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09:01
But according to this, both can be used for aggregate initialization.
70
Q: Is there a difference in C++ between copy initialization and direct initialization?

rlbondSuppose I have this function: void my_test() { A a1 = A_factory_func(); A a2(A_factory_func()); double b1 = 0.5; double b2(0.5); A c1; A c2 = A(); A c3(A()); } In each grouping, are these statements identical? Or is there an extra (possibly optimizable) copy in so...

@Maxpm So?
@Jefffrey That answers the question for (), but I'm unclear about how that carries over to {}.
@Maxpm hence "uniform"
@Dialecticus 42. — rubenvb 10 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
09:03
@BartekBanachewicz Both = both
It always depends on the data type
1
Q: Initialization difference with or without Curly braces in C++11

techfunWe can initialize the variable in two ways in C++11 One: int abc = 7; Two: int abc {7}; What is the difference between these two methods? How compiler treats them differently or the way these codes are executed?

@Xeo okey I can't C++
we know
you fucked up the language
I heard you were on the commitee meeting
part of the blame is on you
yeah
unfortunately I was the only one to vote against many of the fuckups
09:07
@JerryCoffin true, but I'm not that good in scripting that I know the answer to the questions.
the worst part is that I know about it and can't even condemn you to death for it
Someone is tweeting German words at me I don't understand what's happening
@Coolen meh, there are always people dumber than you
@BartekBanachewicz Puppy C++ is a better place.
@Jefffrey I'm still not seeing a clear difference between T t = {a, b}; and T t{a, b};.
09:09
@Maxpm What's T?
I know, but it was hard to find, so I got stuck with being not allowed to ask questions or comment on other peoples questions.
So I just endlessly edit other peoples questions
you won't lift the question ban by edits I think
@Jefffrey is random_device a Singleton type?
@Jefffrey Well, it could be anything. That's part of what I'm trying to figure out: how T's identity changes what the statement is and what it's doing.
But I just found this question, which I'm reading now.
@abergmeier What? There is no problem. So of course it doesn't appear. (I think I don't know what you meant with common_type and or problem there?) — sehe 15 secs ago
anyone else understand?
09:12
-2
A: Generate random numbers uniformly over an entire range

Alien01I just found this on the Internet. This should work: DWORD random = ((min) + rand()/(RAND_MAX + 1.0) * ((max) - (min) + 1));

