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05:00
Ok, now you lost me.
just read C++ Primer 5th ed
4290
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

Ok, one last thing before I leave you all alone. My #1 hate when i dealt with C++ in the past was header-hell. Is there any best practices out there that have been established for isolation or managment of headers/includes so i dont shoot myself in the foot?
I don't even know what header hell is
Uh, header dependencies, problems with types that may require a cyclic reference, etc...
05:04
that's been a solved problem for like 30 years
@Aren I don't know of any changes to header dependancies (yet) although a big change is coming in the next 4 years
rapptz: im not talking about gaurding double inclusion of a header
@Aren that's just a thing to learn, I virtually never encounter it, and when I do, it's easy to fix. Predeclare types
I'm not either
I never encounter it either
@MooingDuck fwiw, I doubt modules will be in C++17
ok fair enough, must be a rogue concern from myself 10 years ago
05:06
and I have slim hope of modules in C++ being good :/
I have a lot of wishful thinking
clang has them half implemented last I checked
is clang worth looking at?
i came across it in my travels
it's just a compiler
it's okay if you don't use Windows
well, that counts me out
<--- dirty windows peasant here
@Aren yes, even if all you use it for is to get a clearer error message
05:08
the clearer error message is a myth
most of the clang advantages are just old things still touted
I think they're clearer. Even if they aren't, they're different, and sometimes that's what you need
@Rapptz says the guy who doesn't use it
I use it all the time :P
I need to check that my code compiles in Clang 3.5 and GCC 4.8
Oct 6 '13 at 23:20, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Borgleader Oh, right, the ever-present myth that clang's error messages are so much better.
/me is starting to wonder if I should just get my feet wet with C first
C isn't C++ and C++ isn't C
completely different languages
Ideally don't use either
05:12
aw
my day was starting well too.
that's what i meant rapptz
maybe tomorrow
Never?
oh I was wondering if I could go a day without "language X sucks" or "language Y is better"
05:14
@Aren no
No?
@Aren don't learn C as a step to learning C++
I can't come up with a good API for a JSON parser
@MooingDuck why not
scroll up
05:16
I know they're different languages, with different methodologies & values. I'm just wondering if I should go to C first to make sure I am sure of my understanding of the basics.
of memory management, etc...
@Aren if you're doing C++, you probably don't have to worry about memory management. That's a C thing
Smart Pointers?
@Yokhen C is advanced C++, not beginning.
@Aren yes, and vectors, and strings
05:17
I see
C++ makes me cry. Specially on VS2012
Dont like VS?
the way it throws errors up on you is not pretty, but somehow it's still better than most other c++ compilers I've tried.
you're not trying hard enough
vstudio is not a compiler though
the msbuild toolchain is, and it's always been terrible
even for .net, which is where all it's focus has gone
cl.exe is the compiler
05:21
well yes
you are correct
What do you guys think is a good API for JSON parsing in C++?
@Rapptz I've always contemplated what it would look like to have a XML tree parser who's API made it act more like a series of nested maps.
though I can't claim it's a good idea
I really hate XML :(
@Yokhen Really? Could just google it.
sure, but it could be applied to JSON as well
forget I said anything.
05:24
another bizzare idea that just popped into my head is a nested map of handlers, and the parser calls the handlers for the tags as it finds them
user3010322
@sehe, it seems like @Rapptz is asking about a C++ JSON parser. You have expertise in this, no? ^
again, no idea if thats a good idea or not
so you want the JSON { "hello": 10 } to be map["hello"] = 10; in C++ land?
@Rapptz well, right sides would be more like a boost::variant<recursive_parser_type,string>, but that's the thought
I didn't wanna use boost (don't like libraries with dependencies) :c
user3010322
05:27
@melak47 ^ You can also probably weigh in here, since you made your own JSON parser.
@Rapptz point stands, it needs to represent either a subtree or the data, and since the type of the data is unknown, that'd have to be a string
that seems absurdly complicated.
the event based tree is sounding better and better to me
because the tree can be type safe and fast and efficient
>.< I'm reinventing boost::spirit ^
and now I see boost::property_tree::read_json
which is the first thing I said
 
