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18:00
@LewsTherin why linke not work? anyway, i mean as soon as introducing naming. naming values, naming actions, those are the two most basic things to learn first. then how to think of named values as variables.
i find it somewhat disconcerting that most teachers have no clue what's basic and what's not in their chosen field. however, bjarne got that. so i sort of admire him.
@AlfPSteinbach works now...the gmail acc I was using doesn't support gdocs..
It's weird that you'd think functions should be taught early...I think after loops at least
@LewsTherin no, as soon as possible
18:04
@Lews The common order to teach is variables, expressions i=2+3, loops or functions.
naming is the most primitive, fundamental thing in programming and maths and generally in human thinking. without names you can't abstract. and you can't talk about things.
I don't really understand this definition of abstract...
as in think in a problem domain or what?
@CaptainGiraffe yep, I concur
Abstract is commonly thought of as a simplification
@LewsTherin to abstract is to think at a higher level of abstraction, ignoring irrelevant details
To abstract a BMW M5 is to regard it as a car.
18:06
so, i started with section 2.4 "naming things", and in there, first, naming actions
or a vehicle
ok fair enough...i gotta catch the bus
@LewsTherin Functions (or any similar construct) are as fundamental as variables, IMO.
when I get back I will talk later about this...
@CatPlusPlus I think so too....but I dunno if many students think that
Is Lews hanging here insted of doing actual coding? =) Experience by assimilation? =)
18:08
Until they get familiar with programming that is
Variables, then functions. Unless it's a functional language, then the distinction might become blurry.
by the way, i think a perfect programming language would have just one uniform naming mechanism. same syntax no matter what you want to name. i think that would be nice. :-)
lol this question isn't for me... lol @CaptainGiraffe I am coding while chatting
I love chatting here
way to go Lews =)
Meh, names.
18:10
haha :P
I go with foo all the time.
Have to head later dudes
@Cat so you really like scheme, and everything is foo?
No, I don't like Scheme.
As far as foo is concerned I'm partial to bar.
Is there a good guide to diff c++98 to c++11? I'm still teaching the 98 stuff with 03 being completely neglected in the curriculum, but 0x has to be adressed in my opinion.
18:16
I was raised with foo and never questioned it. Then I had an experimental phase with mumble and frotz. (But that was back in college. It's something you grow out of.)
Admit it, it was on drugs.
@CaptainGiraffe Why 98?
Yes, it was Vim.
Nothing really useful as far as teaching the language came from 03.
So I have been sticking with the same stories.
As a for instance. The very popular boost is never mentioned in the curriculum.
I think important stuff for beginners from C++11 would be auto, lambdas and maybe range for.
hello folks! :)
Boost should be at least mentioned.
18:19
auto and lambdas are pretty much the reason I want to add to the curriculum
It's the standard non-standard standard library.
Well mentioned it is, but nowhere near part of the curriculum
@Cat lol yes
Thing is, not autos, but lambdas requires more (instead of different) lectures.
k....im nt sure if this is the right place to ask..but anyways...i have this program in c, written on linux..im creating multiple child processes and doing stuff there..but when i print my output, i get my terminal promp even before the whole output has been printed...is there any way my terminal can wait till the whole program is done?
Wait for the children to finish.
did that
18:22
flush your outputs
@Urban child workers are illegal in norway
umm...how do i do that?
@AlfPSteinbach thanx for the heads up :P
Tsk, tsk, did you never learn to flush.
no idea in c, in c++ its cout::endl
std::flush to be precise.
18:24
He is indian, you cant bash him for that
std::endl is \n followed by std::flush.
stdio has fflush.
@CaptainGiraffe srsly? you wanna go there? :|
to bash? I'm in bash constantly
thx anyways...
18:25
Just trying to work a pun in. No harm intended
We should hang a warning sign outside of the room. "Sense of humour required to enter".
And then sing.
That would void at least half of the jokes we actuall make
Stupid spellchecker, can't you read my mind and just know what I meant?! shakes fist
My jokes are un-a-voidable.
There was a time in the past when the spell-checker could pass the turing test. Imagine that!
It surely wasn't Word spellchecker.
18:28
my theory is at 90% of all humor is about showing our teeth as a kind of aggressive gesture which convinces us that we are not afraid of whatever is mentioned in the joke
Clippy? Yes it was =)
I'm too lazy to use dashes properly today.
but i don't understand the remaining 10%
Ah, those would be mine.
@Alf really? The clippy joke is universally funny, and no pink buttocks are shown.
18:29
uh, clippy joke? is that the monty python joke-that-kills?
Is this going to be about naked monkeys again?
@Alf Double-riposte the joke-that-kills is destroyed by the(Ze) Germans based on the new neutrino research
he, well. "as far as we know, our program has never had an undetected error"
My memory is impeccable, I cannot recall anything that I have forgotten.
But of course this is the c++ forum, last week I did in my c++ lecture, the classic "Only my friends can touch my private parts"
Hilarity and lawsuits ensues
18:49
@CaptainGiraffe i think the first C++ joke i ever saw was the "evolution of a programmer". it started with a console hello world, and ended with a Microsoft COM/OLE version of several hundred lines of code. it was funny because the last version really was the minimum way to do it. :-)
1
Q: How do you check whether a Window is Maximised in Gtk?