lmao
@Jefffrey are different instances of random_device somehow different?
@BartekBanachewicz What's a "Singleton type"?
@Jefffrey a type that has only one value.
@BartekBanachewicz he posted a (bad) dupe answer on his own question?
@sehe that's w/e; "I just found this on the Internet" is a real deal
09:13
Do not use random_device :v
It is garbage.
@BartekBanachewicz Like std::nullptr_t?
@Maxpm mhm
@Rapptz why now?
it should be backed by hardware generators when possible
I think std::random_device only does something on linux.
You think?
well, it works on Windows, somehow.
09:15
Would you be surprised if it was broken on MSVC? :v
Doesn't do anything on Windows. Does something on Linux.
Haven't tried anywhere else.
Same on Mac OS X apparently.
Also it's not required to be useful, making it useless
Yup.
distributions are broken in MSVC
09:15
MinGW doesn't implement it.
What are you guy talking about?
Yeah, as I found out a few weeks (months?) ago :(
random_device can be a stupid PRNG and have no entropy whatsoever
talking about C++ is very sad
09:16
real men need no entropy
Literally zero guarantees, which means you have to go through OS-specific things anyway
Which makes it useless
I just stick to std::time(nullptr) again.
and I have literally suggested that to a guy 5 minutes ago
and he said it solved his problem
now I feel bad.
09:17
next level seeding :)
@Rapptz That's not a replacement :v
Works for me :v
If you want that then you might as well use random_device and not care whether it has entropy or not
using random_device didn't give me random results on Windows using MinGW.
09:19
fuck people using C string handling in our code at work
Apr 9 at 3:29, by Rapptz
@R.MartinhoFernandes std::random_device looks useless on my end
god
what the fuck were they thinking
is it 1980 again
it literally malloc
Fuck me.
What are the alternatives? Boost?
Not what I'm into bud.
@Rapptz How do you know?
he he
you can measure it you know
Cute.
yeah, but thats boring
Hmm.
But std::mt19937 is reliable no?
09:25
Yeah that's different
@CatPlusPlus random_device::entropy() is required to tell you if it's a proper implementation with actual (OS-provided) entropy, or just a fallback prng, isn't it?
@Rapptz How?
@Jefffrey heya !
@Jefffrey it's pure
@Jefffrey One is a distribution, the other is a generator.
09:27
@jalf Yes, but then you have to account for that, so you might as well skip the dance entirely
And just use OS services
So, in <random> all faith is lost?
no
also fuck all haswell machines are busy.
I think the only ones that don't do sane std::random_device is MinGW
09:32
Yeah, that's nice.
@Rapptz Nah. They're both generators. One of them is potentially backed by a source of entropy.
@CatPlusPlus Boost.Random.
Same difference
Not random_device at any rate
fuck fuck fuck
09:34
@Xeo All this does is let it work with explicit?
Xeo
Xeo
yes
And it'd be great
oh then I'm fine with it
std::tuple<int, int> f() {
    return { 0, 1 };
} // yay
is there anyone who can OpenGL
I guess that actually makes it closer to "universal init" :v
09:35
@R.MartinhoFernandes doesn't that work yet?
Who called it that anywho?
@R.MartinhoFernandes useless without a, b := f();
std::tie(a, b) = f(); // meh
> GL_INVALID_OPERATION is generated if a geometry shader is active and mode is incompatible with the input primitive type of the geometry shader in the currently installed program object.
hm
you know, driver, you might be right.
09:36
@Rapptz int a,b; std::tie(a, b) = f(); FTFY
@Abyx that :/
Meh, multiple return values.
Xeo
Xeo
@Abyx Meh, unlikely to happen in C++
because it'd totally overhaul how declarations work
Multiple returns are overrated.
using a tuple seems to be fine
09:40
I use multiple returns all the time in Lua but never had a use for them in C++.
I typically write this in C++
struct FooResult {
};
FooResult Foo (...) {
}
The thing is, that multiple returns in C++ cry out for a compound type
Uh no, it cries for tuple support at language level
@BartekBanachewicz thats what i meant
Multiple returns are not overrated. They have use cases.
09:42
but it's not particularly convenient to be honest, esp for a lot of small functions
Don't put more garbage into C++...
@Jefffrey That's not what overrated means.
it would be substantially more useful if you could initialize multiple members from a single tuple, I feel.
My view is that if the n values belong together they should be together (so who cares about tie?), and if they don't belong together then I should probably design the function better.
@Arcoth language support for primitive types is not garbage
09:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes They are two different sentences; hence the period.
@DeadMG You mean like aggregate initialization?
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Isomorphism between a tuple and a struct with the tuple types as members (in order)!
@Arcoth Does not perform anything even remotely like that.
and tuple is a primitive type
Usually when I want multiple return types I just use a struct.
09:43
@Xeo Is still not really the same.
