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20:00
too late to undo the prides' history :(
looking at the new stuff in C++14
we have std::apply now
so std::apply(function, tuple)
yeeey
everybody is doing it anyway
(it's still nice)
how nice of them to provide something that can be written in 4 LOC :v
std::string_view got accepted
20:03
what does it do
@Rapptz Like make_unique :v
I usually don't complain about the lack of documentation, but ever since I started using Cinder, the patient little faggot inside me died :|
user1804599
@Rapptz omg sick
there's also std::sample
i.e. more stuff in <random>
I think that's it for the new stuff
user1804599
20:06
However.
user1804599
I still don’t quite get string_view.
@rightfold I like your new avatar, but what happened to your fondness of ponies?
user1804599
Can you also use it where string is expected?
@rightfold I believe so.
@Rapptz what is it useful for?
20:06
the basic purpose of string_view is const std::string& but dodging the copy for C-strings.
user1804599
@FredOverflow I still have to watch season four but I don’t have time.
And now you watch ice cubes melting instead? ;)
I've read a quarter of the document but I can't see any reason to add that
user1804599
@DeadMG But if you pass it where string const& is expected, will it copy the data? Or will it just pretend to be a string?
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz I don't see the problem with that
user1804599
20:07
It’s const anyway so the latter is safe.
user1804599
I can’t see how it would be implemented other than adding a flag to string, though.
Xeo
Xeo
string_view is a by-reference parameter for string-like things
@rightfold Oh wait, nevermind. Confused the conversion directions :)
@Xeo it was tongue in cheek.
@rightfold No amount of similar interface can change the fact that it's not a std::string.
user1804599
20:08
Or perhaps checking, in the dtor of string, whether the data comes from an address that is in the range of addresses of string literals, but that seems fragile and obscure.
@FredOverflow Well, yes, it is in some circumstances.
Does string_view inherit from string?
btw I can't find any of the stuff I mentioned in the final draft
but it says they got adopted in open-std :s
@Rapptz Maybe the draft isn't quite as final, I just copy/pasted from reddit :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow How would it call a member function if you have reference to base? :P
20:09
@FredOverflow No.
user1804599
You need extra indirection which is UNACCEPTABLE because PERFORMANCE.
string_view sometimes copies data but in strictly less circumstances than if you had used const std::string&, in general.
@DeadMG Is there any inheritance in the C++ standard library, apart from streams?
there must be a good reason for duplicating the interface of std::string in another class
I just can't see it
user1804599
@FredOverflow std::integral_constant :P
Xeo
Xeo
20:10
@DeadMG eh
string_view is always non-owning
user1804599
@Xeo Problem is this:
Xeo
Xeo
it's a handle for string-like things with reference semantics
user1804599
void foo(string const& x) { std::cout << x << '\n'; }
foo(string_view("Hello, world!")); // copy or no copy of data?
@Jefffrey Let's say you have one large string with the source code of a program. Now you want to find all identifiers in it. You can have 1000s of string_views into the same string. Makes sense?
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold oh, that
copy
user1804599
20:12
Meh. :<
@rightfold string is always owning
const or not
@Xeo Which is the problem when you want to convert it to an owning container.
@Jefffrey There is nothing to pass. Think std::vector<std::string_view> identifiers;
for example, std::string -> string_view -> std::string involves a copy.
Xeo
Xeo
the point is to have string_view as the parameter, not the argument
20:12
with ref counted strings, that would be easy. just initialize the ref count with 2
You can't weasel out of copies if you have mutable things in the way
user1804599
Can I create a string_view from a string?
user1804599
Then problem solved. :3
Of course you can.
Still a copy
Xeo
Xeo
20:13
obviously...
Any immutable -> mutable conversion involves a copy
user1804599
I thought for a moment it only worked for string literals. xD
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus no, not from string -> string_view
I meant string -> view -> string
Are string_views read-only?
20:13
Obviously
user1804599
Of course.
if it says "adopted" it means it got accepted right?
