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21:01
Possibly a crazy question.
Is it possible in C++ to use a string as the body of a lambda such as:

Accountants inSalaryRange = list.subset( [=]( Accountant &a ){ return code; } );

where code is a std::string code ="(1+20)"; as an example.
Xeo
Xeo
lol, no
Hint: Lambdas are not special.
user1804599
@Chimera Check out D.
Xeo
Xeo
They are sugar. Nothing more.
user1804599
In D you can compile code from a string.
21:02
I don't know why D calls them "mixins"
@rightfold using reflection?
No using mixins.
user1804599
No, at compile-time.
user1804599
But you can do reflection at compile-time.
user1804599
21:03
If you want to run C++ code at runtime you can invoke a compiler and a linker and dynamically link to its output.
@Chimera Is the string known at compile-time or runtime?
@FredOverflow would like it to be at runtime.
pretty much impossible
@Chimera How complex are those strings? An interpreter for things like adding and multiplying numbers can be done in <100 lines of code.
@FredOverflow It was going to be any arbitrary legal C++. No worries, was just thinking how cool it would be if it could be done.
21:08
@Chimera It can be if you're very very crazy. But beyond that, no.
@Chimera If you want to be able to do that kind of stuff with ease, try a LISP like Clojure.
Yeah, D looks interesting with it's mixins
How dumb is it to implement a Point3D as a class and not a struct in C#?
@JohanLarsson As slow as it makes your application.
it will always be slower?
21:10
@Chimera Note that D's mixins are compile-time.
:D Drink!
@JohanLarsson But is it by an amount that you care about?
that's the real point I was making.
@milleniumbug oh ok then.
@Puppy valid point, tricky to answer, it is for a lib. Don't really know what it will be used for.
if I do structs and they get boxed, will that be the same as classes or worse?
user1804599
@JohanLarsson make it immutable and then you can always change it later.
21:14
@JohanLarsson Why should Point3D be a class, not a struct? I see no reason why. Inheritance? Polymorphism?
they are immutable, that was the reason I did not use the framework point3d to start with
@JohanLarsson no, it obviously depends on the usage.
@milleniumbug inheritance, have vector & unitvector also. Substantial code reuse with a baseclass
@JohanLarsson Dunno. Why are you asking me these questions and not the only thing that could possibly answer it, which is a profiler?
@JohanLarsson potentially worse. the semantics are different anyways. They won't get boxed unless you make them (capture in lambda, pass as Object, use via interface)
@Puppy I'm asking because I have no idea about this stuff, zero.
@JohanLarsson Then ask the only thing that can answer you, which is a profiler.
Oh god. PuppyMG. That took me a while
user1804599
@sehe wot why does capture box?
@rightfold How would it reference the captured value without boxing?
user1804599
21:17
I thought it’d just copy it.
It's not C++
@Puppy I don't really have much to profile as it is general purpose and I don't know how it will be used.
user1804599
var x = 1;
Action f = () => { Console.WriteLine(x); };
x = 2;
f();
user1804599
So this prints 2?
@Chimera nice, ty
user1804599
21:18
If no, why would it reference it?
@JohanLarsson Then your question is unanswerable because you have insufficient data.
yeah, but that is also an answer :)
user1804599
AFAIK you cannot assign a captured variable.
@JohanLarsson Yw
@rightfold I'm trying to remember the specifics here. Hold on. Eric Lippert blogged about this too
user1804599
21:19
Fuck mutability anyway.
user1804599
It’s terrible.
assignment in lambda is invalid
@rightfold You also can't assign foreach variables because reference vs value they thought was confusing.
strange star
@JohanLarsson :-)
user1804599
21:20
Remove mutability and you no longer have to give a single shit about reference types vs value types, copying, boxing and all that crap. \o/
user1804599
Everything is simple!
it is immutable
@rightfold Yeah, sounds so simple.
@sehe which would you pick? :)
> If you use Gmail with your Google Account, it's not currently possible to change your Gmail username after you've registered unless you want to delete Gmail from your account and use a different, non-Gmail address for your Google Account.
fuck you, Google.
21:21
@JohanLarsson going on the name only, I guess valuetype
@rightfold It's incredibly simple until you need to mutate stuff.
If the universe was immutable, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
@sehe ok, guess I'll have to write some T4 then to compensate for the copy paste duplication
user1804599
@Chimera universe is low-level crap.
user1804599
Abstraction is key.
21:23
@rightfold I was thinking in terms of evolution.
