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16:00
@TonyTheLion It's easy to implement. Try it yourself :)
could you use boost::function to pass a lambda to?
Template, dummy!
(But yes, std/boost::function would work)
@TonyTheLion Lambdas are implicitly convertible to std::function
But a template adds zero overhead.
Performance and shit.
16:02
While a std::function is actually a box containing a function object, with type erasure somewhere in-between.
sbi
sbi
So, basically, std::for_each is an implementation of the execute-around pattern?
I was thinking of doing template<typename T> class ThreadSafe { template<template Func> lock(Func f) { /* use f*/ } };
sounds about right?
Func would need to be a type of std::function
It's missing the object to keep locked, and a mutex.
@TonyTheLion It's ok.
@RMartinhoFernandes wasn't a complete example
16:05
I think I'm going to put that wheel in my library.
sbi
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What's the advantage of that ThreadSafe class (template) over using a traditional scoped lock?
@TonyTheLion Given your code it would accept anything that is callable.
@sbi It looks cool.
@sbi You can't access the object without locking.
That also.
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16:05
@EtiennedeMartel That's about that worst reason imaginable.
@StackedCrooked I guess perhaps I'd need to have a std::enable_if or something so that it only accepts a std::function
@sbi Also, you can make an object thread-safe non-intrusively. (Instead of creating a scoped lock in each member function.)
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@RMartinhoFernandes Mhmm. But I think I did this, too, once. Lemme dig...
@sbi I don't know about that, many ideas seem to be cool-powered these days.
{
    scoped_lock x(mutex);
    something_with(s);
}
If you miss the scoped_lock the compiler won't complain.
While with the small ThreadSafe box, you can't get to s without taking the mutex.
@TonyTheLion No need for that. Just call the function.
You can static_assert that it's callable to provide a better error message if you want.
16:07
@RMartinhoFernandes yea but what if what is passed isn't a function in the template arg?
@TonyTheLion The compiler will produce an error.
@RMartinhoFernandes ah, never used static_assert
The point is, the error that occurs if you SFINAE it out ("can't find overload") is worse than the error produced if the object is not callable ("can't call something on this shit").
(And a static_asserted one is the best of all three.)
oh right
ok
enable_if should work as well:)
Why not?
@StackedCrooked Produces a misleading error.
perhaps enable_if should rather be used for overloading
That's exactly what it is for :)
I can't help but think that it's pretty ingenious.
Overload POD vs non-POD? No problem!
16:13
It has a godawful syntax though.
If there is a type-trait for it you can overload it.
Actually, in this case, I would probably SFINAE it...
template <typename F> decltype(f(declval<T>())) lock(F f) { scoped_lock guard(mutex); return f(t); }
sbi
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@RMartinhoFernandes Can't seem to find it, but here's something off the top of my head:
    template<typename T>
    class locked_data {
    public:
        locked_data(T& d) : d_(d), l_() {l_.grab();}
        ~locked_data()                  {l_.release();}

        operator       T&()             {return d_;}
        operator const T&() const       {return d_;}
    private:
        T& d_;
        some_lock l_;
    };

    template<typename T>
    class thread_safe_data {
    public:
        thread_safe_data()           : data_()  {}
        thread_safe_data(const T& d) : data_(d) {}
(see full text)
locked_data get() {return locked_data<T>(data_);} // does this compile?
Because locked_data has is a member that is a reference.
Yeah, should be a pointer.
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16:16
@StackedCrooked It misses a <T>. (I didn't compile it.)
It probably does.
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@RMartinhoFernandes Why?
References are copyable, after all.
@sbi Nevermind, it's copyable.
@EtiennedeMartel Ah yes.
Assignment would fail.
So it's ok.
16:17
But escaping from that is really easy and just asking for it.
T& x = box.get();
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@RMartinhoFernandes I don't understand.
@sbi T& x = box.get(); x.do_racy_stuff();
I have a similar solution (line 103 and beyond) inspired by BOOST_FOREACH.
Sure you can also let the protected data escape with the execute around idea of @Stacked, but it's a lot harder to do so accidentally.
sbi
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@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, of course, stowing away an unprotected reference to a protected value is asking for trouble.
16:20
@RMartinhoFernandes The scope of x is inside the scope of box here so it's fine.
@StackedCrooked But the mutex is released right after the initialization. (See the message that follows that one)
sbi
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@RMartinhoFernandes Yes, I see this now. (You could have said that immediately when I asked, and spared us the round-trip of me raking my head for very badly presented old code. :) )
@sbi Well, it led to me writing a function call to do_racy_stuff, so I can claim I did that just to stay on-topic.