That's like the point
But changes to the string are observed through the string_view?
wondering why the stuff is missing in the draft
user1804599
20:14
@Rapptz It means that now somebody else is saddled with it.
@Rapptz It means you didn't crawl out of your legal mother's womb.
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow again, reference semantics
@FredOverflow Probably. There's no reason to not share storage for immutable things
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz maybe they accepted the proposal, but simply haven't edited the draft yet?
user1804599
Go shares storage for all unit types. :P
20:15
Immutable view of mutable storage
@Xeo Okay, so a string_view is like a const std::string&... oh wait, you already said that, didn't you? :)
Xeo
Xeo
'cept it never copies
user1804599
Meh, it has a thousand member functions. :(
Xeo
Xeo
and puppy said that
@Xeo It does in some circumstances.
20:16
:lol:
string_view copies in strictly less circumstances if you universally replace all non-owning references with string_view.
never-copies is certainly not a guarantee at all.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG again, string_view never copies when it's the target
constexpr basic_string_view(const basic_string_view&) noexcept = default;
basic_string_view& operator=(const basic_string_view&) noexcept = default;
@Xeo Which is useless if you're just gonna have to copy it again later instead.
user1804599
@Rapptz Why is = default in the spec?
user1804599
20:17
It’s the implementation of the function. :|
and worse if the later target is a const std::string& which can't bind to you and could have done if you were a const std::string&.
@rightfold Why would it not be?
user1804599
Because it’s up to the implementor how to implement it.
It's trivial and there's no reason to not default it
@Xeo because const std::string& copies?
Xeo
Xeo
20:18
@rightfold no? it's a restriction on the implementation
But you're right, implementation guarantees have no place in C++ :v
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Not supporting = default in your compiler at all. :D
user1804599
@Xeo but why?
user1804599
It’s silly.
it probably doesn't actually mean the implementation has to use = default.
there's lots of stuff in the Standard that's like, "Exposition only" or "Semantically equal to this mostly".
Xeo
Xeo
20:21
as-if rule
Semantically equal to this monstrosity
user1804599
@Xeo As-if anyone would implement this differently. :)
user1804599
I should try Closure, by the way.
user1804599
It seems nice.
lol @ the apply proposal
> Tuples are great for generic programming with variadic templates. However, the standard does not define a general purpose facility that allows to call a function/functor/lambda with the tuple elements as arguments. Such a feature should be provided, because it is useful (at least for me). It even is given as an example of std::integer_sequence in [intseq.general] coming from N3658.
I liked the (at least for me) bit
20:23
Let's accept every proposal that is useful for somebody then :)
user1804599
Why lol? It’s a great thing to have.
unfortunately there's lots of proposals like that
it's useful for me therefore Standard.
Xeo
Xeo
std::apply is damn useful, though
yeah not denying that
it's even cooler with poly lambda
user1804599
pony lambda
Xeo
Xeo
20:24
just looking at all the 'how to call function with tuple arg' questions
user1804599
Tuple library is quite limited.
I'd like a nice blowjob therefore std::blowjob
user1804599
It’s vexing there is no tail or something. Makes recursion too cumbersome.
user1804599
std::integer_sequence is a nice building block, though.
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold well don't use recursion
user1804599
20:26
Generalise std::for_each to work with tuples and poly lambdas. :D
Xeo
Xeo
also, variadic templates should be morged with tuples. they should be the language-provided tuple equivalent :/
I actually found someone willing to invest $25,000 in my indie game development group :v
user1804599
ORG MODE IS NICE
well, std::apply, std::sample, std::string_view and std::search enhancements are the only "new" things
user1804599
I wonder if that Perl library has been ported to C++, by the way.
user1804599
20:29
The all/any thing.
user1804599
if (x == any(1, 2, 3)) { … } :3
If a class is not movable or copyable and its instance is a member of another class, what does default'd move ctor do with such non-movable non-copyable member?
