« first day (1336 days earlier)      last day (3840 days later) » 

16:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes super-glue can be a good way to fix seams that are starting to tear
@JerryCoffin not really, he's explicitly how to create the overload; not the method of protecting it (he already knows how since he explicitly mentions using a std::mutex)
@StackedCrooked No one was carrying super glue. I was carrying USB cables, though.
one should always carry super-glue
The USB cable idea was pure genius.
@MartinJames yeah, I hate to admit it, but @R.MartinhoFernandes, you did a good job with the whole thing. Thanks for having us over, and for coordinating everything, even if you sometimes did provide entertainment as well, by spending 4 hours getting lost in your own city. :p
13
16:02
Guys, any specific ideas (or maybe wishes?) for how to design a mocking framework that makes sense in C++11?
and now, back to the regular scheduled sarcasm. :p
@jalf Meh - that's nothing. I got lost in my own hotel. I got trapped and had to phone reception to send someone to let me out from the 'stairway to hell'.
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf IT'S NOT PIZZA!
@MartinJames yeah, I remember that. That was quite impressive :D
@MartinJames Of course, you also pulled off the "biergarten is straight east from the station" stunt. :D
FTR I lost the cable because I thought it would be a good idea to cycle a bit with makeshift footwear.
16:06
@TonyTheLion @Tony
"The next question category is food. What is it? It's round, it's dough-based, has cheese and other toppings and is commonly cooked in an open oven?"
@MartinJames Pie?
@CatPlusPlus Seen this?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit that was unexpected
user image
9
16:07
@CatPlusPlus see this?
@jalf One would think you'd also thank me for providing entertainment ;)
@FilipRoséen-refp Mentioning mutex doesn't mean he really knows how. It's a bit like answering 'how do you implode a building?" with "using dynamite". In both cases, yes, you probably do use that--but to be at all useful, you need to know where and how to apply it.
@Griwes No
@TonyTheLion its a trap
@Jefffrey All the puns.
@JerryCoffin "how do you vaporise a whale?" "using dynamite"
@JerryCoffin Your mismatched quotes are upsetting me.
2
16:11
At least it's not `this silly nonsense'
@jalf Anyway, you're welcome :) It was totally worth not using those days to continue my trip and reach Copenhagen.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oops. Sorry 'bout that. [See what I did there?] Unfortunately, it's too late to edit...
On that note, I'd better get to work. TTYL.
Do you guys have any idea what type of diagram this is? It's not UML and it's not Entity-Relationship.
And apparently it matters. That's what the professor says...
Xeo
Xeo
Looks like UML?
UML does not have the double arrow for "many" AFAIK.
16:15
@MartinJames It sounds like you a total fucking mess the whole time.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit don't you hate it when someone a word?
@Jefffrey non-standard UML?
@Jefffrey Haven't looked carefully enough to be sure, but it looks like Rumbaugh's OMT notation (one of the predecessors to UML).
I'm going to take a guess and suggest that it might be one of the previous languages that were used before UML, and one that was invented in Italy.
16:18
it's more fun looking at people's profile pictures now that it has become so popular authenticating at SO through facebook
Kinda but not quite. OMT almost does not use arrows, but they both express the same thing (relationship between relations)
Well, there were two lifts which were too slow at busy times, so I went looking for stairs. Some of the doors were fire-doors that only opened one-way. Also, there was the complication that there were two hotels in the same building - the Indigo, (where I was staying), and Holiday Inn.

I somehow got into the H.I. side of the building and my keycard would still open some doors but not others. To cut a long story short, I got stuck in a stairwell with no way out except the fire-door to the street outside. I didn't want to use it in case I caused a fire-alert, so I was stuck.
> fire-alert
@FilipRoséen-refp some people have a fake FB profile pic tho, like me. my SO one is real but I used a fake one on FB and my website
@LightnessRacesinOrbit AKA evacuating two hotels and being stuck with some massive bill.