1 hour later…
06:39
And yesterday is over, I'm home
@Rapptz It's either that or mapping to objects, but latter's undoable in C++
@MooingDuck json_value = variant<int, string, array<json_value>, map<string, json_value>> or something
Unless you really, really, really want lazy parsing or something I guess
And now I have nothing to do and I'm not even that sleepy
07:29
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Now with 300% more boring mornings loungecpp.net [all-the-lazy-all-the-time] [no-stalking]
Hi folks. I am junior programmer, in theory doing c++ for living, going to stick around a little. Nice to see you
@m.wasowski hi. you might want to read the room rules - loungecpp.net/w/…
You're terrible
already did
Link crafted for sidebar can't you seeeeeeeeee waaah
07:34
@CatPlusPlus it's your link. from your message.
We're doing SCIENCE and you're RUINING IT
@Abyx Yes, which is supposed to be accessed from the sidebar and not linked directly
So we can measure how many people actually click on that out of their own volition
oh I see
It's not very accurate, but copying that link makes it even less accurate!
well it doesn't work then. 'cuz I posted it here
yep
1 min ago, by Cat Plus Plus
We're doing SCIENCE and you're RUINING IT
Currently about 22% of new visits go through that link
112 measured
07:38
pretty good ratio, I think
Well it's better than nothing
that was honest, I would expect it to be like 5% rather...
I'm dumb and looking at wrong data anyway :v
Actually I don't know
Whatever, I'll let it accumulate and then someone better at stats will look at it
It's all useless anyway
can something break if I put C header file in a namespace?

namespace foo {
#include "foo.h"
}
07:44
what?
everything
ah fuck it uses #defines. it's useless =\
23
Q: Is it a good idea to wrap an #include in a namespace block?

R. Martinho FernandesI have a C header that was written to compile as both C and C++ (it only uses features from the common subset, and uses that extern "C" thing). Problem is, that header declares stuff in the global namespace. I'd rather avoid that for the usual reasons. I thought about doing this: namespace foo ...