Xeo
Xeo
ew
Jesus Christ, what is that
user1804599
20:30
Perl 6 has it as a language construct: if $x == 1 | 2 | 3 { … }.
@wilx It's deleted I'd say
that is super fucking dumb
user1804599
@FredOverflow lol
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold if(boost::any({1,2,3}, x))
user1804599
lolwot
Xeo
Xeo
20:31
typos
user1804599
Funny.
user1804599
How about x == any(1, 2, 3) * 2. :P
@Xeo what is that
Xeo
Xeo
oh wait, the algorithm is called any_of
user1804599
x = 2; x == any(1, 2, 3) collapses to any(false, true, false) which then converts to true because any of these is true.
20:33
Error 1 error C2228: left of '.select_on_container_copy_construction' (from trying to compile this example)
user3010322
Hm.
well fuck
user3010322
I wonder if I can pass back a const reference or a reference forthis.
user1804599
x == all(1, 2, 3) is false because x is not both 1, 2 and 3.
user1804599
20:34
And x = 4, x < all(1, 2, 3) is true. :P
@FredOverflow Holy tits.
@FredOverflow That's why posting while under drugs is a bad idea
user1804599
C-u <TAB> is cooooooooooool.
"destroy"

I don't think that's a good word, it should be "replace"
:laffo:
template<typename Element>
bool any(const Element& element)
{
    return false;
}

template<typename Element, typename Head, typename... Rest>
bool any(const Element& element, const Head& head, Rest... rest)
{
    return element == head || any(element, rest...);
}
int main()
{
    std::cout << any(0, 1, 2, 3) << '\n';
    std::cout << any(1, 1, 2, 3) << '\n';
    std::cout << any(2, 1, 2, 3) << '\n';
    std::cout << any(3, 1, 2, 3) << '\n';
    std::cout << any(4, 1, 2, 3) << '\n';
}
I always have to look up variadic templates syntax.
user1804599
20:37
@FredOverflow more like this (lemme write).
needs more coliru
I can never remember where to sprinkle the ...s.
You suck
Even I remember and I don't write C++
Also you missed && :v
Always Forward
why &&?
it's any not all
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold so it's basically a map over a list, with implicit and/or when in a boolean context?
20:38
@Rapptz He probably meant universal references.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz wrong &&
oh lol
Does it make a difference if I write Rest... rest or const Rest&... rest?
Jesus Christ Fred, how are the semantics of any obvious in that case? ;_;
user1804599
@Xeo Yeah. It keeps being any or all until you explicitly cast it to bool (including if, while and for loops).
Xeo
Xeo
20:39
@FredOverflow yes?
one is by-value, the other by-const ref
... just expands a pattern
I didn't get the syntax quite right the first time and thought maybe it wasn't even possible to pass variadics by const ref :) As I said, they are one of my blind spots in C++.
Xeo
Xeo
3 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
You suck
:P
Why on earth do you want your nice neutral water more acidic? — slugster 18 mins ago
^^ lol
template<typename Element, typename Head, typename... Rest>
bool any(Element&& element, Head&& head, Rest&&... rest)
{
    return (std::forward<Element>(element) == std::forward<Head>(head))
        || any(std::forward<Element>(element), std::forward<Rest>(rest)...);
}
@CatPlusPlus Happy now? ;)
To have acidic water
Duh
@FredOverflow NO YOU DIDNT FORWARD ELEMENT
user1804599
20:44
main.cpp:17:47: error: no type named 'type' in 'std::enable_if<false, bool>'; 'enable_if' cannot be used to disable this declaration
    explicit operator typename std::enable_if<std::is_same<T, bool>::value, bool>::type() {
                                              ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
user1804599
lolwat
user3010322
()
user3010322
That's a bit weir oh, it's an explicit conversion operator.
user1804599
main.cpp:17:23: error: 'auto' not allowed in conversion function type
    explicit operator auto() -> typename std::enable_if<std::is_same<T, bool>::value, bool>::type {
                      ^~~~
user1804599
:(((((((
20:45
lol
Xeo
Xeo
context...