Etienne got really sexist last night when I posted a totally SFW photo of me in my luxury shower :( Said girls can't program
@MartinJames yeah probably a good call
16:23
@LightnessRacesinOrbit well, your profile pic at SO isn't hosted by facebook
@FilipRoséen-refp Indeed.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I'm talking about the "real" facebook users on this site
@FilipRoséen-refp I don't follow.
I wouldn't follow her, either
16:24
@LightnessRacesinOrbit picture hosted by facebook, which means that she signs in using facebook, which means.. well, that's what it means
@FilipRoséen-refp I sign in using Facebook.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit but you have explicitly changed your gravatar to some other thingie, but alright.. rephrase; those who sign in using facebook without changing their default
@FilipRoséen-refp Correct.
erhm.. the enlightened badge is buggy; even if you aren't the first to answer you can get it (if the ones posting before you deletes their posts)
@FilipRoséen-refp I think that's probably by design; the idea would be that you're still enlightened, because you couldn't have learnt anything from a prior post crappy enough to have been deleted.
It's not a "who can post the fastest" badge
I miss my Winter Hat
16:28
@LightnessRacesinOrbit that's not what I'm saying, but "can't learn anything from a soon-to-be-deleted post" is somewhat valid
but only somewhat.
@FilipRoséen-refp ok what're you saying
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I'm not saying that it's "who can post the fastest"-badge, but the description of "first to post an answer with a score >10" certainly isn't accurate
@FilipRoséen-refp ok
@FilipRoséen-refp and yeah to be fair, given the >10 requirement, my thing above about crappy posts is probably bollocks
@LightnessRacesinOrbit lol
@FilipRoséen-refp did all those people get 10 before deletion, then? otherwise, it's not a bug.
i.e. you may be misparsing the description
16:31
@LightnessRacesinOrbit no..
well there you go then
you were the first to post an answer with a score >10
which makes much more sense than the alternative interpretation, I'm sure you'll agree!
> There is no entrance fee.
fuck, I'd love to go
@Jefffrey Exactly!
16:32
@FilipRoséen-refp The deleted question does not have >10. So, it is not a factor at all in the equation for this badge.
It's not "first to answer, and got >10 on that answer"
@LightnessRacesinOrbit "First to answer and accepted with score of 10 or more. This badge can be awarded multiple times. "
(that would be FGITW)
@FilipRoséen-refp Yes, I can read. I've told you several times now what that means.
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, we mock you for that. That doesn't mean it's not appreciated though ;)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ... track the cases where you have recieved this badge, and get back to me.
@FilipRoséen-refp You know, I really can't be fucked to
Write a post on meta if you really care, and watch the downvotes roll in. :)
16:35
@LightnessRacesinOrbit you are one annoying little prick (not that haven't heard that before) in either case: The "rules" doesn't match when the badge is awarded, hence; something is inaccurate. and jftr; I don't mind enough to make a post on meta.
@MartinJames and you ate breakfast at the wrong hotel, don't forget that part :D
Well, that was an enjoyable conversation.
@jalf Well stupid idea, two hotels in one building. Asking for confusion and trouble..
@LightnessRacesinOrbit according to your interpretation (which is the "correct" one) I should have been rewarded it for this post, but the badge list doesn't include it; hence.. your "correct" interpretation doesn't match what is really happening.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit the previous sentence could be summed up with; "next time, just lick your finger and put it in your ear instead of making so much noise".
@LightnessRacesinOrbit <3
@FilipRoséen-refp <3
16:39
there's a lot of love in this room, must be friday.
Xeo
Xeo
@Xeo such fancy symbols are only allowed during christmas, and thanksgiving
16:55
@FilipRoséen-refp Nice dude
dyp
dyp
And now, for something completely different: Does anyone have a recent clang++ and could test something for me? (my setup is broken due to a recent g++ which ICEs when compiling clang++)
dyp
dyp
@Jefffrey Unfortunately, coliru is not always up-to-date. I need a really recent clang++ because I've spotted a different behaviour for g++ and (coliru's) clang++
@40two indeed, him and newton faulkner are my greatest inspirations when it comes to playing the guitar
@dyp show a testcase.