@Rapptz thanks
lmao same example
programmer originality
07:49
Hey guys! I am a student of 2nd course. I need some suggestion/discussion on biginteger... Any interested in?
no
i see u r one of those users of "what is ready" or stl
What the hell is a student of 2nd course?
guess what
last year he managed to pass one?
07:52
yep, and going to pass 2 more
So.. you're in your 2nd year of... College?
university
what abt u
Same thing
are u too
No
I finished school in 2008
07:54
i did in 2006
We should
me too
@EpiGen lol and you're just an average noob
@ScottW You should make games for money.
if not secret, what are ur home countries?
make some shitty pixel game and dub it indie and sell it on steam
you'll get at least some money
07:57
@Abyx is that what u care about?
@Scott W related to shame or...?
would be a great also if most "have to pee" on understanding of nation
I'm incredibly bored
And I'm incredibly pissed by MSVC. :(
Writes out of nowhere corrupting data members. Fuck.
wish to have some challenge on intelligence? :)
lol
go nuts, I'm curious
08:04
@MarkGarcia I guess it's just an UB and not the MSVC
just looking for suggestion... thought on this a lot, looked into various sources too
so much for that test of intelligence!
ah well.
@Abyx I call a move assignment operator on a base class (which absolutely works correctly on its own), then some data member way below the class layout gets modified. Really don't know how.
@MarkGarcia write a SSCCE
@Rapptz so, suppose you have bignumber : 100000100043453000100000101010101000
how would save it so it could be easier to realize ops(+,-,/*,...) using your container?
08:08
Hmm. Those are completely different questions. Also, I don't see the contradiction (why "But for"). Years of experience make me pretty confident that I can easily adapt the parsing to your graph type. If you have unrelated questions about adjacency_list you should consider asking a new question. — sehe 6 mins ago
that's not a challenge :v
@Abyx That's why I'm absolutely pissed. I can't point out what triggers the write as there are two different base classes and both trigger the write. I'm still trying, be assured.
that's easy and doing your work for you
@Rapptz then share your idea :)
do a "favor"
Yay pasting worked. After 5 minutes.
08:09
Nice try. Is that homework?
@EpiGen try freelance.com
@sehe really reliable interner :D
@Rapptz not actually, and u see i am asking for idea
not for code
I already wrote a bigint
@EpiGen do you realize, that this is pretty standard stuff on any c++ 101?
@m.wasowski of course i do, first time i tried to right my own failed...
now trying again
asking others, what i did not prev time
@rapptz how did you saved numbers? as one char in list<int>?
08:13
no, that's terrible
i tried to save as 16 bit occupied int
but fck, all the problem is '0'
memory isn't an issue
morning
afternoon
08:16
afternoon
morning
@Rapptz then? what would you suggest or what did you use?
when wrote ur own
writing a big int is probably trickier than you think
the char way is pretty silly though
I store the numbers backwards in a vector (though it should be a deque)
I did that once :v
(Don't write bigints what the fuck)
i chose list, since i found it more or less convenient to run sequence
in case of deque comparing to list -1 iterator to NODE *prev for each
what about inside of each deq[i]? representation?
08:26
mawning
hey
Food opens in 2 hours :(
std::list is one of the worst data structures
also
is gyro that good?
gyro?
gyroscope
08:29
facepalm
its less good than deque, but faster since i do not need to access random element and use *iterator instead of elem[i]
It's not faster
@EpiGen more like crappy chat experience on Android
Reasons to use std::list:
lol. List and bigint.
08:33
ok, as i know deq uses realloc
you are incredibly misinformed :v
Also, standard containers cannot use realloc.
At least for non-trivial types.
@EpiGen you mean better, because it's easier to understand for you, cos' you don't feel comfortable with iterators? ;)
did you hear this stuff in your college, EpiGen?
for any types
cause they use allocators
08:34
Even if it did, std::list is still worse
@CatPlusPlus untrue, they can be easily spliced, that's the only property I find useful
@ScarletAmaranth not actually
@ScarletAmaranth They broke that by making size() O(1) :v
So, no
@CatPlusPlus beacuse it is confusing?
No, because it's shit
08:37
@ScarletAmaranth lol. Thanks for making me understand @CatPlusPlus's joke.
@m.wasowski its uncomfortable for the first few times
@EpiGen that's what she...
@yeah, they do. i wanted to say that its fixed size malloc as string, so it uses realloc every time when given range is filled
it's uncomfortable until you write few iterators on your own, as with every feature
i did, i repeated list
just to to "see" what it is
08:41
Ugh
7 mins ago, by Rapptz
you are incredibly misinformed :v
@EpiGen I had the same task on my lab exam, if it is standard 'read numbers from file and do operations, print total', don't even bother with converting, do calculations on chars.
TIL std::list::size was O(n) in C++03
Yes, that allowed for O(1) splice
@m.wasowski any link on this?
i have idea how to operate on string, but it seems to be even more/unnecessary checks/conditions
08:45
man, even new programmers care too much about performance
C++ kills
@Rapptz it was, in c++11 O(1)
thanks m8
thanks you too dude
seems like talk on obvious things)
0
Q: How to free the memory in my code?

chi chi chiBelow is the my code, IplImage *** frames = (IplImage ***) malloc(sizeof(IplImage**) * 2); frames[0] = (IplImage **) malloc(sizeof(IplImage*)* 2); (frames[0])[1]= (IplImage) malloc(sizeof(IplImage) *2); If I allocate the memory as above, can I just free the memory by...

