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01:00
There are tools, but that doesn't change the fact that development cost for maintaining a stable ABI grows with its complexity
(shocking)
@QuestionC The Windows API has a fair number of problems, many stemming from its sheer age--it still have essentially the entire 16-bit Windows API, often extended versions of the same functions for 32-bit, and still further extended versions of the same for 64-bit. A fair number have things like Ex and Ex2 tacked on on to distinguish these versions (and at least one has a suffix of no less than ExEx2).
ExEx2? lol
There's a lot of ExExes in calendar API
BTW, when (and why) did message editing disappear?
they really went too far
01:02
@JerryCoffin After the third glass of wine?
2
You developed your OS too far MS
But wait didn't we want modern things
IM CONFUSED
@CatPlusPlus Only if reinvented.
@CatPlusPlus Calm down, our brains are going to start exploding.
@CatPlusPlus No, they just developed an OS that is too backwards compatible.
(Hey, look, everyone has that problem.)
01:03
Damn you MS for making customers happy about their shit not breaking most of the time!
@CatPlusPlus We always want modern things--because we generally redefine "modern" to mean whatever we like. New things we don't like are (for example) "new fangled" instead of "modern".
DEEP DEVELOPMENT OSES THAT BREAK EVERYTHING EVERY WEEK IS THE WAY TO GO
Just look how happy Arch users are
I think that it grew to accommodate its age is impressive though. Maybe this is my lack of experience, but I never ran into a problem with their method depreciation.

A lot of that is good documentation, but maybe that's a part of the API.
Arch didn't go far enough, it's still Linux. :P
You're right
OS should be rewritten every week in a way that requires everything else to be rewritten too
That way everything will stay fresh and modern!~
01:05
Yes.
But I can settle for "every 5 years". :P
Ell
Ell
I don't think a standardized c++ ABI is completely unreasonable
Idk how versioning would work though
Anyway, it really is the time for me to start trying to sleep now.
I don't think it's super useful.
G'night.
It's one of those things that I hear people clamouring for but never really understand what they want.
Either that or they don't understand what they want.
01:09
@AlexM. My guess is they toned down some particle limits/draw distances/... in coop so when you went back in SP you took a performance hit.
to me that sounds a lot more likely than leaks
Ell
Ell
I think it'd be nice for people to be able to use a library compiled by MSVC in clang and vice versa
@Borgleader 10fps is not a performance hit
@Ell you can... with clang-vs
your theory only works if I'd have gotten 10 fps when restarting too
@Ell Something which cannot be solved by throwing a third ABI into the problem.
01:10
which is not what happened
Also, C++ already has the ability to target different ABIs, and has had that at least since the first standard.
And it's actually a commonly used feature.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes why not? A third abi standardised and supporting all c++ features would solve it
@Ell No, it would not because then you still can't use something compiled with MSVC in clang.
Ell
Ell
What ABIs can it target? extern 'C' is the only way I know to get a "standard" abi
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes why not?
because of what I just showed you
@Ell Whatever the compiler wants to provide you.
see also: esperanto
note: nobody uses esperanto
Code won't get magically recompiled to the new ABI
Ell
Ell
01:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes the compiler is not c++
The compiler is an implementation, c++ standard only offers extern c
The open source C++ G3D Innovation Engine release 10.00 is now available. http://g3d.sf.net I use it for most research and prototyping.
@Ell C++ cannot have a list of ABIs in it. That's ridiculous.
the C++ standard doesn't say anything about ABIs. at all. even for extern "c".
@Ell And a set of implementation-defined ones.
and it never will
Ell
Ell
01:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes c++ could have an option to target the platforms abi though
@Ell C++ doesn't require that to be standard in any way either. It's perfectly plausible for one compiler to use C ABI that is not compatible with another.
@Ell There's no such thing.
Ell
Ell
Not compiler vendor
In this case the platform is OS + architecture
I think he's proposing that C++ add one to itself
but I think there's good reasons that it doesn't
and even if it did the implementors would ignore it
so
@Ell I.e. that is standard because the C ABI happens to be relatively homogeneous, not because C++ wants it.
anyway i'm being entirely ignored so night
01:16
meanwhile, I'm sitting here wondering what brogramming is
Ell
Ell
The platform vendor decides the platform abi, and c++ allows you to target the platform abi
@LightnessRacesinOrbit something something dont go gentle in this night
Ell
Ell
@LightnessRacesinOrbit sorry lol night
@Ell Which is not how the real world works.
See MSVC vs MinGW.