@rightfold SFINAE doesn't work with conversion operators?
Xeo
Xeo
you suck, SFINAE needs deduction
user1804599
Oh. :v
user1804599
20:46
TIL.
This question appears to be off-topic because it is about water, not Stack Exchange. — Jeremy Banks 24 mins ago
user1804599
C++ y u no static if so much easier.
Xeo
Xeo
also, your op== needs a user-defined type as one of the arguments
user3010322
@rightfold Because Concepts!!!!
Xeo
Xeo
I guess that was supposed to be any<T> const& self?
user1804599
20:48
Wait, I will add more indirection to solve the problem.
@rightfold It really wouldn't be.
@ThePhD Because static if is a huge mistake with horrendous consequences.
user3010322
Meh.
user3010322
Concepts still doesn't cover one of my use cases very well.
it has little to do with Concepts really.
user3010322
Or at all.
user1804599
20:50
@Xeo yeah :P
the simple fact is, it's easy to show that static_if benefits small cases, but when you really consider what would happen if it was introduced, it would be a disaster.
Xeo
Xeo
There, fixed all your fuck-ups
(SFINAE with deduction, proper parameter on op==, call begin/end, use any_of not all_of in bool conversion, create an any<bool> in op== not an any<T>)
Why did you add template<class U = T>?
user1804599
lol linker error.
dummy parameter
Xeo
Xeo
20:53
7 mins ago, by Xeo
you suck, SFINAE needs deduction
Xeo
Xeo
@Tuntuni that's wrong
21:08
@Xeo why?
Xeo
Xeo
because it only collapses in a bool context, and otherwise maps the function over the data
@rightfold for the finale, here's some fun with deduction coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a09e0c410f74bd29
user1804599
Nice.
user1804599
I should once generalise this code so I can build all on top of it as well.
user1804599
And overload all operators that make sense.
21:10
I love this guy!
user1804599
And provide sin, cos, sqrt and friends with ADL.
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold and provide .map for non-operators
user1804599
That could work too. :P
user1804599
Also, this code is ugly.
user1804599
I should use _.reduce with ==.
user1804599
21:14
But having Underscore.js as a dependency for unit testing seems like overkill.
user1804599
Oh wait JavaScript has reduce on arrays.
user1804599
Also, good old [].slice.call to convert inferior types to Array. :v
user1804599
Fuck JavaScript.
user3010322
Hm. There's no reason for me to use unique_ptr at this point. They really do the same thing.
user3010322
21:20
handle<int> woof( 24 );
handle<int*> woofx( new int( 24 ) );
user1804599
var columns = document.querySelectorAll('#equal-width-test > div > div');
var success = [].slice.call(columns)
    .map(function(column) { return column.offsetWidth; })
    .map(function(width) { return width === columns[0].offsetWidth; })
    .reduce(function(a, b) { return a && b; }, true);
user1804599
So ugly. :[
user1804599
Ohh, there is array.every.
Why do you run map twice
user3010322
Is there anything called unique in the std:: namespace?
user1804599
21:24
Looks nicer IMO.
It doesn't buy you anything
user1804599
I don’t like to have a multiline lambda there suddenly.
@ThePhD yes
user1804599
Now I have three single-line lambdas which is nice.
user3010322
Tits.
21:24
why would you put something in std:: anyway nub
user3010322
Nah, just trying for a unique name.
user1804599
var columns = document.querySelectorAll('#equal-width-test > div > div');
var success = [].slice.call(columns).every(function(column) {
    return column.offsetWidth === columns[0].offsetWidth;
});
user1804599
Way better.
user1804599
Wait, I have a better idea.
Type "arab driving" on Google Images. Jesus fucking Christ. The sad part is that I've been to Dubai and it's true :v
user1804599
This is ugly because it doesn’t work when columns is empty.
user1804599
It should yield true in that case but it gives an error.
user3010322
@FredOverflow 10/10 best operator.