Structural typing all the way
(,) all the way
When do you guys want multiple returns?
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz auto foo{ struct { ... } result; return result; } :D
Dunno, I sometimes do
09:44
@BartekBanachewicz That's a pair.
(,,)
that's a small sea creature
@R.MartinhoFernandes x and y positions!
@BartekBanachewicz That's unusable.
@Rapptz wrong case
09:44
I'm writing a REST API right now, and I'm returning (HTTP code, object) from verb handlers vOv
use a compound position type by all means here
@Rapptz Nope, you write a POD for that
And unpack it level higher
Those actually make up 99% of my multiple return type use cases in Lua. :(
return a literal
09:45
You don't really think about it when it's a natural part of the language
or write a Point constructor, really
return x, y is silly
In C++ land I use a vector class
Lua is simple, but that's just...
I see no reason to not use a vector class in Lua
@R.MartinhoFernandes first
@Rapptz You mean a vector class template
09:46
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you think that's bad, Lua uses multiple return types for error handling
@Arcoth no, he meant vec2
oh k
@Rapptz Yeah, I was expecting that too :|
yeah, C land
@Jefffrey Yep, totally not overrated.
09:46
it also has error, though :F
Also in map's iterators.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what?
@Arcoth Unnecessarily pedantic.
Multiple returns don't make working with that code significantly less boilerplatey.
well I partially agree that a function, denoted a -> b, has one value returned
09:48
collect_results;
branch_on_one_result { do_stuff; }
else { other_stuff; }
now, how do you denote compound values...
Multiple returns make collect_results look prettier. :\
@DeadMG You could write a lil' template to match a tuple to a aggregate
I learned this a few days ago.
09:49
@Arcoth No, you really couldn't.
Gimme a sec to show what i mean.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's literally the only way to know if the value has been inserted.
lol
@Rapptz yeah, you have to unpack two
09:50
I've never used the information given to me by insert.
I assume if it didn't insert then it'll throw std::bad_alloc or something
Then it must be useless.
lolwat no
It probably is.
@Rapptz in associative containers it's way more useful
09:51
It must totally justify some syntactic sugar.
When would insertion not take place outside of bad memory allocation?
@Rapptz When there's already a key of that value in the map.
Xeo
Xeo
element already there?
Destructuring a tuple is a more readable way to use information contained within a tuple
09:52
@Rapptz ...
@CatPlusPlus It still keeps all the other boilerplate.
I don't know what boilerplate you're talking about anyway :v
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
collect_results;
branch_on_one_result { do_stuff; }
else { other_stuff; }
@DeadMG :V useless it is then
For me anyway.
of course
09:53
@Rapptz Most of the time, you don't need to know whether there was already an element in the map by that key, but sometimes you do.
especially when it comes to if you're making a concurrent_unordered_map instead of a regular unordered_map.
The committee should make future decisions based on how useful features are to rapptz.
I haven't ran into a situation when I cared if there was an element in the map yet.
It's the difference in naming results result[0] or a_thing_with_name, dunno who argued this reduces boilerplate
Or std::get<0> whatever
@Jefffrey They're doing a pretty good job!
@Rapptz That clearly means it doesn't exist!
09:54
Also "multiple returns values are overrated" -> basically only std::map uses it in the entire standard library
imo named arguments are more useful.
@CatPlusPlus I didn't say it doesn't.
Why are you guys generalising my statements?
I explicitly put "I" in all those sentences.
@Rapptz It's not hard to envision. Just test if a sequence contains any duplicate elements.
I forgot what this is about like 5 minutes ago
09:56
tuple unpacking I think
@Jefffrey What a surprise. In a language that doesn't support multiple return values, hardly anything uses multiple return values? :p
@Rapptz who is overrating them?
@Jefffrey The Overraters
Tuple unpacking is useful syntax sugar
@R.MartinhoFernandes tbh, I use a set for that.
09:57
@jalf then you are overrated :P
@Rapptz It has the same kind of overloads.
Yeah I figure.
@jalf Also poor support for conveniently initializing them in many cases.
Welp
Time to eat.
09:58
@jalf There's really little else where they'd be useful, though.
I'm sleepy
I'd like { int i, string s } foo();
this early in the day?
Sleep.
Time to sleep.
09:59
at least saves you from inventing stupid names with _result appended
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz plsno
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, very progressive.
Meh, it's a tuple
Xeo
Xeo
15 mins ago, by Xeo
@Rapptz auto foo{ struct { ... } result; return result; } :D
woops, should've been auto foo(){ ... }
09:59
okey.

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