Same OS+architecture, different ABI.
Ell
Ell
I'm mobe I cant see which that's a reply to. But assume its for the 2nd last
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah that's what I'm proposing
01:17
A third one?
Ell
Ell
I'm proposing that the platform owner describes an ABI which compilers can target
How do you use stuff compiled for MinGW in ABIv3?
@Ell Which makes no sense because it would need to be updated with C++.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah haven't figured that one out yet :P
I feel complicit in the devolution of this chat into ABIs and it feels bad. =/
Ell
Ell
OSs come often enough :L idk that's still an issue
01:19
@Ell ABIs that compilers can target already exist. In the end you're still reducing the problem to the problem of convincing compiler vendors to let you target multiple ABIs.
And if you solve that, you don't need any more ABIs than you have already.
@Borgleader Can yo give nay comment to the actual quality of that project?
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes I see your point
@Nican No but I'm sure some loungers will be quite happy to look at it just to have the satisfaction to tell anyone who will listen that the code is shit
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes have you read the proposal?
Ell
Ell
01:21
N4028
I remember making similar points at the time.
Ell
Ell
I think you're right that it all means getting someone to agree to an ABI
No agreement is needed.
You just need compiler vendors to make use of the existing features.
Ell
Ell
Right
You then do the agreement yourself in your code.
Ell
Ell
01:29
I wish there was a way to gracefully version code?
I think an inline namespace is a good idea
there was a presentation on that somewhere... i cant remember where
might've been niebler's c++11 library talk
or maybe it was boostcon, i cant recall
Ell
Ell
Well then. Rusts type system is Turing complete
I didn't know that
@Ell Well, it was as of 9:30 AM today. That doesn't mean it necessarily was yesterday, or will be tomorrow... :-)
02:08
func(std::move(std::make_unique<int>(1)))
  ^ does the std::move here prevent move elision or do other bad stuff?
declaration of func is func(std::unique_ptr<int>);
Ell
Ell
I didn't think unique ptrs were copyable
No copy is made.
Ell
Ell
But its taking it by value, no?
Or is it being emplaced?
(elided) move constructor
Ell
Ell
Oh of course
02:17
Above code doesn't need std::move btw.
Ell
Ell
How come its there?
I noticed this code written by colleague.
Ell
Ell
Oh right
I have to think carefully when it comes to reference and value semantics
Else I forget things like move constructors exist :P
I want to point it out to him. But first I need to be 100% sure about the implications of the extra std::move.
@Ell C++11 is not very intuitive in that regard.
But it's not a clusterfuck either.
Ell
Ell
I think the extra move will simply have no effect
The constructed unique ptr is an rvalue ref in the first place
And move effectively casts it to what it already is, doesn't it?
user2985029
02:28
...
BBC makes the best documentaries \o/
10/10 would buy/watch again
@StackedCrooked Didnt STL do a presentation about this? (GoingNative2013 IIRC, part of the Dont Help the Compiler talk?)
That could be.
user2985029
smokin
02:34
Too many stupid people on SO that don't know how to follow directions. I'm out.
Ell
Ell
@StackedCrooked well I'll be. Why is this?
@CaptainObvlious You came in here just to say that?
@CaptainObvlious Did you see the new review queue?
I came here to post pictures of the almighty beaver.
BEAVER
There's a new review queue/
/
my shift key SUCKS
02:37
Yeah, it's the first step in automatically putting all bad questions on probation so that they don't show up on the homepage or question lists.
So that they stop annoying the fuck out of users like us.
I feel stretched too. Like a 2 inch penis made porn worthy
Ell
Ell
What
user2985029
02:39
@9205892 That sucks.
user2985029
@CaptainObvlious really?
user2985029
ok
user2985029
i just wanted to get to good part
Ell
Ell
I wonder why std move prevents elision
02:41
Yes. like a crack whore.
user2985029
see you there
user2985029
@CaptainObvlious you know what i like
Ell
Ell
@CaptainObvlious what are you doing man
user2985029
@CaptainObvlious hard
02:42
@Ell Watch STL's Going Native talk. You might get some insight into that. Even if you dont, its worth watching.
What do you guys think about Rust?
user2985029
@Ell deep
@Ell Browsing dwarf porn
user2985029
/em leaves
Oh jeez not another Rust Witness
02:43
!!wiki C++
idk man
user2985029
banned?
user2985029
not yet
user2985029
where is the leagve button
Ell
Ell
@CaptainObvlious just get outta here man
02:44
I just saw what Rust was, saw it trying to replace you guys
and was like hey, what do these people think
user2985029
what do i press to get out of herew?
yeah that's not even close to the dumbest question I've seen
alt+f4
Ell
Ell
I think rust looks good
user2985029
where is the exit button?