Three stars found!
08:47
sorry Mark
it needs to be > 4
Tomalak has already raised the ante.
@EpiGen just sit on it until you figure it out, it's not solution important, but what you learn getting it on you own
now to find that sockpuppet users files
@ScottW Good night.
@ScottW night
08:48
eot for me
That guy is crazy good
looks good
@ScottW good night
@m.wasowski i forgot about this as usual :)
@ScottW have a nice dreams
looked better without colouring
though the colouring isn't bad
08:53
Everytime I try coloring my sketches they always look awful.
@MarkGarcia link pls ;o)
@m.wasowski Most of the time they end up as a mouse pad replacement, or a wipe for my pc. :P
thanks for link Mark
but he uses IplImage *** frames = (IplImage *) malloc(sizeof(IplImage) * 2); which is static alloc
09:06
ewwww
dude...
triple pointer
@EpiGen Could you stop spewing all this nonsense?
must be a language barrier, otherwise i dont see the nonsense
Struct or Class for Data-Object with no logic, I'd imagine struct right?
09:09
both the same thing
just different default visibility
@EpiGen Static alloc?
memory allocated at compile time
i.e. not using malloc
But there's malloc... nevermind, I don't even understand the code in the question.
And I will not try to.
he's obviously a three star programmer
@MarkGarcia fixed size alloc*
09:14
that malloc is not static memory allocation.
look up the definition
I am surprised you even bother, I've been lurking for like an hour today, he's said nothing but nonsense :)
I'm playing games
morning
mawnin
he's so great he can call malloc at compile time
100% legit
There's no neat language features in c++11 for private member encapsulation is there? I imagine it's still very-much a getter/setter ?
09:19
if you have getters and setters that do only what their name entails, there's a really neat language feature called public
har har
People calling getters/setters encapsulation will never cease to be funny
user1804599
@Aren What is funny about it?
> Note : in C++ you should really use new and delete instead of malloc and free.
Such great advice
09:20
@Aren I was being serious
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus I didn’t find it funny when my teacher told that “encapsulation was getters and setters for every private field,” but rather sad.
@rightfold we probably had the same guy
user1804599
@kbok lol
What made you all assume the only reason I mentioned getters/setters is because i wanted to blindly wrap private fields with no purpose?
user1804599
We didn’t “all.”
user1804599
09:23
But yeah, if a function called set_foo does more than setting foo, its name is misleading.
naturally
user1804599
Also, it means that your object is mutable, which is terrible. :F
can you elaborate?
I mean, immutable objects are great, but doesn't that defeat the purpose of something with data?
well
let me re-phrase
user1804599
09:24
@Aren lolwat
nvm
it's late my brain is failing
@rightfold It's perfectly acceptable to have mutable classes
Mutable types suck
Ok @Cat
user1804599
@kbok A mutable class is something I yet have to see in C++.
09:25
That's extremism.
Kill all extremists!
user1804599
class foo {};
foo.add_non_static_data_member<int>("bar"); // mutable class!
user1804599
Oops.
user1804599
Jan 24 '13 at 22:13, by Cat Plus Plus
Immutable objects are the best objects
"mutable class" can also refer to a class where instances are mutable
09:27
Oh jesus, semantics
user1804599
Then an immutable object can refer to an object where pointers to it are immutable!
Also it's quite a stretch to go from "it's best to have immutable objects" to "if you use mutable objects you should die in a fire"
@rightfold No, an object is not used to produce pointers to it
user1804599
MUTABILITY = DIAF
user1804599
@kbok Then how else do you create a pointer to an object?
@rightfold By using a language feature.
user1804599
09:30
Well, you can do &my_array[0] + 1. :P
user1804599
SuffixArray already uses pointers in its implementation. :) — rightfold 5 secs ago
Everything is terrible and boring
cz?
09:47
@TonyTheLion we do like to fuck
@rightfold Mutability is a useful tool just like immutability.
@ArneMertz for rest and recreation

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