IntermediateHackerI want to give a window a specific property only when it is maximised and change it back when the maximised state ends. I am using Gtk# , but all GTK binding answers are welcome. What I am looking for is something like this (pseudocode): OnMaximise += new Mhandler(); Mhandler(){ property = tru...

Ok I'm spoiling my SO April 1:st joke here. The last well written C piece I have ever seen was from Franz Schubert. I was gunning for C# and Chopin, but well =)
Maybe Jon Skeet would have a rep accelerating answer as to why my sheet music didn't execute =)
19:13
I understand what people were saying about C# being garbage collected
I think I've figured it out. The tag is active when I'm sleeping.
@R. Martinho No not at all. SO has a quite sophisticated heuristic in detecting when you are online. It can even detect your coffee breaks.
You should really cut down on your coffee
I haven't touched coffee in two months.
(I'm detoxing.)
Really? I'm a coffee addict of the highest degree, whats your experience?
@R. Martinhoand of course why?
I was having like three or four a (normal) day.
And I was happy :)
Then my treacherous stomach decided he wouldn't let me enjoy it anymore.
So I had to stop.
19:23
Me too =) 6 strong big cups. 6-8 dl in the morning
Sry to hear that. Would anti-acids help?
I'm approaching 40 do you think my age is a problem?'
I have a mixture of tea and coffee every day probably 3 teas and 1 coffee :D Never had an issue
@RMartinhoFernandes Try Prilosec. I took that for two weeks.. no more issues with coffee. I can even drink orange juice with no issue
@0A0D Yeah, right, instead having coffee, I'll be having coffee and some drug.
Doesn't sound like much of an improvement.
@RMartinhoFernandes No, you take the drug for two weeks and that's it
@RMartinhoFernandes =)
19:25
it kills the acid pumps in the stomach
that are overactive
I wish I did it years ago.. my life is so pleasant without acid reflux :)
My last acid reflux(not counting the bad oyster last year) was from drinking to much bad ethanol on my 18:th birthday =) That was fortunately 20 years ago =)
I read a story about someone who would take a normal amount of antacid and they still got bad acid problems, then, when they stopped taking it, they improved. It was because the antacid was causing the stomach to overcompensate and produce more acid than it was meant to
@KianMayne Seems very likely; in a particular case.
@KianMayne Yes, that can happen. It's like a vicious cycle. There might be an underlying issue in the stomach (i.e. ulcers). Requires bloodwork though
@0A0D I don't think I have acid reflux.
19:30
@RMartinhoFernandes Ok
Or I don't know what acid reflux feels like.
The body rhythm is of course very helpful. Acid reflux is a painful experience to you upper chest area.
And that's why I don't like to self-medicate.
I like to self medicate my contacts =)
I avoid even simple over-the-counter painkillers or anti-flu drugs.
19:31
*contact lenses =)
over-the-couter anti flu drugs?
Anti-common cold maybe. (Translation issue.)
The anti-flu drug was not so much for you as it was a benevolent action not to carry it on
kk =)
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't know if you are American, but we have medical issues due to anxiety and stress
so it leads to other issues... downward spiral
Coffee sucks anyway.
If I get to be neutrinoed to 18 years old when I die I would become a psychologist =)
@CatPlusPlus K, please give an alternative
Tea is all unicorns and rainbows.
No tea is nowhere near coffee
@CatPlusPlus +1
I don't know if I was understood, I was saying that tea is great and coffee can suck it.
Hello
Anyone here?
19:37
...Yes?
No
@CatPlusPlus Really? I read the opposite! =)
I have a problem on my hands.
5
Q: How to goto and longjmp in C++?