@Xeo: Just remembered why I used ~ for not and ~= for not equals, and it's because I needed !() for explicit template arguments to C++ functions, which does not play well if I used ! and != for negation and not equal.
why not use keywords for them?
not and ~= like lua does
meh at that.
user1804599
@Rapptz dat pun
lol
21:26
why not use a keyword in place of every operator?
it reads nicely
even C++ has keywords for operators
We could just go back to using COBOL then
user1804599
@Puppy I think := for specifying types won’t play well with := for initialisation!
C# fella here trying not to injure myself writing a little C++ bit for something at work, specifically need to send some STOMP data over a CSocket (windows), and STOMP terminates with a null char, will LPCSTR bla = "blabla\n\0"; Send(bla, strlen(bla)); send a null char over the wire to the receiver on my socket?
it's acting like the server isn't getting the null character, figured \0 is the right way to create one from what I was reading
user1804599
lol explicit \0 in string literal.
Xeo
Xeo
21:28
strlen stops at the first \0 it sees
@rightfold Initialization is all := ever does. It's just that what exactly it initializes can vary.
user1804599
You want strlen(bla) + 1.
xeo: oh so if I do strlen+1 ?
AHH ok
Xeo
Xeo
also, that's C. Use string for proper C++
thanks I had a feeling it might be terminating at the null char
didn't know the strlen was the culprit, thanks!
21:29
@JimmyHoffa Don't use null-terminated strings... they're bad and dumb and this is just the beginning of your horrible pains if you keep using them.
@Puppy how do I send a null termination character over the wire? Server requires it.
user1804599
Or even better std::string bla("blabla\n"); bla.push_back('\0'); Send(bla.data(), bla.size()).
user1804599
@Puppy your name is confusing with @Pubby’s please change back.
Null terminated strings are the worst idea in history of computing ever.
I'm actually not sure if I can.
Xeo
Xeo
21:30
change it on another site
and apply change to all sites
there was something like that
> AVOID defining a struct unless the type has all of the following characteristics:
It has an instance size under 16 bytes. 3x double will be 24
user1804599
@milleniumbug I’m not very fond of character–byte duality either.
@Xeo The follow-up to that is, I'm also not sure if I want to.
@rightfold Yeah, that one of the fundamental problems. But not the only one.
user1804599
21:32
Oh well don’t use C anyway.
user1804599
> calls a keyword stackalloc
so...is there some trick I should be doing to send the nul termination char over a CSocket in windows? Is there some reason I shouldn't be using it in the literal like I am? It's quite necessary - STOMP protocol demands such.
user1804599
Send("\0", 1)
Ok, I'll give that a try
thanks!
works :) I am going to write the buggiest memoryleakinist little C++ app ever...woo....
user1804599
4283
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

21:37
hmmm
I hg pulled, but make doesn't seem to think that any of my files have changed.
I tried make clean but it doesn't seem to do the trick.
how can I kick make into noticing that stuff changed?
> Making the nano-optimization of making a type that really should be a ref type into a value type for a few nanoseconds of perf gain is probably not worth it. ... I’d always make the choice of value type vs reference type based on whether the type is semantically representing a value or semantically a reference to something.
user1804599
If it weren’t locked I’d imagine @BartekBanachewicz to edit it into a link to LYAH.
Sounds like he would struct it
@JimmyHoffa You sure you're not writing C? :>
@rightfold ugh, I'm a much bigger fan on the Haskell/LISP/SML side who normally does C#, when visual studio tells me in a tooltip the type of something with 3 lines of code I take it as an indicator the language I'm looking at is meant to be used by people smarter than I
More interested in making this tiny app work and then fleeing from C++ than learning it heh
21:39
Does boxing/unboxing apply to C++?
not really.
user1804599
> The concept of boxing and unboxing underlies the C# unified view of the type system in which a value of any type can be treated as an object.
user1804599
THAT’S FALSE.
if you want to move an integer to the heap, you do it yourself.
user1804599
It doesn’t work for pointers. :P
21:40
but there's rarely an explicit need to do so because you can reference locals.
hajime no ippo is about boxing
@rightfold Is normal C#/Java style object modeling something that people shouldn't be using, just design style wise, in C++?
Just had to force-reboot my Mac when compiling some recursive template expansion.
user1804599
@JimmyHoffa No.
were I in C# I'd create a StompClient class that interacted with the socket and presented an easy API for consumers to make stomp connections and send and receive messages etc, do C++ idioms take different approaches? (I'm going to do it C# style because it's all I know, but curious heh)
user1804599
21:45
In C++ static polymorphism is more common.
user1804599
I don’t know what said StompClient does.
@rightfold yeah, that term doesn't even mean anything to me... parametric polymorphism, higher kinded polymorphism, sure, but...static polymorphism?
c++ sounds so fucking scary
user1804599
@JimmyHoffa like, at compile-time rather than at runtime.