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp X x = static_cast<X&&>(X{}); Is move elision allowed or not?
17:03
@dyp afaik a compiler is not allowed to do move-eilision in that context, but I can look it up for you
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp The Standard forbids it if the temporary is bound to a reference. See the related open-std.org/JTC1/SC22/WG21/docs/cwg_defects.html#1376
@dyp [class.copy]p31
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp That does not prevent g++ from doing it nevertheless
@dyp this could be allowed following the as-if, ie. that not calling the move-ctor doesn't have any observable effects
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp That's why my test type X{} is called loud and yells in any special member function to cout ;)
17:06
but if g++ does move-elision in that case I'd say it's a bug because I doubt that gcc checks so that the move-ctor really has no observable effects
@dyp the observable effects of the default-ctor doesn't matter, it's the observable effects of the copy/move-ctor that is of relevance
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp That's also what I think. But I'd like to back that up with clang++'s behaviour. -- "special member function" includes copy/move ctor, doesn't it?
@dyp surely, but having a statement that invovles default-initialization in that sentence sure makes it confusing, but hold on; I'll test it for you.
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp Also, if there's implementation difference, I think that might help clearing things up in the Standard.
@dyp clang++ has the correct behavior
17:11
and this reminds me of certain programmers on SO: imgur.com/gallery/tkRtKrH
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp I also think that's the case.
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit dat IQ
@dyp in other words; report the bug.
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp Yet, if it were allowed, we could force moving into the return value plus (N)RVO, which is nice to have, instead of "move or copy".
@dyp there's no return-value in this case, but I'm guessing you mean "allowing elision even if a temporary is bound to a temporary reference"
dyp
dyp
17:14
@FilipRoséen-refp Well, not in this case. I imagine something like template<class T> T foo() { return static_cast<T&&>( T{} ); } which produces a compile-time error if T has a deleted move ctor.
@dyp copy-elision takes place after checking if the code is indeed invalid, a compiler should not accept code where taking out the copy-elision would make the code ill-formed
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp Oops, forget it, I misinterpreted /32
struct X {
  X ()         = default;
  X (X const&) = delete;
};

X func () { return {}; }

int main () { X x = func (); } // _never_ valid
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp I thought about that "if overload resolution fails" in /32, which says that a return value is attempted to move, but if that doesn't work, it's copied. But I don't have an example how overload resolution could fail here :(
@FilipRoséen-refp Finally, here's an example of what I meant: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/dd6147d4dd1c61fb
Xeo
Xeo
What about that code?
user1804599
17:27
user1804599
Is this こ? Needs more JPEG. :v
Xeo
Xeo
The second thing?
user1804599
Yeah.
dyp
dyp
@Xeo In the function purr, NRVO could be applied. So that cast could essentially be a std::move that you could apply to return value.
Xeo
Xeo
@dyp NRVO can not be applied
user1804599
17:28
I looked up the kanji and I think it is .
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold One sec
user1804599
But the hiragana next to it is unreadable.
dyp
dyp
@Xeo Why? g++ applies copy elision to X x = static_cast<X&&>( X{} );
@dyp but g++ is doing it because it's doing it wrong, ie. it should not be allowed to use elision in T a = static_cast<T&&> ( T {} );
Xeo
Xeo
That's irrelevant to NRVO
dyp
dyp
17:29
@FilipRoséen-refp Yes, I know, but it seems not to be necessary to forbid copy elision in that case.
@Xeo Oops, you're right.
Ok, I can't come up with a case where that's actually useful. I'll report it.
Thanks @Xeo and @FilipRoséen-refp
Xeo
Xeo
@FilipRoséen-refp Yeah, IIRC copy/move-elision only works from prvalues, and that static_cast makes it an xvalue.