02:45
Guess I'll go order a pizza and masturbate with a brillo pad
peace
this room is weird
user2985029
/leave
have you guys seen this?
user2985029
/part
@Apoph1s The only Captain you should listen to is Jack Sparrow.
Ell
Ell
02:47
Yah
I'm sleeping night all
user2985029
/exit
2 hours ago, by Mysticial
: http://chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/18892462#18892462
back to C++
user2985029
03:15
i'm sorry. i'll be better this time. don't blame in on me
it lacks a public interface :P
lol
@StackedCrooked He's just saving space!
04:12
@MarkGarcia struct is only one extra letter. If he really needs to save that space, he can use 0 instead of nullptr for the initializers (not that I'd really recommend it).
Where can I find a copy of all of the std algorithm functions that take containers instead of iterator pairs? It's certainly possibly with type traits, is it not? I was going to write them all myself, but I was hoping it was already done somewhere.
Eric Niebler's github has an implementation, IIRC.
@TrevorHickey Most range implementations (Boost, Neibler's, etc.) will accept a container as a range.
@JerryCoffin Or use a smaller font. ;)
@StackedCrooked Worse: he's using OS X.
04:17
Oh, I should just the use the boost one, huh?
I just #include <boost/range/algorithm.hpp>
and now I have them all?
Is there any gotchas?
Does it have all the new C++11/14 functions also?
@TrevorHickey I've never tried to compare them head to head, but I think I prefer Eric's version.
From the client's perspective, is there a difference between the two? Or do you just like his use of meta template programming?
@TrevorHickey At least the last time I looked (pretty recently -- 1.55, if memory serves) it was pretty much pure C++03.
@TrevorHickey Yes, there are differences in client code. At least as I recall things, Boost ranges didn't/don't seem to compose as cleanly, for one example.
Ah, I see. Yeah, Eric's seems further into the future. Although he just committed code 6 hours ago that is probably a breaking change.
Oh, well. I'll just keep a close eye on it as I use it.
If it doesn't compile then it breaks. :)
04:24
@TrevorHickey Yes, he's been working on it quite actively for the past few months. The other good point is that he's pushing it as the basis for a future addition to the standard, and the committee seems fairly well disposed toward it, so code you write using it will probably work with a future standard version with minimal work.
@JerryCoffin Goooood! Settled then. Thanks yall.
@TrevorHickey I suppose I should add that it's always possible the committee will decide to go a different direction for ranges--but I don't know of any other proposals that look like serious competitors to Eric's right now.
morning
@Jefffrey Hi, how are you?
Less horny than yesterday.
04:39
@Jefffrey If that means you got laid, then great.
How are you doing?
Feeling lonely in Lounge<Europa>?
@Jefffrey Fairly well. Never Lonely Alone.
In case you care: I'd never even heard that song before. Was looking for something else, but I couldn't resist the Roger Dean cover art.
I can't listen to it just now.
@Jefffrey I wouldn't say I've just found my new favorite band, or anything like that, but I found it pretty enjoyable anyway.
05:06
For instance, if you would like to write a function that takes an iterator/sentinel pair, you can write it like this:
...
what's a sentinel?
does that just mean "an end iterator"?
@TrevorHickey yes
@TrevorHickey No. (How's that for perfect disagreement?)
A sentinel is an end iterator that's based on some value in the data. The obvious example is an iterator to the end of a C-style string that's zero terminated. Where an end iterator to something like a std::string or std::vector has some position that's known when you create it, a sentinel is one that's basically a functionally oriented thing that has to look at the data and evaluate whether you've reached the end every time. So, for the C-string example, pos==end() when *pos == '\0'.
WTH Synaptics 100MB+ for a TOUCHPAD DRIVER???
05:13
@MarkGarcia It's cloud enabled!
@JerryCoffin And analytics and stuff!
Well we'll be damned if that's so.
user1646075
... the name sentinel comes from a guard that stands there and screams stop! when you reach an end. Classically, you put an 'illegal' value as a marker, such as the '\0' in C-strings, or something like -1 in a list of positive numbers.