21:46
@rightfold in C# it would be obvious but ok, to C++ folks that would not be a normative design approach
But it crashes MACs. Probably started swapping.
user1804599
@JimmyHoffa If StompClient only adds higher-level functions but not any data members or custom destructors, just make them free functions instead.
@JohanLarsson that. You nailed the summary line
Oww.. trod on broken glass while walking home leaking red stuff all over office..
user1804599
You don’t have to stuff everything in a class in C++.
21:47
@rightfold free functions? As in globally not a member of a class functions? Is that common in C++?
user1804599
Yes.
huh interesting
user1804599
Look at <algorithm> alone. It’s full of free functions.
@rightfold yeah, union is better
@JimmyHoffa lmao
21:48
ohai
Headsup: the GCC update broke Clang for c++11 mode... (on coliru)
C++ is a multi-paradigm language, it is not exclusively a ~OOP~ language like C#/Java etc
user1804599
@JimmyHoffa C++ is powerful when it comes to generic programming.
user1804599
You often do not inheritance and certainly not for “code reuse.”
user1804599
Many algorithms in <algorithm> work on different types of containers whilst only being implemented once.
user1804599
21:49
It’s based on duck typing.
@rightfold yeah, but to get anywhere near that I'd first have to learn the difference between the innumerable primitives just to use C++ well, I just realized I accidentally missed a T in reading a type and was handing an LPCSTR to an LPCTSTR and I have no idea what either of them are other than strings...
@sehe still don't understand the benefit of value type just cos it is a value compared to an immutable class. And then there is the code reuse through inheritance thing.
user1804599
@JimmyHoffa Those are Windows API crap.
user1804599
Not part of standard C++.
21:50
@rightfold ah, I figured, well unfortunately that's what I'm stuck with for work. I've pondered learning proper standard C++ because I have heard the basic language is not nearly as complex as the code you always read...
user1804599
C++ is a complicated clusterfuck.
but meh, if I want powerful generic programming outside of work I'll use Haskell, and in work I'm stuck on windows
@rightfold do you hate c++ right now?
user1804599
Nah; it’s fun.
@JohanLarsson you can reuse static functions just fine. And generics work for valuetypes IIRC
user1804599
21:51
@sehe They do.
@JimmyHoffa The code you read is typically C, not C++.
user1804599
@JimmyHoffa Generic programming in C++ is different from Haskell, though.
user1804599
It’s based on duck typing instead of constraints.
@rightfold I should think so ;P
quite a bit
user1804599
21:53
And Turing-complete!
user1804599
I don’t know if Haskell’s type system is Turing-complete.
well, just define max_align_t in the global namespace then :P
user1804599
Scala’s is which, is quite funny.
@sehe yeah but I have a bunch of tostring overloads + equals + operator overloads + serialization etc
@Puppy nah, the code I read is typically really bizarre C++ MFC code when it comes to C++
21:53
MFC is on the border, really.
it's mostly C but with a bit of C++ sprinkled in.
and even that is ancient C++- pre-Standard.
user1804599
There is not much good C++ code.
@rightfold You can constraint templates in C++ just fine.
user1804599
Yes, but it’s not required.
user1804599
In Haskell constraints are required.
even in the pure C++ arena, there's the Java-style inheritance ejaculation and Singleton spam approach.
user1804599
21:54
You cannot define f x y = x < y without adding an Ord a constraint.
but apparently you can define const void void long void const *
no, you can't.
user1804599
const void void long void const * is invalid.
don't think so
ok well, that's what most C++ code looks like to me anyway heh
user1804599
21:55
:3
and even if you could, No True Scotsman would want to.
famous last words; you underestimate humanity again
@sehe Hm, seems like a clang bug according to the googles.
@StackedCrooked okay. then, let it slide.
It's a shame because it means I can no longer Boost Spirit there (clang++ -Os was the only working config due to the constraints)
user1804599
This is what most C++ code looks like to me:
user1804599
21:57
How did you get into my house
user1804599
Oh, ik stalk je al jaren. Ik maak dagelijks foto’s.
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe -stdlib=libc++
@rightfold thankyou. this is why I've explicitly never bothered...
@Xeo is it on coliru?
Xeo
Xeo
21:58
yes
TIL
Xeo
Xeo
Stacked went to great pains to get it on there :D
ISTR there might have been other issues with that - but it's been a long time since I tried
user1804599
@jboner @mjpt777 @JefClaes *sigh* when will this bullshit stop?
@sehe if you like messy hacks (not even sure if correct..)
user1804599
21:59
I don’t like @jboner.
Xeo
Xeo
in case something goes wrong, -lsupc++ at the right place

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