@dyp you should report it even if it's "not actually useful", if it's in the standard (and currently not a DR) and an implementation violates it (without a suitable diagnostic or similar): it's a bug.
user1804599
@Xeo okay
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, I think Richard Smith asked in an NB comment to allow copy-elision through xvalues
Wasn't accepted though
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp I'll report it as a bug to g++ because I think it's not useful to have it. Otherwise (i.e. not in this case), I might address the Standard/EWG mailing list to propose relaxing copy elision.
17:33
@Xeo indeed, as stated in [class.copy]p31 bullet 3, if a temporary is bound to a reference it cannot be copy-elided
@dyp you got my blessing
Xeo
Xeo
1 min ago, by Xeo
Btw, I think Richard Smith asked in an NB comment to allow copy-elision through xvalues
not that anyone ever asks for my blessing.. but heck
Xeo
Xeo
Originally stemming from my questions why auto-move is tied to copy-elision / RVO
I'm glad they relaxed auto-move rules at least
and made them independent from RVO
mmmm shredded Asian rump
17:36
too bad you can't delete more than 5 of your answers per day, it'd be funny to only have answers related to
sometimes I stumble in on some other tag and boom; answer a question by mistake
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold Sure that's actually a kana at all?
user1804599
Nope. :D
user1804599
hmm
I'm reading Clang's EH impl code and it's full of stuff like, "Impossible to implement specification" and "LLVM IR defective".
Help, I dunno what I'm doing.
user1804599
17:41
Ah, it’s ぎ. I looked up 将棋.
Xeo
Xeo
Lost again?
Oh, it's furigana
that would've helped...
How come you've been reading so much Japanese lately, though?
user1804599
Dunno. It’s fun.
user1804599
I know most hiragana now.
user1804599
And some kanji.
@Xeo No. Just staring at circuit boards wondering WTF I am supposed to do with them.
user1804599
17:45
So if I’m right it says 将棋…やってて良かったな…楽しかった。(楽しかった is in another speech bubble.)
@R.MartinhoFernandes electrocute them
Just now realised that I should probably have bought some LEDs first and get them to blink to get some idea of what to do.
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold What about grammar? :P
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp d'uh.. do you happen to know how to format a gnu bug report? ASCII-art style?
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold mh
user1804599
17:47
@Xeo I know how to say that something’s something is a something. :P
user1804599
With は, の and です. And を. But I want to be able to read the symbols first.
@dyp I do, hold on.. I've written my fair share of those in my days
Like, I have no fucking idea what this means.
Xeo
Xeo
Go study electrical engineering
I feel like a noob learning C++ without a book.
Xeo
Xeo
17:48
@rightfold That's really not a good idea
Especially since there are over 2000 everyday kanji
user1804599
No, only the hiragana.
Xeo
Xeo
oh
yeah, that's doable
It really help to actually write them, though
user1804599
I do that too.
@dyp trying to find a good example for you.. that's kinda close to what you are about to report
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp Nevermind "close" I just need some link or so if/what's the formatting syntax -- or just some example. My report will be short anyway
Xeo
Xeo
17:50
You format your stuff in reports?
I just keep an empty line before and after code, and put explanations around it
@dyp gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=60755 I normally write them like this
@dyp gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=60679 <- if the bug requires further explanation
user1804599
@Xeo The only kanji I can read and write are 人, 上, 口, 木, 世, 京, 東, 界, 私 and 極. But I want to get the hiragana right first before I move on.
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp Ok, thanks
@dyp include code in your description, and then attach a testcase.cpp with the example snippet
@dyp gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=61490 as you see here, bug reports doesn't have to be long
Xeo
Xeo
@rightfold Get the 'Japanese from Zero' books :P
user1804599
17:54
I learned hiragana and some words through nihongomaster.com.
