« first day (416 days earlier)      last day (4759 days later) » 

13:00
Hey
I C99 one is allowed to do void *foo = 3; for instance
ie there is an implicit cast from int to void*
I don't think so.
I am now sitting in a major pile of C99-shit
and want to use C++ (for my own sanity)
Yes, implicit casts are allowed in C99
Oh, gosh it is.
Question is
I can't find any flag to g++ that would allow this behavior
Of course, I could correct the errors, placing explicit casts myself
but I only need to work on this code for the next week :/
(for a school project, a C-subset compiler)
any idea of getting g++ to allow this madness?
I have tried with -fpermissive
just trough some regex at the problem
13:05
If -fpermissive doesn't work, I don't know what will.
okay
thanks anyway :)
Does MSVC support emplace_back?
seems you might never find out @RMartinhoFernandes
I looked it up myself.
and...
13:20
It supports a bastardized version of it that is basically the same as push_back.
Pointless.
well I have no idea what either of them are meant to do :S
@RMartinhoFernandes afaik they fake it. But they don't have a proper implementation because that'd require variadic templates:)
sadly had to move over to java to get money... but C++ chat is more fun
@thecoshman push inserts a copy. emplace constructs an object in place
18
A: push_back vs emplace_back

Thomas PetitIn addition of what visitor said : The function void emplace_back(Type&& _Val) provided by MSCV10 is non conforming and useless, because as you noted it is stricly equivalent to push_back(Type&& _Val). But the real C++0x form of emplace_back is really usefull : void emplace_back...