@JerryCoffin So is it safe to assume that a sentinel for a c++ std container is always one past the last element. (what is returned from .end())?
user1646075
some old-skool tricks included deliberately putting the value you are searching for into the end of a list. Then your loop is guaranteed to find it and terminate. Then if the found-index is 'beyond the end' you haven't actually found anything.
and anything else can simply be an end iterator of a range, but not a sentinel?
05:20
@TrevorHickey A standard container will have a non-sentinel end iterator.
@JerryCoffin ...because it doesn't point to a specific value?
such as '\0'
user1646075
'\0' is 'in' the string. it's not beyond the end, althouh it's beyond the end of your actual interesting data
@TrevorHickey Right (nor do anything else sentinel-like). In theory, it wouldn't have to be a specific value, but to be a sentinel, it at least needs to be something vaguely similar to that.
@TrevorHickey no
Just for example, you could have a string that starts with (, the sentinel doesn't just look for a ), but the matching ), so something like (a(b(c)))d would end just before the d.
05:27
a sentinel is more like a predicate of when to stop
@TrevorHickey Yes.
it's just a value an iterator can have
why are you complicating this
First time I heard of it, just confused.
IME a predicate is something like bool p(...), so no a sentinel is not a predicate
but I'd also trust jerry, so I guess it is
user1646075
yeah, classically a sentinel is a detectable 'STOP' piece of data
user1646075
05:31
and a predicate to detect it
@Jefffrey It's a position that's basically defined by a predicate--most commonly an end iterator that a position compares equal to it when some predicate (that depends on something other than the value of the iterator itself) becomes true.
this is an example of sentinal found in n4128:
// For determining whether an iterator refers to a null value:
struct null_sentinel
{
template<Iterator I>
friend bool operator==(I i, null_sentinel) { return 0 == *i; }
// ... and friends
};
Yup. I think I get it.
user1646075
@TrevorHickey yup - see how it's detecting a magical null value in a list of non-nulls
@JerryCoffin Yes. A sentinel is usually checked in a predicate. But a sentinel is not a predicate. Just being unsuccessfully pedantic.
user1646075
pedantry is clarity
user1646075
05:33
in this case
> One day trying to uninstall a beta version of Visual Studio 2003 (I think), I got an error. The text that came up was "This is a bullshit error that I was never able to fucking reproduce. If you get this message, call me at 123-456-7890"
The mechanics are still a little confusing, but I at least understand their purpose.
It goes on to say:
template<Iterator I>
struct common_type<I, null_sentinel>
... see Appendix 2 ...

so null_sentinel would need another specialization to work properly?
@Jefffrey link?
give me a sec jesus
:P
@MarkGarcia there
dude
@Jefffrey lol, fearing because reddit?
the point is that (c.begin(), c.end()) is a valid range
don't overthink it
@MarkGarcia ?
The only way I am thinking I can be a software engineer is if I study electronic engineering after my computer science degree
Or are you not being serious?
oh no, that's just a thing i do
okay ;)
05:42
> Overload the + operator to add two arrays
oh bby
@Jefffrey If it weren't so much work, I'd draft up a question just to break the monotony of crap.
I don't get it. Is there a valid reason for operator+ and operator[] to be virtual?
Wouldn't you have to call them as: ptr->operator[](1) to have a polymorphic behavior?
So this Synaptics package includes A LOT of WMV files. tsk tsk tsk
@Jefffrey Not necessarily, no. One obvious possibility would be a function parameter of type reference to base, to which you might bind an actual base object or some derived object.
Oh right.
05:48
Is it true Windows 10 Powershell has been buffed up
@MoonOwlPrince CMD
What's noteworthy that has been added and what internals have changed
I suspect they are working towards breaking what was going to become tradition
@Jefffrey Even if you use a pointer, (*ptr)[1] isn't necessarily horrible.
05:54
@MoonOwlPrince Nope, not at all. Or are you punning break? If you're worried Ctrl+C won't do what you expect it to do, there's always the Break key.
> They should have moved Clippy to product activation work... "It looks like you're trying to use a copy of Word that you didn't buy. I've gone ahead and alerted the authorities for you. Do you want me to find you a good bail bondsman?"
3
+1!
At least they have added unicode support
@JerryCoffin That would technically be a reference, though :P
I also think there should be tighter catching of pirates
@Jefffrey If you say so. I don't know the details of C++ nearly well enough to guess at complicated stuff like that.
lol, I just meant that (*ptr) would be a reference and you would call operator[] on a reference
05:59
If someone is about to install a copy of Windows they did not buy the computer should freeze
@MoonOwlPrince Too much effort for a small group of users, most of which are having a hard time getting their products anyway.

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