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18:03
oh i see
hi a question
when I have constructor like so:
ChildClass(int x, int y):ParentClass(x,y)
The ParentClass(x,y) is calling the ParentClass constructor or base class..
how come that isn't creating an instance of the object ParentClass? Especially if ParentClass was say abstract...
I know in this case it is calling the base class's constructor to initialize the values, but how does it differentiate from actually *creating* the object...or does it create the object?
sbi
sbi
@DavidRodríguezdribeas If I was you I'd flag for a mod explaining the situation. You could also look around on meta whether this was a recent change.
@LewsTherin Basically, this doesn't create a temporary object because the language's grammar says so: A constructor header followed by a colon will be followed by a list of base class and member constructors to be called when the object is created. Type names need to be base class names, object names need to be data member names.
18:18
@sbi is there a name for this?
@JohannesSchaublitb Thought is the human ability that facilitates/provides purpose in life; manual labor is what actually brings about success in life (which is measured against a purpose). There cannot ultimately be success or progress in the world without both thinkers AND doers - though, in a pinch you can get by (or get started) with people that can do both, but they tend to be rare.
a very good quote IMO: "There is moderation even in excess." - Benjamin Disraeli
sbi
sbi
@0A0D It's called an initializer list. There is an FAQ entry for this.
@sbi thanks
@sbi a list of base class (so I assume if it was also in the case of multiple inheritance) and member constructor? constructor or constructors? Won't it only call 1?
Type names need to be base class names, object names need to be data member names. I don't understand that sorry
@ Lews, even an abstract class can have data members in C++. The syntax ChildClass(int x, int y):ParentClass(x,y) says that You're creating a child class (it's the constructor declaration) and you're initializing the base class of type parentClass with the values x and y.
sbi
sbi
18:21
@LewsTherin Please read the FAQ entry I just linked to and come back if this leaves something unclear.
@sbi ok thanks
When you create a derived class, it is an extra bit on the end of the base class essentially. So, in memory you would have [ParentClass][ChildClass], the base is created first, then the derived. On destruction the derived is destroyed and then the base. So, when you're working with a derived object you're basically referring to two objects, the base and the extra things the derived adds to the base. This is all transparent though.
Do numeric escape sequences only work in octal...?
@w00te so basically the objects are individual but lie "side by side" but the child has access to it
e.g. \70 (F) versus \106.
18:24
@Maxpm There are also hex escape sequences, like: '\0x12'.
@JerryCoffin I can't use decimal, though?
@Maxpm No -- if you want decimal, you normally just use something like: 'char x = 13;'
@JerryCoffin Ah, that explains it. Thanks!
In C++ (but normally not C) you might get a warning, and have to use a cast to shut it up.
ANSI escape codes are fun.
\033[;1;31mMY FISTS ARE MADE OF STEEL\033[0m
18:26
@Maxpm Almost as good as dental work without novacaine.
@LewsTherin Yeah, pretty much - though its worrying to simplify it that much. For example, if I had a function, foo() that took a class of your type ParentClass as so: foo(ParentClass pc), and I passed an object of type ChildClass into it, the variable pc in the function foo would only have the base class (ParentClass) portion of the ChildClass left. It's called sllicing
@w00te yeah so only the parents object is created :)
@LewsTherin exactly. :)
@sbi @w00te thanks a mil
@LewsTherin no worries man. Later ;)
18:32
@w00te bye
how does one build logic skills?