13:23
subtle difference, but I can see the significance
What they provide is just push_back with a different name.
Which is nonsensical as there should be a push_back overload for rvalues.
There is.
emplace_back is just for show.
sbi
sbi
@jalf: Have you gotten your SO shirt yet?
The shirt is not a lie! Best mail I've gotten in a while. #StackOverflow http://t.co/kINBFz6H
@sbi nope
but nice to hear they haven't forgotten completely :)
sbi
sbi
13:31
Mhmm. That was promised...what?...half a year ago?
Maybe they paid off CrshOverride just to fool you.
Maybe that twitter account is a sock puppet.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes That must be one hell of a scam then, setting up a 86k+ user.
wow... that store kind of sucks ¬_¬
@sbi Er, they own the place!
They can fake rep.
sbi
sbi
Mhmm. The guy lives in PA, BTW. They could almost throw the mail with the shirt at him, rather then paying for shipping. I suppose it's different for us here in Europe.
@thecoshman You mean the one where you need to get to the first five pages of dedicated followers in order to be given a shirt without even being able to pick your own design?
13:35
I like how with a little over 1K repp, I am in the top 30%
@sbi erm... this one shop.stackexchange.com
Hmm, my profile says "top 0.25% this month". How can I see what top % I'm in overall?
Ugh, tab width should be standardized.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Wow. They do have a shop. I didn't know that.
@sbi :D
like I said though, it's shit
cpx
cpx
13:40
@RMartinhoFernandes All the time?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman It's shirts!
@sbi shit shirts though
sbi
sbi
@cpx I'm #126 on that page. Is that good or bad?
> I guess I don't understand what you mean by "invariant". – curiousguy 42 secs ago
How am I to reply to this?
@sbi depends if you consider spending far too much time on the internet a good or bad thing
13:42
Ooh, #449. How much % is that?
tell him what "invariant" means
well, I am 18000 ish, which I think makes me around top 2%
You said top 30% before.
sbi
sbi
In computer science, a predicate is called an invariant to a sequence of operations provided that: if the predicate is true before starting the sequence, then it is true at the end of the sequence. Use Although computer programs are typically mainly specified in terms of what they change, it's equally important to know or specify the invariants of a program. This is especially useful when reasoning about the program. The theory of optimizing compilers, the methodology of design by contract, and formal methods for determining program correctness, all pay close attention to invariants in ...
cpx
cpx
@sbi I think it is good.
13:43
@RMartinhoFernandes top 0.05%
@TonyTheLion Would nothing but a link to wikipedia be rude?
:This article is about class invariants in computer programming, for use of the term in mathematics, see equivalence class and invariant. In computer programming, specifically object-oriented programming, a class invariant is an invariant used to constrain objects of a class. Methods of the class should preserve the invariant. The class invariant constrains the state stored in the object. Class invariants are established during construction and constantly maintained between calls to public methods. Temporary breaking of class invariance between private method calls is possible, although n...
Better.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Why the heck do you ask us, if you are so much better at this game? Did you just need a boost for your ego?
@RMartinhoFernandes no, I don't see anything wrong with that
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Does the chat still not inline https links to Wikipedia?
@sbi Yes, it doesn't.
@sbi I didn't ask what was best link to wikipedia!
Thanks by the suggestion of "using a link to wikipedia" though.
13:49
Ih.
I got 21/40 points on that stupid test.
What stupid test? There are many.
I got this query made by Mark G
si ti solleh sdrawkcab @CatPlusPlus
The one I was raging about at 3AM.
I wasn't around at 3 am.
13:50
is that bad news then?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman When you clean your keyboard, you are supposed to put all the key caps back at the same position they used to be.
50% from 2 tests is passing threshold, so outlook's good.
@sbi you mean you use keycaps?
What do you mean clean your keyboard?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Yeah, it's less stressful for your finger tips.
13:52
@sbi oh, and get a mirror
Why that stupid reply userscript eats 'f'.
@CatPlusPlus I think "clean" means "buy a new one"
@CatPlusPlus 'f's are the tastiest letter of them all
sbi
sbi
It's frustrating to see that most of my top-voted Qs & As across SE aren't on the site I am most active and have — by far! — the most rep.
Yeah, keyboards breaking down is painful. :/
13:53
work meeting time ¬_¬
I still intend to buy an indestructible mechanical keyboard one day.
Made of adamantium?
Awesomium.
That's a browser framework.
Oh, I remember that. I think Overgrowth uses that for UI.
sbi
sbi
13:57
BTW, @RMartinho, have you seen my profile at SciFi? Can you identify them all?
@sbi Ha, no. I guess there's a bunch of fantasy ones there. I don't read much fantasy.
I clearly see the LOTR one, but that's about all the fantasy I have read.
> Sorting my Hats
That's TF2.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes At least half of this is true SF.
Clearly.
@CatPlusPlus lol
@sbi Well, I don't get more than half of them :(
sbi
sbi
14:00
@RMartinhoFernandes Ah, so at least you get all the SF ones!
@RMartinhoFernandes Haven't you read Pratchett?
Oh, right, Pratchett!
Sometimes I forget there's more fantasy than high fantasy.
@CatPlusPlus How does that work? The UI is made up of web pages?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Isn't Pratchett considered HF?
Can 9 women make a baby in 1 month? Of course not, that's ridiculous. You need ~12 to account for the overhead of the distributed algorithm.
@LucDanton Like Visual Studio wizards. You take HTML and JS and just render it in a window.
@sbi afaik, high fantasy == fantasy that takes itself seriously and doesn't tell jokes
14:05
Well, at least conceptually it's simple, because HTML and JS and CSS are taken straight from hell.
@jalf Right, that's what I thought too.
Also, Overgrowth is awesome.
sbi
sbi
> High fantasy has become one of the two genres most commonly associated with the general term fantasy, the other being sword and sorcery [...]
> High fantasy is defined as fantasy fiction set in an alternative, entirely fictional ("secondary") world, rather than the real, or "primary" world. The secondary world is usually internally consistent but its rules differ in some way(s) from those of the primary world. By contrast, low fantasy is characterized by being set in the primary, or "real" world, or a rational and familiar fictional world, with the inclusion of magical elements.
or maybe, it's "fantasy which wishes it was LoTR"
@CatPlusPlus I may or may not have bought the second game when I preordered NS2. I don't remember.
sbi
sbi
14:06
That's from Wikipedia, and it seems to me the Diskworld is HF.
@sbi It's already a highly parallelized process due to cell division.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes So you found Pratchett in my blurb?
Burleigh and Stronginthearm :P
What's the "planet of Accountants" about?
14:08
Sounds like real world.
@CatPlusPlus Oh wait, there's no Overgrowth 2. Overgrowth is the follow-up to whatever the predecessor was named.
Lugaru?
@sbi Yes, according to that it seems so. But it's "Discworld" (note the c).
0
Q: classes with pointer members and no overridden copy constructor.

