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23:00
I only admitted the implication no forced dichotomy => no problem, not that Java is an appropriate example.
eh. i guess i like the dichotomy...lol
never really felt forced to me
You can't avoid it. That sounds like forced.
i never had to. value types have value...identity shouldn't matter
if it does, you're doing something wrong
Another reason why I don't like the forced dichotomy is that I'm often under the impression that for those languages which force you the value types (struct and the like) are implicitly assumed not to have invariants.
If you want you can make value types work as reference types (just write a Box<T> wrapper that is a reference type), but it's a lot harder to write a generic reference-to-value adapter.
23:04
struct bundle_o_stuff { string name; container<int> ids; int age; };
@LucDanton What do you mean, no invariants?
@RMartinhoFernandes struct as heterogeneous container.
Yeah, C# seems really pragmatical about stuff.
You're forced a default ctor that initializes everything to null or 0 or whatever is appropriate (a bit annoying). Other than that and value semantics it's the same.
23:07
@RMartinhoFernandes You cannnot not have the constructor?
@LucDanton No, the default ctor is mandatory :(
Ah, well.
You can have other ctors, but the default one stays.
Is it for something like CLI compatibility?
If all zeros is not an appropriate default value, it sucks.
23:09
you can have a default constructor if you want
@cHao Not on value types, you can't.
i just did it in vs
nothing complained
Is the copy customizable though?
@LucDanton Nope. Bit blasting. Value types in C# are really limited in scope.
I only ever wrote two I believe.
Yeah, D has that too. Exactly the kind of stuff I was referring to.
23:10
And I've been using it since v1 (2003 or something, I guess.)
Though D allows attaching a hook/constructor to run after the bit-blasting.
@cHao Wanna bet you did something wrong?
struct Foo { Foo() {} } is not valid C#.
It just irks me that it's assumed that the default will make sense for everyone, in every situation.
@LucDanton Yeah, me too.
It worked fine for my Option<T> wrapper, but it doesn't always make sense.
struct blah
{
    int x;
    public blah() { x = 42; }
}
23:12
Something concepts-like and robust implementations (hello, compile-times) would make C++ shoot just so much ahead.
what's wrong with that code?
template<ValueType T> void foo(T t); now that's how you enforce the use of value types, not at the language level.
@cHao Default ctor.
works for me.
> Structs cannot contain explicit parameterless constructors
My compiler spits that out.
23:13
mine doesn't...eh. hold on
ok, wait...it does. course, it waits til compile time to tell me...wtf
You didn't compile?
facepalm
i put it in the editor. it catches all the other issues before i compile...so eh
Obviously though it doesn't :p
My trusty $ csc a.cs is better than your VS.
:P
lol
kinda makes sense though
23:19
I'm awesome.
lol
Actually, maybe it is better for types to have a notion of reference versus value.
Think of it this way:
Of course there are types that are not supposed to have value semantics. That's why we have things like T(T const&) = delete; T& operator=(T const&) = delete;.
I don't mind that some things come with reference semantics and others with value semantics, I mind that the dichotomy is forced and that the difference between the two is too pronounced.
Instead of defining different functions to sort an existing Foo and to return a sorted copy of a Foo - as is done in C++ - just define the first one and rely on client code to make copies where it needs to.
23:30
In C++ as Martinho is pointing out it only takes changing the special members.
@Maxpm No, in C++ you usually don't return a sorted copy when you sort stuff. For example, std::sort works in place.
And whether an algorithm should make a copy or not is (should be?) independent of the semantics of the language.
@LucDanton Think functional! It's not independent in Haskell :)
@RMartinhoFernandes It's an example.
But your point still stands. If it's an in-place algorithm, it works in-place. If it's not, it copies.
23:32
@RMartinhoFernandes Since I'm claiming that algorithms should be independent of languages, I don't see how bringing up a particular language can run counter to my claim?
@Maxpm It could be more efficient to have the algorithm produce the copy on its own, rather than have the client make a copy and the algorithm work in-place on that copy.
Think filter.
A can't be independent from all X 'except for B in X'.
@LucDanton But Haskell is the pinacle of perfection, isn't it? ;)
If it is, it still doesn't affect algorithms!
@RMartinhoFernandes That's true.
0
Q: Can I Pass by Value in D?

Maxpmimport std.stdio; class IntegerContainer { public int Integer = 1; } void DoubleInteger(IntegerContainer Container) { Container.Integer *= 2; } void main() { IntegerContainer Container = new IntegerContainer; // Internal integer defaults to one. DoubleInteger(Container); // Int...

Ew, previews don't handle code well at all.
And it doesn't look like SO supports D syntax highlighting.
23:35
@LucDanton Oh, right, now I get it. For some reason I read "algorithm implementations" instead of "algorithms".
awww.
we'll survive somehow
lol
@RMartinhoFernandes Two separate points collided for a short moment :)
I should have prefaced with "Besides, ...".
questions come at a very low frequency :(
@RMartinhoFernandes And I snipe them, am I right? :)
5 messages moved to Sandbox
@Maxpm There, I noobified you :P
23:44
Nooo...! My powers...!
@LucDanton You seem to be on every one.
Hmm... D supports out parameters. I feel as if this is relevant somehow.
I don't see how.
out parameters are useful to emulate multiple return values.
Which is something Go has without emulation, yay!

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