Code MakerI don't usually code C++, but a strange comp sci friend of mine got sick of looking at my wonderful FORTRAN programs and challenged me to rewrite one of them in C++, since he likes my C++ codes better. (We're betting money here.) Exact terms being that it needs to be compilable in a modern C++ co...

@Code So do I.
Try washing them.
19:38
I asked this question for the purposes of playing a practical joke on one of my friends, but the question is damn real.
Mine is water souluble
@CodeMaker It was answered and closed appropriately.
You don't use longjmp in C++ under any circumstances.
Never, ever.
Just don't even think about it. Forget it even exists.
0A0D, not quite.
And on goto, we have a FAQ entry.
19:40
There are a bunch of useful answers on the goto, yes, but not so much on the longjmp front.
To his defense I have seen lngjmp in virus code
@CodeMaker No really, SO is not for practical jokes or for winning bets. SO is for programming problems.
I don't know Fortran, but if you're looking for a cross-function goto, you're not going to find it in C++.
SO is for asking serious questions, but I don't see why I should be judged for having a not-so-serious purpose in wanting to know the answers.
No, really, just don't even think about longjmp.
It doesn't exist, period.
19:42
Well SO is for asking for questions that can be authoritatively answered and found in a google search.
Google search is telling me right now that you can use void pointers with gotos, something none of those answers did. :-/
> Clearly my goal here is not to give him readable C++. – Code Maker 27 mins ago
Anyway, I checked stackoverflow.com/faq
And it didn't say anything about goto related questions.
Computed gotos aren't standard, AFAIR.
When you have to say this, it stops being a serious question.
19:43
No, my intentions stop being serious. The question stays serious.
And the answers you got are serious.
@Code Then you need to rephrase and rethink
And incomplete.
The only thing missing from answers is "don't use longjmp" written in large, friendly letters.
No, no, the answers are complete: "There is no reason to prefer longjmp over goto if you have only one function. But if you have only one function, again, you really aren't writing C++ and you'll be better off in the long run just maintaining your Fortran."
19:45
And that's not an answer. :-/
I feel ignored.
The only reason you want to use longjmp is to "[not] give him readable C++. "
I'm sad.
@Cat Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy used your font! how can you feel ignored?
longjmp can only be used to create bugs.
19:48
or viruses
Besides, your questions shows no research at all, since you're basically asking "please tell me all about these language features for me"
And I'm sorry, but I can't treat "how to write Fortran in C++" question completely seriously.
Rob tells me I can't jump over variable initialization, John Dibling says I can but it causes Undefined Behavior.
You can't jump over variable initialisation with goto.
Good to know, thanks.
What about longjmp?
19:49
It's longjmp that causes UB.
Does that mean goto, with its compiler restrictions, is safe?
Tomalak posted a weird question+answer about it recently.
Thanks, but I can jump over it with longjmp then, okay.\
21
Q: Will using `goto` leak variables?

Tomalak Geret'kalIs it true that goto jumps across bits of code without calling destructors and things? e.g. void f() { int x = 0; goto lol; } int main() { f(); lol: return 0; } Won't x be leaked?

19:50
Again, this triggers UB, bugs and all other bad stuff.
Do. Not. Use. Longjmp.
See you could have tried search.
Ever.
Oh, I was looking for that post.
I thought it was tagged with .
That question was the first hit for [c++][goto].
@CatPlusPlus No longer. It's not really a FAQ.
Bow down to my 1337 search skillz.
1337 h4ck3r.
It's h4xx0rz.
19:55
Now that is the comment I would have liked to end the paper by the neutrino guys. "It's h4x0rz"
"Even though you read this, we know you didn't understand one word."
Maybe we should toss this over to the physics.stack =)
About jumping over initialization
Neutrions.
19:57
Speaking of which, I'm making a list of buzzwords. Here's what I have so far:
can it be done with void pointer labels?
The paper is very well written actually
For gotos?
@Maxpm Don't spam the chat with that! That's certainly a huge list.
What's "void pointer labels"?
19:58
@RMartinhoFernandes Aw, okay. xD
post-its that you willy-nilly throw around
It's a huge list, isn't it?
If it's small enough to fit on one screen, you're not very thorough.
I only have 6 or so words, actually.
I don't have the actual list in front of me. It's in my notebook, and I don't feel like grabbing it.
Clearly, you're new to this field.
If you mean computed gotos, then they're not part of the standard, and therefore we don't really care about them.

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