@LewsTherin thinking logically :D
very much like you might build a muscle
@CodeJockey yeah how does one learn to think logically lol
or an endurance to pain, or cardiovascular exercise, or poison, or even really bad poetry
logic problems, logic puzzles, postulating about otherwise useless things
not all one type of logic puzzle, mind you - once you figure out how to "figure out" the answer to a sudoku puzzle, for instance, the benefit of doing them lessens
18:36
@CodeJockey yeah I learnt how to solve sudoku puzzles but I didn't notice any difference
I didn't get "smarter" or anything lol
avoid nogical exercises
@Xaade What is nogical?
learning the basic rules of Sudoku (which can be reduced to about 10 words by your average poet) is not "figuring out" how to "figure out" the puzzle - you need to abstract the rules, and combine them in new ways (then they really become theories)
@LewsTherin I would guess non-logical, but who knows?
even then, Sudoku is just a very popular example of a logic puzzle
@CodeJockey How do I do all that..abstract the rules...what does that even mean
18:39
Logical thinking comes down to two parts. Logical pathing (discovering new ways to attempt to solve a problem), and Logical pathing proficiency (discovering which way would most likely work), the proficiency comes from seeing patterns in problems and retrofitting a solution from one type of problem to work in the new type of problem that shares a pattern that the solution fits with.
...yeah - that!
@Xaade ok so how do I learn to see the patterns and retrofit the soultion
"abstract the rules"... hmmm - that's actually kinda abstract in itself, isn't it?
For example, one might find a way to solve ONE sudoku problem, but that's not logic, that's stumbling on a solution. One might find a algorithm to solve a subset of sudoku problems, now you have one algorithm. One might find a way to determine a way to solve a new subset, now you have a logical path. Now given a NEW type of problem. One might take the logical path from sudoku and apply it to the new problem, given that the pattern (or ruleset) is similar. Now you have a proficiency.
sbi
sbi
@LewsTherin You learn to think logically the same way you learn anything else: training, repetition, perseverance.
18:43
logic isn't a solution, it isn't an algorithm for solutions. Logic is the process to immediately identify patterns in problems and apply an algorithm for developing algorithms.
@sbi ok. Looks like this will take me a long while :(
well... I guess it basically means take the rules slightly out of the context of the puzzle, and see how they apply in a more general sense, rather than specifically and literally... hmm..... hard to explain - it's kinda like trying to answer the question "how do you learn?" - you just do, through effort and as @sbi said, perseverance.
The algorithm for creating suspension bridges, is not logic. The algorithm for selecting which bridge algorithm given the circumstances isn't logic. Logic is needing to make a firetruck ladder, and seeing that the problem is similar to bridges, and using the algorithm to develop new types of firetruck ladder algorithms.
one thing you need to realize is thinking logically is - again, just like any other human ability - a relative measurement, not absolute
further than that, it is very subjective, not objective
ok guys thanks advice noted
18:48
The relativity is how a person converts algorithms. Does the person think visually and see the ladder as a vertical bridge. Does the person see the ladder as needing to support weight. That differs from person to person. In order to develop your logical abilities, you have to reflect on how you solve problems. Then you'll learn the most efficient way for you to develop strategies from other strategies.
I guess I can't learn to be smart in a day... learning a language is one thing but not knowing how to solve a problem in an efficient way disturbs me
You can somewhat compare two people and determine (subjectively) that one thinks more logically, on average, than another person. saying that someone thinks logically or does not think logically is nearly impossible unless you have a reference
I think most humans tend toward the lazy way to do things - solving a problem is solving a problem (success), whether or not it is done in the most efficient way
if you keep trying to solve specific (and related) problems, the human brain will eventually and naturally start to say, "hey! wait! there's a pattern here - can I do this in an easier way?"
@Lews It is hard to be proficient/logical in a language you are learning. You learn to think in a language after you learn it. Also the more you expose yourself to different problem solving methods the easier it is to apply them
@CaptainGiraffe good point
I'll be back in 1 hr
yeah - two things to balance: variety (different problems) and persistence (more of them)
18:53
@LewsTherin In short. Logic is the process of adapting previous experience. The more logical a person thinks, the more efficient they are at adapting previous experience. No one can recognize a pattern for algorithms unless they develop an algorithm. No one can develop an algorithm for solutions unless they have experience developing a solution. No one can develop a solution unless they have a problem.
So find a solution to a particular problem, learn how to solve a set of problems, learn how to recognize patterns in solving a set of problems.
meh didn't have time for projecteuler or tc for more than two months..