So, the final resolution is that static_cast<X&&>(X{}); does bind the temporary to a reference, the language for the static_cast-operator does actually mandate so?
user1804599
I’ll check out the books you mentioned.
@Deduplicator Why would you want to do that? Why not simply X{}?
@FredOverflow it's related to a potential bug in gcc, static_cast<T&&> (T{}) is the shortest way to show what's going on
@FilipRoséen-refp I wonder how the bug got noticed. I don't see the point in casting a prvalue to an xvalue.
17:58
It's just that that is the underlying question for dyp's question. And it might somehow happen with templates.
dyp
dyp
@FredOverflow This question and I knew about this defect. Never had that in real code.
@dyp oh, there's a question?
why didn't you say so :(
@dyp also, I'll investigate a bit further
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp Well it's no a question about static_cast<X&&>(X{}) but due to this question, I wondered what would happen.
So.. has anyone ever written Standard issue / defect report paper? That's the next point on my list :(
Put a few pics on slack.
18:02
@dyp a good way to get you started is by starting a thread in the [std-discussion] mailing list
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp I have, was rather unsuccessful: groups.google.com/a/isocpp.org/d/msg/std-discussion/0yxikZInp-E/…
good morning everyone
dyp
dyp
@FilipRoséen-refp The problem is not very short, and it's in the nebulous realm of container exception specifications. I guess that's why noone seems to be interested.
@Deduplicator [expr.static.cast]p4 (and of course [expr.static.cast]p1)
I know there are some game people here
anybody done kinect work
18:07
@crasic games? fuck games.
For me it is not for games
but most kinect devs are game devs
@dyp ah, I skimmed through that thread while on my phone
dyp
dyp
@crasic Really? I thought Kinect was more popular amonst scientists..
@dyp There are some, but not on the level I am interested in
in terms of sheer volume though, its a toy
I have a primesense thoough, not kinect
For our purposes kinect is a locked in toy
Anyway, I am interested in firmware hacking, no scientists are doing anything close to that
Fuck it. Time to shop for books. @Martin, @Jerry: do you have any recommendations for some kind of electronics from zero book?
18:11
Hm, just opened the latest draft (n3797), and there §4 is clear.
@Deduplicator it's equally clear in n3337
Robot's approach to problem solving: get a book.
@EtiennedeMartel Can I read it on a nook?
@FilipRoséen-refp Why doesn't §3 apply instead?
> A glvalue of type “cv1 T1” can be cast to type “rvalue reference to cv2 T2” if “cv2 T2” is reference-compatible with “cv1 T1” (8.5.3). The result refers to the object or the specified base class subobject thereof. If T2 is an inaccessible (Clause 11) or ambiguous (10.2) base class of T1, a program that necessitates such a cast is ill-formed.
@crasic I refuse to acknowledge this pun.
18:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do you want to build your own computer? :)
the digital side is dated obviously, there are better books on that subject, but the most intuitive book to "start from 0"
From 0 to 1 in a thousand pages? :D
Robot is looking to upgrade self.
The book is from 1989...
@FredOverflow It is actually not very heavy reading, he has hundreds of example ciruits that take the pages
@FredOverflow Like I said, don't read the digital part, which is the second half, but in terms of starting from 0, passive components, transistor/fets/opamps etc.
18:23
thermometer just hit 27º
He does it in examples so you can read circuits like a book
I should get aircon in my office, to deal with all the heat pumped out by all my other electronic kit. Lol...
@crasic I had this stuff at University. Sort of interesting, but also not really my kinda thing.