SirYakalotAm I right in thinking, (given the situation stated in the question) that if you copy such an object (where pointers point to something declared in the same class) that there are multiple sets of pointers but they all point to the same objects? Does this mean there are other objects in the othe...

Can anyone parse that?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I always get that wrong, no matter how hard I try. :(
@RMartinhoFernandes h2g2
14:11
@sbi I know.
Aug 30 at 9:40, by R. Martinho Fernandes
(It's Discworld, with a c. Pratchett is British.)
@sbi Damn. Now I feel... unworthy.
I love H2G2.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes You bastard!
While I remember that it's spelled differently, I keep forgetting who spells it which way...
Seems like everyone is doing their own indie bundles now.
Pick the one that doesn't look German!
sbi
sbi
> Accountants are just failed poets. — h2g2.com
Hence Vogons.
sbi
sbi
14:15
But "world" never looks German no matter which one I pick.
@RMartinhoFernandes LOL!
@CatPlusPlus There should be a generic response, "write code, not words."
@RMartinhoFernandes Isn't "disc" the American spelling?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I had to look it up to find out it wasn't just accountants.
No, disk is American.
Not a real question if I've ever seen one
3
Q: Expression evaluation in assignment

PhilippI was just surprised to see that on GCC (4.3.2) the left hand side of an assignment expression might be evaluated before the right hand side: int x,y; int& getX() { std::cout << "getX\n"; return x; } int& getY() { std::cout << "getY\n"; return y; } void test() { ...

14:28
@CatPlusPlus Hah, I genuinely thought it was the other way around! It's consistent with skeptic/sceptic then
Do parenthesis ever effect order? getX() = (getY());
That'd be silly.
If you need to rely on evaluation order, you're doing something wrong.
No more silly than sequence points!
In i++ + (++i + 1), it does not help that it has parentheses.
14:41
> Compiler Security Enhancements in Visual Studio 11
@CatPlusPlus That sounds good.
Is that like, complaining about crap code that is just asking for buffer overruns?
Some silly warnings turned into errors and more runtime checks as far as I can see.
I wonder what kind of simple heuristics could determine the crappiness (read C-ness) level of some C++ code.
Just counting splats should give good results already.
14:47
I like that, go for a meeting, come back to a comic
1
Q: Best practices for recovering from a segmentation fault

SamI am working on a multithreaded process written in C++, and am considering modifying SIGSEGV handling using google-coredumper to keep the process alive when a segmentation fault occurs. However, this use of google-coredumper seems ripe with opportunities to get stuck in an infinite loop of core ...

Why is it that some people have a desire to attract problems?
2
sbi
sbi
Considering buying a Amazon Kindle. Since I'm not a avid reader I think I'll choose the Kindle Shuffle which displays pages in random order.
@CatPlusPlus "...the now familiar cookie-based stack overflow protection..."
lol
@CatPlusPlus care to take a second look at my openGL problems? question is on SO now...
Er, why are you calling glVertexAttribPointer in drawing code?
14:55
0
Q: Error when trying to use VBO "array vertex_buffer_object must be disabled to call this method"

thecoshmanI am currently stuck trying to get some vertex data drawing from VBOs I keep getting caught with the following exception: Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" javax.media.opengl.GLException: array vertex_buffer_object must be disabled to call this method I will refrain from posting all ...