The human brain thinks in branching pathways. Memory is stored in a tree. Every thought is mapped to other thoughts. Solving problems is mapped in the same way. So learning only one language, means that you never learn how to retrofit how you learned the language towards learning a new one. The older you are, the harder it is to modify memory at the top of the tree (because you're using space for the bottom).
2
@CodeJockey Be persistent enough until you have a pattern for solving the type of problem. Then introduce a new problem and see if you can modify the old problem. If not, develop a pattern, and try another problem. Eventually you'll have the ability to modify old patterns.
evening <o/
sbi
sbi
19:16
@JerryCoffin I'm not sure I'd like that. IME having half a dozen women together in one place for longer than a week is a sure recipe for scolding, screaming, and bitching. A thousand of them for the rest of my life makes me flinch when I only think of it. And that's not even considering the verve-wracking chittering and snickering when they have a friendly moment with each other.
And who do you go and have a beer with when it's just you and a thousand women?! Who do you will sit with around a camp fire, stare into the flames and speak a lot by saying nothing for an hour? Who will slap your shoulder and say, erm, nothing in order to show his appreciation?
And the idea that my boys only have me as their sole role model makes my toenails curl.
evening all
sbi
sbi
@Tony: The sky. Or an operator used to create objects on the free storage.
wow! I didn't even have to ask the question
but you already have the answer ;D
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion That's called familiarity.
19:19
lol
yea
@sbi hahah :P
I've not been here for a while, so I'm kinda out of the loop
anything interesting been going on?
sbi
sbi
@legion You know, I'm a neutrino in disguise.
@TonyTheLion I was just swinging the topic round back to women, when you appeared. How fitting.
@sbi lol, so typical, Every. Damn. Time
I think you guys do that on purpose
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Of course, being a neutrino I could.
spent my day in London, was nice :)
sbi
sbi
19:22
@TonyTheLion Oh, you're still over there?! What about your interview(s)?
@sbi I'm going back tomorrow evening, cause I have my second interview in bxl on Thursday morning
bit nervous, cause this could either turn out good or a dissapointment
I hope it's the first, but you never know, I guess
I hate interviews ;X
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Waitaminute. Aren't you with Uncle Karl because you have interviews over there?
haha
@sbi who is Uncle Karl?
@sbi I had an interview here, got declined
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion UK.
19:25
I had another email today, from a company in Oxford that might want to see me
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Oh, I see. I'm sorry. So the next one is in bxl? What's that?
so I might come back to the UK, lol
@sbi Brussels
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion I see. (I could have guessed that one, really.)
sbi
sbi
Well, I guess I need to go to bed soon. I stayed up too late the last two, no, three, no, four... OMG, way too many nights.
I'll keep my fingers crossed for you on Thursday, @Tony. Good luck!
19:28
@sbi Thanks :)
sbi
sbi
I just realized, @Jerry, "May you be the sole man to a thousand women" might be the, um, French? version of the Chinese curse. :)
Anyway, good night, folks!
sweet dreams :)
bah I can't sleep
@TonyTheLion where do you live?
my eyes hurt, but can't sleep wtf
19:45
@Nils in Belgium
ah are there many good dev jobs?
@Nils in Belgium not that many, but London is pretty good, if you have a degree :)
ah..
I do
but from a school nobody knows
lol, still a degree
you will probably be able to get a stanford master for free online
no joke
and.. you don't?
19:48
:)
@Nils no degree no
u can get a bachelor degree here and drink every evening
master was a bit harder :)
are you looking for a job?
@Nils where is that?
don't tell :D
yes
19:51
and I want a challenging one, otherwise tiger will turn (mentally) into a kitten ;)
they have jobs like java programer for a specific framework which require a bachelor
makes me wanna puke
yea, ridiculous, isn't it
who the hell wants to code Java for a living anyways
lol
well it is a good way to make money
I guess yea
19:55
Well it depends on what you have to code, but most of the Java jobs seem to me like read something from the db and display it in the browser.
@Nils :)
@Nils really?