Get it used for $40
@FredOverflow Thats alright, he specifically said from 0
If the question was more a digital design from 0
I would give a different book
Physical laws are strange. What twisted committee came up with these? :)
@FredOverflow Nobody knows
we are constrained to a 4 dimensional surface embedded in an unknowable n-dimensional space
@FredOverflow I wouldn't be stunned if there were some overlap between that group and the C++ lot
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I would be. Pretty sure physics is older than 35 years :)
dyp
dyp
18:26
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Is there a lot of UB in the universe?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Honestly probably, you have a few very simple laws, perhaps even 1 law if physics is on the right hunch. And the rest comes out of condensation of minimas
Local stability points in the random interaction of particles
@crasic Pfft the grand unified theory is a wild goose
dyp
dyp
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So.. where's the active issues list?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You say that with authority
18:27
@dyp churches
@crasic thank you
we have combined 3 laws into one with simple group theory
one more left
physics community
@crasic what, all of it?
@Deduplicator it does apply, but we are still initializing a temporary reference
18:28
In part, its incremental steps of knowledge
every person expands the bubble a little bit, and many discoveries are shared by dozens and in intelectual influence by an even greater number. It would be wrong to attribute it to a single person or small group
Or rather, too "hollywood"
@jalf Wait. It says "hate to admit", not "have to admit". Hey!
@crasic But still, physics has rockstars. I think Richard Feynman is really cool.
Thats not to say I don't think that people shouldn't be aknowledge for the discovery, my point is that they don't invent the laws, they discover them, ownership belongs to the universe, and the progress of knowledge belongs to everyone
@FredOverflow Of course, we are still humans after all
@crasic So knowledge is like a container of weak pointers into the universe? ;)
And feynman was an incredible person, I wish I was around to meet him, from everyone I know that interacted with personally he was quite a character
@FredOverflow Essentially yeah :P
18:32
The cool thing about computer science is that many interesting people are still alive. It would be cool to meet some of them :)
Thats what physics is, and math is our pointer
I went to Berkeley so I have randomly met a few in passing
like whom?
mainly BSD folk
18:34
Not sure who they are. Richard Stallman? :)
Stallman is at MIT
other coast
although he did come talk here at some point
RISC inventor Patterson
heard a seminar
Just random stuff
Inventor of the maser is like 92 and he's around sometimes
@crasic RISC like the CPU design? wow
RAD lab is a cool place, they have a nice lounge
All the talks and stuff here is open, if you are ever in the area you should look to see if anyone cool is giving a talk or seminar
Most of them are webcast too
@FredOverflow I thought that was James May from the thumbnail
What do you expect sleep(1000) to do? — sehe 11 secs ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit shame on you!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit did it break?
18:43
@sehe we don't use mercury in the first world
Well, mercury would render the glass less prone to break, right
Was there a change in shading of "interesting" question of some kind? i.imgur.com/X0jAuSi.png
@sehe less prone than electronics and an LCD? :)
@sehe not that I can tell
Did somebody pay you to ask this so that they could repwh0r3 off it? — Lightness Races in Orbit 4 secs ago
@Gabriel Read this. The part relevant to your question is this answer ... operator T*() is not the deference operator but a user defined conversion operator to implicitly convert a B<T> to A<T> *Praetorian 6 mins ago
hmm
Can I have an upvote on that comment please, so that it shows by default
18:48
whenever I want to test throwing, I have to use Clang to generate a catch, that's kinda inconvenient.
Also, close enough to mark as dupe of the operator overloading question?
@Praetorian done
@sehe Thank you
@Praetorian No; write an answer!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It's already answered ... there's a whole dedicated answer for his question in the operator overloading faq
plus I've already rep-capped for the day :)
18:50
ah rep-caps I remember them
I've closed it. I'll re-open if someone complains
@sehe Sigh
y so srs
You may want to use the search facility of this site, or (better) google — sehe 14 secs ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit y so bored?
posted on June 13, 2014 by Nada Mohamed (MSFT)

In the upcoming release of Visual Studio, we are making some changes to the Visual C++ compiler switches. Two areas are impacted by these changes, 1) projects built with certain variations of /clr and 2) projects using 32-bit compiler to detect 64 bit...(read more)

operator/ could be a nice substitute for lack of operator .(dot operator).

« first day (1336 days earlier)      last day (3840 days later) »