:P
Lock lock(threadSafeObject);
Data & data = lock.get(); // lock outlives data
@StackedCrooked And how do you operate on the data?
sbi
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16:26
@StackedCrooked And maybe that's even what I did back then. Also, I'm unsure whether I used an implicit conversion operator at that time.
@RMartinhoFernandes Through the locked_data object.
@StackedCrooked Oh, that's good ole scoped guard, but you can't forget it. Neat!
@RMartinhoFernandes In my above link I added some syntax so that it's similar to boost foreach.
LOCK(Data & data, threadSafeData) { ... }
But that's a bit overkill perhaps.
sbi
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@RMartinhoFernandes Of course, you can still defeat this (assign to a pointer), but that's the old tension between Murphy and Machiavelli.
Anyway, back to work...
I always wondered why some people are so eager to admit that they're beginners right before they ask a question.
@StackedCrooked Couldn't you make it just LOCK(data, threadSafeData) { ... } with the aid of decltype (or even just a typedef in the box class)?
16:31
@EtiennedeMartel To me that always smells like self-defeat: "Help, I cannot understand anything, so please don't give me a difficult answer"
@RMartinhoFernandes It's C++03 code. I tried really hard to find a solution but didn't find one.
I usually read it just as "I'm not much interested in learning."
@RMartinhoFernandes And then I noticted that boost foreach also doesn't do this.
@RMartinhoFernandes But it would probably work with decltype.
@StackedCrooked But, isn't Data the simply type you are templating the box with?
Add a typedef Variable TheTypeOfTheData; and voilá!
No?
@RMartinhoFernandes yes, but I would need something like decltype or typeof to be able to use it as an lvalue type.
16:34
@StackedCrooked Er, just add &?
@RMartinhoFernandes I challenge you!
You can't in C++03.
Unless perhaps with BOOST TYPEOF.
Ok, I'll have a longer look at the code. Back in a moment.
17:09
I used to be a chat troll like you, but then I took an arrow to the knee.
17:24
@StackedCrooked Oops, sorry, got distracted by some question on SO. Yeah, I see the problem now. You need some form of decltype.
I think that in C++11 you could abuse the ranged-for loop for this :)
for(auto& x : box) {
    x.do_racy_stuff();
    x.do_more_racy_stuff();
    x.do_really_raunchy_stuff();
}
No, you couldn't.
WTF am I thinking.
sbi
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17:39
@RMartinhoFernandes Racy thoughts?
In for(auto&& x = blah(); blah(); blah()) {}, the temporary x refers to lasts until the loop ends, right?
@sbi I'm thinking nasty things, but not that kind of nasty.
@RMartinhoFernandes the object referenced exists outside the scope of the loop, it's resident in the box object, and will persist outside the body of the loop. Because your using a indirection to call the functions on the original object in box there shouldn't be a problem. (i may have this totally wrong)
@johnathon Exceptions.
That's the problem.
If do_really_raunchy_stuff() throws, the lock won't be released.
But...
for(auto& x : box.open()) {
    x.do_racy_stuff();
    x.do_more_racy_stuff();
    x.do_really_raunchy_stuff();
}
This could be made to work!
Now please excuse me while I write a proof of concept, complete with racy functions.
OMG how is that possible!
@RMartinhoFernandes The absence of a government had become a stable factor of daily life. Now I feel confused.
2
@StackedCrooked Wow.
What do I need for an input iterator? Just ++, *, == and !=, right?
@StackedCrooked woah - I wonder if it'll last longer than it took to form?
18:08
@awoodland Good question :D
Hello All
lulz, Belgiain Government
@StackedCrooked are they pro-split too?
@awoodland no they don't want to split Belgium
I am kinda new to using C++ with separate class files and header files that need to be used to import them, I just want to know , including other headers in a new header file is generally a bad idea right ?
18:10
@angryInsomniac why would it be
how can you use std::string in your class if you can't include string ?
@awoodland Wallon parties are radically anti-split (because Wallon would end up poorer). Some Flemish parties are pro-split. The outspoken pro-split parties (NVA, Vlaams Belang) don't take part in the new government.
@TonyTheLion I meant doing a #include in the header file , I mean supposedly I make a class "A", and make a header A.h , include "string.h" in it , then string.h is automatically included wherever A.h is , not really ideal behavior ?