That is perfect
@LewsTherin huh? sounds rather boring to me
19:59
@TonyTheLion it is but at the moment I won't care...imagine working for a bank where they pay big bucks for a little script
I can do more interesting stuff at my leisure
@LewsTherin haha yea, I guess
ok I am a banker doesn't see this so I'm removing the comment lol
damn! I can't
Xeo
Xeo
omg
not that error again...
> d:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 10.0\VC\include\cmath(19): error C2039: 'acosf' : is not a member of '`global namespace''
oh I've had that before,
can't even remember how to get rid of it
Xeo
Xeo
20:03
same
what did you include?
Xeo
Xeo
I think it was something with the include priorities
Yeah, that stuff is annoying
Xeo
Xeo
@LewsTherin <SDL.h> :P
And with that, all kind of stuff
oh never used that...that probably conflicts with the cmath if it is acosf in it
20:05
hmmm
I love how firefox looks...too bad it's a memory hogging bitch
Xeo
Xeo
Argh. I hate that error -.-
And atm I really don't have the nerve to deal with it...
what does sdl.h have? Any math functions?
Xeo
Xeo
afaik it got nothing to do with SDL
<cmath> basically includes the C <math.h> header, opens namespace std and introduces all the identifiers into it with using xxx;
oh I thought it was the games programming library my bad
Xeo
Xeo
20:14
so it seems <cmath> doesn't even get a chance to include <math.h>, where everything is defined
1
Q: cmath compilation error when compiling old C++ code in VS2010

Mike O'MalleyI've inherited a few C++ files and an accompanying makefile, which I'm trying to bring into VS2010 as a solution. I've created an empty project and added the appropriate C++ and header (.hpp) files for one of the makefile targets. When I try to compile the project, however, I immediately get a ...

const blah* const asdf;
@Xeo or could it be this?
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3376224/ms-vc-iostream-compile-error
pointer can't be changed and data of asdf neither, right?
Xeo
Xeo
@Nils right
20:17
@Nils yeah
Xeo
Xeo
@LewsTherin It's all .cpp
I think it is read from right to left
Xeo
Xeo
The problem is, it compiled before
@Xeo why not just try math.h ?
Xeo
Xeo
On another Pc, but it compiled
@LewsTherin I never actually included <cmath> ;)
20:19
@Xeo uh maybe you should then ha ha
Weird, was the PC windows?
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, same VS version
Maybe it was a fluke....very odd
const int* const asdf;
how do you read it again?
Xeo
Xeo
const-pointer to const-int
asdf is a const variable of type pointer to an int that is const
right
Xeo
Xeo
20:22
int const* const bla; is how I'd write it
easy read from right to left
Yep, makes more sense
So asdf is constant pointer to a costant int
Xeo
Xeo
Hm
Now I even forced the source file to compile as C++
@Nils if you knew this why ask?
Xeo
Xeo
20:24
same errors still
unsure, it is late
@Nils ok
@Xeo that's why I kinda hate Vis Studio
Just include the damn header file and save yourself some grief lol
Xeo
Xeo
20:37
@LewsTherin which one? :P
@Xeo whichever one that works lol
Xeo
Xeo
#include <SDL.h>

int main(int,char**){ return 0; }
having just that, it compiles
including any stdlib stuff, it breaks again in cmath
include cmath before SDL.h
did you try compiling with .c file
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, got nothing to do with SDL. :)
Emptied main.cpp, just included <string>, same errors
And did you include any of the cmath or math.h files? Otherwise I don't see how you expect it to work...
Xeo
Xeo
20:51
Like I said, I didn't include anything but <string>
And it should work, it's the damn stdlib lol
Ok, works now.
Either 1) broken compiler or 2) not saving or not compiling the file you're editing.
Xeo
Xeo
The include priorities have been bad again. :)
didn't inherit from project defaults and just manually added $(VCInstallDir)include atop all other include dirs
21:09
Honest?
I'd read it as:
// please delete this
done :)
@RMartinhoFernandes How're you?