Try replacing
gl.glBindBuffer(GL4.GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, bufferID[0]);
gl.glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
gl.glVertexAttribPointer(0, 4, GL.GL_FLOAT, false, 0, null); // this is the line that throw s the error
with
huh... good point... but either way, it should work the first time
gl.glBindVertexArray(your_vao_name);
huh... shit... its during the buffering of the data the glVertexAttribPointer fails... let me just fix that
Also glDisableClientState is not part of core profile, at least in >3.2.
14:59
fixed post
well, I was trying disabling and enabling a variety of things, so that was just kind of left in
I am right in thinking though, that glVertexPointer is also depreciated from the core?
@RMartinhoFernandes Not really related to that question, more the answers it got, but you can use SIGSEGV reliably if you're careful, for example with mprotect to mark pages RO and then use some kind of COW on individual pages in user space
gl*Pointer were replaced by generic attributes.
from what I can tell, I am doing the same things as in the sample you sent me the other day
Well, it's some Java crap bindings.
I can't see anything else.
15:02
hmm... might have to try harder to find some one who knows wtf is up with JOGL
from what I can tell, you can either use JOGL1 which is no longer supported and only supports up to GL2 (if that) or you can use JOGL2 which is currently still in beta but at least (theoretically) supports modern openGL
Isn't LWJGL the de facto standard of Java OpenGL bindings?
from I can tell, LWJGL is equivalent to DirectX (not just D3D)
@awoodland Yeah, but that doesn't really count as "recovering" does it?
I think the question is about "surviving" a bug.
hmmm... nightly builds... chances of bug being fixed vs chances of another bug crewing me over ¬_¬
15:29
strange ways of breaking out of a loop
107
A: Breaking out of nested loops in Java

Jon SkeetYou can use break with a label for the outer loop. For example: public class Test { public static void main(String[] args) { outerloop: for (int i=0; i < 5; i++) { for (int j=0; j < 5; j++) { if (i * j > 6) { System.out.println("Breaking"); br...