@angryInsomniac that's what include guards are for
Why would you split. To ditch the poor?
at the top of A.h you do #ifndef A_H #define A_H /*all your code */ #endif
@Xaade basically :P
18:15
@TonyTheLion Googling :) thanks for the info
@TonyTheLion Then I wish America would split from Mexico already!
haha, Mexico is a separate country
whereas Wallony isn't
it's part of Belgium
You should have include guards anyway, but that won't solve your problem.
@TonyTheLion Well, no one's told the Mexicans that.
18:16
It's something that you can solve sometimes (by providing a declaration to the stuff you want to use), but sadly many times it's just something you have to live with :(
I want modules.
@Xaade lulz
@Xaade really? the impression I got of mexico was they were keen to assert that there's more than 1 country in north america
there's also Canada in NA
@awoodland Maybe so, I mean.... on Cinco-Mayo day they get ticked if someone wears an American flag to school in America.
Then the American school told the American kids not to bring American stuff to school on foreign Mexican drunkard's day!
Why does int main() { try { throw 42; } catch(...) {} } call terminate()?
18:19
So they both want their own country, but they want all the benefits of not having their own country.
Hi
@RMartinhoFernandes Because you threw the answer to the question of life, the universe, and everything at it, it has no more purpose.
Does anyone here know anything about this?
:2033380 not exactly. I sat in on 8 hours of iPhone programming workshops and spent most of the time thinking "this would be a great language if C++ didn't exist"
18:21
@awoodland Lol, okay.
No, really, I fear I don't know as much as I think I know about try-catch.
We should rename the chat room to, "Come here if you're too lazy to post a question on non-C++ related topics".
Or this is a compiler bug.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Come here if you're too lazy to post a question on non-C++ related topics [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
@Xaade I did post a question.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Don't come here if you're too lazy to post a question on non-C++ related topics [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
18:22
@RMartinhoFernandes it looks like the "implicit rethrow" if it's doing that, but it shouldn't be doing that there
We should change room topic to "bunch of C++ fanboy elitists".
:P
ducks
@Moshe If you knew how often that this occurs, you'd understand.
Everyone thinks he's the only one.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A bunch of people that hates C++. Some even use it. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
@Xaade I do, that's why I ducked.
@RMartinhoFernandes status-norepro here
18:24
Maybe it's the misconception that if you're good at C++, you must be good at everything, since C++ is so awesome.
11
Damn, it's a bug.
@RMartinhoFernandes Hate, not hates ;-)
@Xaade havastar
We're a bunch.
:P
We hate it as a bunch.
He's right.
hey @sbi, I got my shirt :)
or at least I assume that's what it is
18:24
A collection uses the singular verb.
haven't opened the package yet
group hates, people hate.
There are a few exceptions (as always), but I don't remember them.
I'll Listpify it.
A (bunch of people) that (hates C++).
oo, another SO sticker
what do they imagine we stick them on?
Not "A (bunch of (people that hates C++))".
(I know I'm wrong.)
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A bunch of people that hate C++. Some even use it. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
18:26
@TonyTheLion Hey Tony, I assume the guard thing is not a concern in for redefinition of STL classes. I only need to do it in stuff I define.
@RMartinhoFernandes now it's wrong.
Dammit. Stop confusing me.
oo, and a SO pen and stuff
now comes the important question. Is this going to be less tent-like than the first one
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A bunch of people that hates C++. Some don't know how to write the previous sentence. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
bunch = singular -> singular verb.
18:27
I won't change the topic again today, dammit.
remove the clarification. "A bunch that hate C++." To make it sound right, change to group. "A group that hate C++" or "A group hate C++. / A group hates C++"
Room Topic changed to: A room run by a tyrant who is too lazy to change the room topic
I don't run the room!
hey, it fits
18:30
Lol, just teasing you.
sbi
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@jalf Wow! I think I had mine sent to work, and it didn't arrive today. Well, I'll see then...
Mwahahahahahah. ideone.com/HK4Kw. Prints:
Mutex acquired.
Being racy...
Being even more racy...
Mutex released.
(ideone doesn't support ranged-for yet :( )
sbi
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@Moshe What did you do?!
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A room that can't keep a single description for more than a few minutes. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
Sometimes it lasts for days.
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18:34
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A bunch of people that hates C++. Some don't know how to write the previous sentence. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
haters gonna hate
Dammit.
No thoughts on my racy code?
"Woa", said Keanu Reeves.
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@EtiennedeMartel Did he even know @RMartinho's question?
@RMartinhoFernandes racism is bad.