No really, if you're writing code like that, don't. If it's already written, refactor it.
you avada kedavra it ? lol
@RMartinhoFernandes nah , i always follow guidelines told by my superiors :)
@MrAnubis I know I'm supposed to be pissed off at something, but I can't remember what it was now that I had some sleep. Other than that, I'm fine.
21:11
@LewsTherin lol , spell was broken , by the way how're you?
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes what was there, what was there? :(
@Xeo a broken spell?
@MrAnubis I'm trying to be fine, but bloody Sql! :(
Yourself?
@LewsTherin good here :)
@Xeo int* (*(*(*x)[10])[1]);
Xeo
Xeo
21:13
@RMartinhoFernandes My eyes!
@MrAnubis excellent! I'm going to eat brb
@RMartinhoFernandes yikes!
by the way most of the C++ declarations are read from right to left , right?
Xeo
Xeo
Damn, how was that C syntax defuscator called?
@MrAnubis Right. Except when it's not :( it's a mess.
@MrAnubis thought it was left to right
Xeo
Xeo
right, thanks
@RMartinhoFernandes the website is asking for user pass
Xeo
Xeo
interesting, cdecl.com is protected
Got the TLD wrong. It's .org.
aah working now:)
what if some one asks questions like this in interview -> stackoverflow.com/questions/5429045/…
i'll surely be dead :(
Xeo
Xeo
21:22
@MrAnubis I'm bad with probability
I am sure not more than me
@MrAnubis You're not supposed to know everything, you know.
And that looks like a bad interview question. Not even the "you can assess how he thinks" argument holds much water here. What if I just answer "I don't know enough about probabilities to answer that, I'd have to google for it"?
yeah that's for sure will be my answer
Xeo
Xeo
"I'd google it" or "I'd ask about it on SO" are actually good answers. Atleast the interviewer knows that you know how to acquire new knowledge
@MrAnubis they won't ask that..from what I've heard you get tested by people who have no idea about programming
21:28
I'd ask about it on SO :)
HR folks
lol
@Xeo Fair point. I wasn't considering that some might not have the ability to acquire new knowledge. I guess I'm making too many assumptions about the interviewee population.
When I had interviews, the techie questions were always asked by programmers, not HR people
@LewsTherin Unfortunately that doesn't prevent them from asking technical questions.
If that seems nonsensical to you, it's because it is.
@TonyTheLion oh then I'm screwed
21:30
@TonyTheLion Interviews are basically divided to two rounds , technical and HR
it used to be that way before
at least this happens in here
and i think for good programming maths has to be good of one , isn't the case?
@MrAnubis you are worrying too much about it... And that's making me nervous
@TonyTheLion will you share some interview (last attended) questions here ?
63
Q: Why does this code crash?

Tony The LionI went to a job interview today and was given this interesting question. Besides the memory leak and the fact there is no virtual dtor, why does this code crash? #include <iostream> //besides the obvious mem leak, why does this code crash? class Shape { public: virtual void draw() c...

21:34
Any perl coders here?
@RMartinhoFernandes that was some tricky question for sure ( a real pointer hero can solve it)
Yes, this is the Lounge<Perl>. Oh wait.
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh hey, runaway question/answer.
@LucDanton Pretty much.
21:36
@ R. Martinho yeah they took down #!Lounge perl
I can only assume the question got popular from people not that familiar with C++ but familiar with a language that supports polymorphic arrays (reference semantics come to mind).
I cant see the problem weird
not
@LucDanton Someone once tried to explain it by saying something like "It's a subtle issue, people get interested".
@LewsTherin There are answers.
(Mine is great btw. Look at it, 100+ votes)
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm not looking at them I want to figure it out myself
21:38
apart from the obvious memory leak can't figure it out :(
i had figured out answer of that without looking at answers ( i had my answer there)
i am idiot smart sometimes :)
Does he mean crash at run or compile time?
Crash usually means runtime.
2
@RMartinhoFernandes That's right. The other baffling property of runaway questions/anwsers isn't so much that it has attracted interest at all though, it's why this one did and not one of the other one regarding the exact same situation.