only in Java would one be able to do this :P
Yay power outage at the job...
Java has labels?
@TonyTheLion Yeah, and guess what that can be used for unrestricted goto.
it is a strange syntax, but I can see the idea behind it
as far as I know though, the labels to have to be directly before the associated for loop
break it_down_now;?
15:32
@thecoshman You can label arbitrary blocks.
break(2) or something would make more sense
@RMartinhoFernandes well I'll be
labelGoesHere: { // pity you put the label far from where things goto
    doSomething();
    if(someCondition())
        break labelGoesHere; // goto!
    doSomethingElse();
}
// I want to goto here
someMoreCode();
// equivalent C code:
doSomething();
if(someCondition())
    goto labelGoesHere; // goto!
doSomethingElse();
labelGoesHere: // things comefrom somewhere to this place
someMoreCode();
could someone explain why this is illegal: { label: }??
Can't go back, but that's something you can hack with a while(true) and continue!
@Pubby No block associated.
15:37
What do you mean?
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion What's wrong with putting this into its own function and simply return from it?
@Pubby Oh, you mean in C++?
Yes. I have to do { label:; } which is strange
@sbi that is probably the nicest solution to this
BUT FUNCTIONS PERFORMANCE SOMETHING STACK.
sbi
sbi
15:40
@thecoshman I always wondered why everybody is arguing that breaking out of nested loops is a use case for goto, when the solution is simply to write better structured code and never be tempted to consider goto.
@RMartinhoFernandes inline?
@sbi its true, surely the fact that you have a complex set of nested loops slaps you in the face of "stick it in a dam function"
@EtiennedeMartel There's no such thing in Java.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Either we're talking Java here as in the original question, in which case performance doesn't matter (or why use Java in the first place?), or we're talking C++, in which case we can use inline.
@RMartinhoFernandes Then that means it's a good thing.
15:41
But you can't force the compiler to inline!
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Does that mean you were applying your performance concern about an additional function call around three nested loop to Java? Don't be ridiculous.
@RMartinhoFernandes So the compiler knows better. Shrug. What's your point?
@RMartinhoFernandes Then use #define? Functions are for squares
@sbi But I was trying to be ridiculous!
The JITter is probably going to fix it anyway.
the one thing that I find strangest about Java is the way it optimises on the fly... but it never caches these optimisations, so when you restart the program, you start with the raw basic slow as shit version
sbi
sbi
15:43
@thecoshman Actually, I'd be the kind of programmer who uses three nested function calls for three nested loops.
@Pubby You can't return from a macro. That would be disastrous.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, you succeeded.
@sbi :O that's just sick (with in reason)
@Pubby #define ¬_¬
@sbi I thought the ALL CAPS and crazy grammar was a dead giveaway.
@RMartinhoFernandes We need a sarcasm font.
15:44
@EtiennedeMartel or just tag things as sarcastic
Then again, what makes sarcasm so great is the subtlety.
I wasn't trying to be subtle.
I thought you humans were good at detecting this kind of things.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Why? If you have a loop that operates on rows, why not stick it into a function do_on_rows(), and if you want to work on columns within that, why not call a function named do_on_columns() for that? Makes perfect sense to me, and if you have messed up rows and columns, nobody will have to wonder whether that was intentional.
> The reason why there is loss of precision in double/float mathematics is that the computer operates in base 2 and we operate in base 10.
Just saw that in a deleted answer.
My favourite solution would be to encapsulate the iteration pattern.
15:46
@sbi so a sort for for(eachrow){for(eachcolun){dostuff}} structure?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Sigh. Of course we noted this. We were just playing along with it. Too b ad you had to be explained. That spoiled all the fun. It seems robots simply aren't subtle enough for sarcasm.
Like rows_begin()/rows_end(), columns_begin()/columns_end() for rows/columns, and begin()/end() for what would be the nested thing.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman do_on_rows(...) { for(eachrow) do_on_columns(...); }
@RMartinhoFernandes I have written function templates to descent into arbitrarily nested sequences and operate on whatever non-iterator is at the bottom, and such code is not pretty at all.
You could then make something like for(auto a : x.rows()), for(auto a : x.columns()) and for(auto a : x)work and get all three iteration patterns always with a single loop.
@sbi Maybe. I guess I'm used to C# iterator blocks.
@sbi except, strictly speaking, you are not working on a column, you are working on a single cell within a row. I would rather use some sort of call back system. that would allow for you to pass in a function pointer to a 'for each row' 'for each column' or 'for each indavidual cell' though this would require some sort of table class
15:51
IEnumerable<T> EnumerateNested() {
    foreach(var row in Rows)
        foreach(var column in row)
            yield return column;
}
And then foreach(var x in y.EnumerateNested()) DoSomething(x);.
Easy as pie.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Except you failed to imagine this: do_on_columns(...) { for(eachcol) do_on_cells(...); } :)
@RMartinhoFernandes now how would you write something like that in C++?
@TonyTheLion With iterators. Not as pretty.
2 mins ago, by sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I have written function templates to descent into arbitrarily nested sequences and operate on whatever non-iterator is at the bottom, and such code is not pretty at all.
@sbi meh? :P
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I said "...three nested functions...", didn't I? :b
15:53
oh wow
I wonder if the execute-around-pattern will become a common pattern in C++ now that we have lambdas.
File.write(filename, [](std::ostream & os) { /*...*/});
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion I think "painfully" is what you are looking for.
@sbi hmmm
I guess you'd only really implement it if you really need it
@sbi sure you did ¬_¬
@TonyTheLion The C# compiler generates a bunch of very ugly code for that.
15:55
@RMartinhoFernandes yea I know
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Isn't that what had been called "template algorithm" (and other things I can't remember right now)?
@RMartinhoFernandes In C++, you have to create that very ugly code yourself.
You don't need to make it as ugly, though.
@sbi You mean template method?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Yeah, I think that was used, too. It confused everybody, because they heard "template method" and thought "member function template".
Template method is a pattern from GoF, isn't it?
15:57
I don't see the relation between execute-around and template method though.
@RMartinhoFernandes yep
execute-around is a nice way to enforce mutex locking
ThreadSafe<std::string> name; name.lock([](std::string & s) { ... });
Now you can never forget to lock the variable.
@StackedCrooked now that would be handy
I call those things LockedBox (I wrote one in C#).
Internet playing games again.
can't be that hard to implement, or is it?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Both allow you to embed your own code in some context-providing code?

« first day (416 days earlier)      last day (4759 days later) »