I most certainly haven't heard that joke 100 times
user1804599
I want &&=. :<
21:31
No you don't
Another new comic~ paranatural.net
user1804599
var success = [].slice.call(columns).pluck('offsetWidth').allEqual(); :D
user1804599
OMFG WHAT
> Stefanus Du Toit
Thalmic Labs
user1804599
Same number of pixels wide!
I WANT TO THALMIC PLEASE HIRE ME PLEASE
:<
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz welcome to 2013
What's Thalmic sounds nerdy
21:39
@Xeo grawfhajfh
@CatPlusPlus the company that makes Myo
And that would be
@BartekBanachewicz every draft I see has his name
user1804599
Hard drugs.
@CatPlusPlus that psychic armband used to control stuff
Xeo
Xeo
the armband motion sensor thingy
21:40
@Rapptz but he worked at Intel!
So?
Never seen it before
I already forgot about it
Intel is part of the committee
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz he's the standard's editor
21:41
my world has collapsed
I'm just sitting here refactoring crap uni code
while others move from Intel to Thalmic while editing C++ standard like a boss
I feel small, dumb and insignificant.
4
the Bloomberg recruiter guy is messaging me on twitter. Is it just me who finds that kind of weird/inappropriate?
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz It is nice when people feel how they actually are. Many people have some bent over self image, but you don’t. :)
Welcome to 2014
(email please die already thanks)
@rightfold Coming to SO was a huge breaktrough for me
bigger than leaving my hometown, I think.
@BartekBanachewicz what's up?
@jalf If it's public then absolutely. Else, I guess I don't really see the difference between private Twitter messages and other forms of private messaging.
user1804599
HSV is so awesome.
@rightfold color space?
6 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
I'm just sitting here refactoring crap uni code
user1804599
Yes. :3
21:48
How can a color space be awesome?
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Crap Unicode.
2
user1804599
Since I already know I’m never gonna finish this vapourware, and I’m bored, let’s make a website for it using it itself.
What vaporware?
user1804599
Bartek probably knows.
user1804599
21:50
He stalks me on GitHub.
I have a suggestion for your next project: finish it.
va·por·ware
n.
synonym: rightfold project
No, sorry, you gotta change your nick back to Zoidberg, it works better with jokes
@DeadMG not private, just @me
then yes that does seem to be wildly inappropriate.
private message would require me to follow him, which... not gonna happen :p
user1804599
21:52
$line-height: $font-size * 1.61803398875; this is awesome btw.
I'd expect all potential employment discussions to be totally private.
user1804599
It looks great.
then again, I don't like discussing my hair colour in public.
user1804599
21:52
Also I’m a nerd and golden ratio.
@DeadMG yeah, tbh it doesn't bother me. The whole secrecy thing about all this stuff always bugs me a bit tbh, like it's some kind of taboo, which is ultimately just so employers can get away with paying you less if you're a bad negotiator. But it does seem unprofessional for a recruiter to do this.
ah well, that's his problem, not mine. It just surprised me :p
@DeadMG I don't like if you do either :)
hi
Oh right
it used to say Intel
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, he's leaving Intel?
Hi @jalfd, Got some C++ Roles based in London I'd be keen to discuss with you. Let me know if you'd like to find out more! Cheers, Alex
21:56
@jalf oh cool
@jalf apparently left already
@DeadMG By the way. I compensate for that by canceling a 9-star message. Or a 10-star message, even
@BartekBanachewicz I'm not sure if that's the word I'd use. :p
but kind of funny
@jalf are you going to respond?
How is that in any way unusual?
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf he left sometime last year
21:58
@BartekBanachewicz Unlikely. Like I was just discussing with @DeadMG it seems a bit unprofessional to just publicly message people you don't know on twitter about job offers :p
also, it's finance stuff, which is gross. ;) He's from Bloomberg, according to the email I also got from him
@jobsatnintendo
Welcome to the official Nintendo of America Careers page!
107 tweets, 2.1k followers, following 62 users
can't say I find it weird or "unprofessional"

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