21:40
@RMartinhoFernandes grins
The only reason I can think of is because the member variables are not initialized
but then draw doesn't use them..so why should it care?
Nope.
This message contained spoilers. Don't look at the history if you don't want to be spoiled.
@LewsTherin Good analysis, the initialized variables aren't touched so that can't be the problem.
@MrAnubis What? It should!
@RMartinhoFernandes right , pardon me
@LewsTherin my mistake
21:42
Oh fuck
I see
Each pointer points to an invalid location
@LucDanton I guess lucky timing will have to explain it.
If it gets enough interest early on, it stays longer on the front page and garners more views (and then this feedback loop can go on for a while).
Wait is that wrong?
Shape * shapes = new Rectangle[10];
yes:)
that just creates an array of of Rectangle pointers but there is no actually object reference in each element...?
@LewsTherin That isn't good style, but it doesn't crash.
21:44
It's dangerous but not yet invalid.
So it isn't the cause of the crash? Bloody hell!
@LewsTherin new Rectangle[10] will construct 10 Rectangles. The whole array is initialized
Dangerous meaning that you have to make a downcast to retrieve the first element to the array.
@MrAnubis Ssh, don't spoil it.
@RMartinhoFernandes pardon me again
@RMartinhoFernandes Wait, there's such an algorithm to the front-page?
Damn, I'm confused why would I need to downcast it?
@LucDanton Don't know details about it, but it seems to be a function of posts, edits, votes or views, and age.
There was an incorrect statement here, born out of some confusion.
@LewsTherin To do array operations like indexing or delete[].
@JerryCoffin Funny, because that's what happened.
21:48
Shape * shapes = new Rectangle[10];
Returns 10 rect objects...so shapes point to the first Rectangle object...to move I have to increment..the compiler will figure out the amount of bytes to move...I * can't * see it
@LucDanton ah yeah I see
@LewsTherin See, that's where your assumptions are wrong.
@LewsTherin The compiler will not figure out the amount of bytes to move.
It's not an array of Shape so a pointer to Shape is not a valid iterator of the array.
oh, it will actually move by less bytes ?
You can see where the problem arises here: new[] returns a pointer and pointers are overloaded to either be handles to something (aka the CS nullable reference) or iterators of an array.
@LewsTherin Likely.
21:50
@LewsTherin You're not allowed to increment a pointer that is not a pointer to an element of an array anyway.
@LucDanton new returns a pointer
to the array yeah ?
To the first element.
Right...so shapes[0] gets the first rectangle object
Right.
And shapes[1]?
shapes is not a pointer to the first element of the array.
shapes is a pointer to a suboject of the first element of the array.
21:53
@RMartinhoFernandes the second rectangle object
No.
You can't do that.
@LucDanton is there a difference?
3 mins ago, by Luc Danton
@LewsTherin You're not allowed to increment a pointer that is not a pointer to an element of an array anyway.
Let's demonstrate with another example.
struct T { int i; char data[20]; };
T* array = new T[20];
21:54
int* subobject = &array->i;
subobject + 1 is invalid here, can you understand that?
Yeah because it is pointing at the member variable of first object
not the first object itself
@LucDanton (Actually, it's valid. But let's discuss this after you finish your point.)
although is the address of i not the same as subobject?
shapes also do not point to the first object itself.
@RMartinhoFernandes Isn't that for C?
I mean array
&array is the same as &array->i Just different types
21:57
It's true that (void*)subobject == (void*)array but that's a technicality and not useful in actual code.
@LewsTherin Types are important.
@LewsTherin And being different types makes subobject + 1 different from array + 1.
Types matter in pointer arithmetic.
@LucDanton There's a follow-up question here: stackoverflow.com/questions/7197677. You can treat the subobject pointer as a pointer to an array of one, and that makes subobject + 1 a pointer to one past the end.
Types aren't here just to badger the programmers, they are part of the contract between you and the implementation.
So in actual fact the shapes does not point to Rectangle object but to height
It points to the Shape subobject.

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