18:35
@sbi No.
Gosh. No, not racism. "Sexually titillating". Or "likely to cause data races". I'm not sure.
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@EtiennedeMartel Then how could he have replied thus?
@sbi Because he's Keanu Reeves.
@sbi Really, what else could he have replied?
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@StackedCrooked Yeah, heard that in the news this morning. Cong-rats!
@Xaade Has there ever been any other reason?
18:38
@RMartinhoFernandes Clockcycle dash!
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@RMartinhoFernandes I didn't ask what, but how he could have replied that.
@sbi Nothing, why?
@sbi Different interests (iron curtain).
Dammit, I keep failing at basic stuff like reading and writing today.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: The room where Moshe figured out how to fake room topic changes.
18:40
What are you trying?
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@Moshe See, again!
A tad slowish.
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room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: A bunch of people that hates C++. Some don't know how to write the previous sentence. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
I set it back.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: @sbi you will never win!
@sbi I'm glad I'm in a stable country. Where illegal immigrants get magical Mickey Mouse votes, suicide bombers fly planes into buildings, and big business is too big to fail, rather than those other countries where they dissolve the government because they can't agree to ditch the poor.
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18:42
@Moshe I reckon you're about the 25th person to do so.
But room topic changes don't get the tags tagified.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: [Insert Topic Here] [Insert-tags-here]
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@Moshe I could just shut you out and be done with winning.
Remember, I'm The Grumpy Old Man in this room. Do not cross me.
3
@sbi You can't do that, can you?
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@RMartinhoFernandes Shall I test it on you? :D
18:46
@RMartinhoFernandes It's under info somewhere.
Lol, okay. I'll give it up.
sbi
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If a feature is built in a forest, and no one ever finds it to use it, does it make a sound?Sarah Ford
cpx
cpx
Hm, can you ban someone from the room, if you're a room owner?
@cpx I don't think so.
sbi
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18:48
Damn Murkdown!
It would take a concerted effort, I think. Someone must flag the guy, and then others must validate said flag.
That's a 30 minute cooldown.
And no need for ownership.
@Xaade One of the reasons I learned C++ is because I thought that after learning C++ it would be easy to pick up any other language.
Let me guess, you were wrong.
@StackedCrooked That's the usual argument in favor of teaching C++ as a first language.
In fact that's the only argument.
18:53
@RMartinhoFernandes Mostly.
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@StackedCrooked That is probably true for C, Java, C#, Delphi and may others. It is probably not true for languages like LISP or Prolog.
Yeah, functional languages in general, actually.
Exactly. And the transition to Java is not necessarily easy.
The thing is that most other language actually are easy to pick up after learning C++. However, the real challenge is learning the accompanying technologies. For example Java is pretty easy to pick up, but there's a whole Java universe out there that I know almost nothing of.
You need to get used to the "everything is a mutable nullable reference, except some stuff" thing.
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18:55
@EtiennedeMartel Like Prolog? :)
@RMartinhoFernandes It's probably a lot easier than the other way.
@RMartinhoFernandes also = and copy ctor
@sbi I was talking about Lisp.
@sbi You think knowing Java contributes to that? More than the sheer complexity of C++?
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@EtiennedeMartel And I was talking about non-imperative languages in general.
(I'm assuming someone that knows Java and sets off to learn C++ without trying to make it Java)
18:56
@sbi Yeah, but who uses Prolog anyway?
Lots of people. Mostly women.
@RMartinhoFernandes Really? I guess it's time for me to learn Prolog.
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@RMartinhoFernandes I think that learning Java when you know C++ is easier than learning C++ when you know Java. I have no scientific proof, but I have experience teaching C++ to students knowing Java, and have a friend who just made the transition from C++ to Java for a new job.
@EtiennedeMartel Not really. That's a silly joke reference.
@sbi Is there anyone who know C++ and does not hate C++?
18:58
You probably won't get the reference because the original was in Portuguese.
@sbi I agree. It's easier going from a more complex language to a less complex language than the opposite.
@curiousguy Thanks. I got those for free :)
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@EtiennedeMartel The Genius in Residence here!
@sbi In my case Java served as a stepping stone to C++.
C++ -> Java is easy merely because Java is a simple language
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18:58
@curiousguy Many, actually.
Java -> C++ is not easy because C++ is a complex language
Yeah, I know a guy who hates it when I bash C++.
@sbi But what I really wanted to know is if you think that knowing Java doesn't make learning C++ easier than not knowing it.

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