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sbi
sbi
19:00
@RMartinhoFernandes Interesting question. I taught C++ to students knowing Java, and I taught C++ to those not knowing Java. But the latter knew none or very little programming at all and had a lot more time at hand to learn, so the results aren't comparable.
Compare "learn Java, then C++" and "learn C++". Which has an easier last step?
I guess having some background in programming makes it easier.
Learning to ride a bicycle with training wheels is easy after having learned to ride a normal bicycle.
@sbi They don't even hate modern templates?
@StackedCrooked That's not really a fair comparison.
sbi
sbi
19:02
@curiousguy Many here don't.
@RMartinhoFernandes Why not?
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel I am sure it does.
@StackedCrooked Java is not C++ with training wheels.
@EtiennedeMartel I know I hate when people who don't know C++ bash C++.
@curiousguy why would I hate the chief redeeming feature of C++?
19:03
@RMartinhoFernandes Not literally.
I hate C++'s verbosity. And its compilation model.
@jalf Because it sucks? (It's still the chief redeeming feature)
@RMartinhoFernandes not half as mcuh as C++ would suck without it
@jalf Hello, casts to void *!
19:04
@jalf you don't hate 2 phases name lookup?
why would I? I hate that some, but not all, compilers implement it
@RMartinhoFernandes WideC to the rescue.
@StackedCrooked I'm not sure about that.
sbi
sbi
@curiousguy I hate VC not implementing it. :)
Assuming it ends up working one day, I think it's "too powerful".
19:08
If I am not mistaken WideC will compile to C++ so it will be easy to integrate with existing code. That sounds cool.
@RMartinhoFernandes Then there should be a compiler argument to reduce power.
sbi
sbi
@curiousguy Have a look at my profile. Look what most of my questions are about, and what most of my answers are about. You will find that I am not working in C++, ATM. So I am used to program without templates. And I hate it. It's like they cut of my right hand when I'm a joiner.
@EtiennedeMartel C++ does not even have a compilation modem. Textual inclusion + no way to restrict exported names (unlike Windows)
-p0 up to -p10
lol
@StackedCrooked Needs a setting of "up to eleven" too.
@curiousguy Modules would fix most of those issues.
19:10
@curiousguy of course it has a compilation model. It just leaves a lot up to the implementation
also what do you mean "unlike Windows"? Windows isn't a programming language
@curiousguy compilation modem?
you're a curious guy
3
@StackedCrooked Ba-dum-tish.
@StackedCrooked that's why you need compilation firewalls too
Lately I've been starting to appreciate free functions more that I did before.
@awoodland I use pimpl a lot. I'm a big fan.
19:15
@StackedCrooked Waaa, news about my country!
@sbi The old template textual model that MS implements is not C++, but is it less useful for programmers?
@rubenvb also my country :)
@StackedCrooked And so we learn a new thing everyday :)
Either of you fancy a beer at FOSDEM in Brussels in Feb?
@jalf Windows proposes a linking model where you can control name visibility.
sbi
sbi
19:17
@curiousguy It allows code to compile that ought to not to compile. I had this hurting me badly several times.
@awoodland Interesting idea..
I've been there once.
@StackedCrooked I get to go and pretend it's work :)
Sorry, I'm not that into the stuff. Thanks for the offer :)
I'm a physicist after all :p
pysicist .. nice
19:19
@curiousguy I still don't see what you mean. Are you talking about __declspec(dllexport)? That's MSVC and not Windows, and it's an extension to C and C++
@johnathon well, almost :) (2nd master student)
@rubenvb closer than I ;P
@jalf GCC on Linux has a similar mechanism (it even accepts MS's syntax).
@RMartinhoFernandes but it's still compiler-dependant, and not a feature of Windows
@jalf dllexport is Windows, really, every Win32 compiler supports it
it's part of PE-COFF
the object file format
19:21
@jalf That's what I meant, it's not Windows.
making it a feature of Windows.
@jalf which was inherited from the VAX team ms hired to write NT
@rubenvb er, no? Where in the file format does it say anything about dllexport?
@jalf You mean the PE export table? win32assembly.online.fr/pe-tut7.html
19:22
@johnathon yeah right, here, google.com
how about something specific?
@jalf forget it
@rubenvb Er, how do you think libraries work under other OSes? They too have tables describing exported symbols
@johnathon Gladly
well, the explicit "export" facility is quite baked into it. Linux just has every symbol visible by default
@johnathon I asked a very specific question, and you gave a link to a general description of an entire complex file format. Not very useful
@jalf Go read it. Come back Friday and we can continue this.
19:24
@rubenvb I don't see the connection. The file format in both cases has to support a mechanism to list the exported symbols. The file format doesn't care if there were any symbols in the source code that weren't exported
from the file format's point of view, it doesn't matter how many symbols are exported (or how many aren't)
@jalf The OS does.
@rubenvb how so?
@jalf specificaly the loader
calls to LoadLibrary and friends
@johnathon Why does the loader need to know whether all or just some symbols are exported?
As far as I'm aware, it only needs to know which symbols are exported
@RMartinhoFernandes dun wanna ;)
19:26
I'm not saying Windows invented symbol visibility or anything, I'm just saying that if developing on an ELF platform, you don't have to care, whereas on Windows, you always have to care (in the case of shared libraries). Hence it's connected to the OS.
DLL is a Windows feature so it seems natural to that it is closely tied to how MSVC exports names.
@rubenvb I'm just saying you're wrong. The de facto standard compiler on Windows supports a convenient mechanism for specifying symbol visibility, but from the OS (and the loaders) point of view, it makes zero difference. The loader needs to know which symbols are visible, it doesn't need to know if there are any symbols that are not visible
Its relationship to Windows is entirely incidental
@jalf Does it even know the non-visible symbols exist?
@jalf Incidental, but correct.
no
which is why the list of non-exported symbols kind of doesn't matter
19:29
@jalf Reply to me?
@RMartinhoFernandes yes
but the list that is exported, really does matter, and without dllexport, you can't do that. As far as I know, GCC visibility does not work on Windows, and ld's --export-all-symbols is buggy as hell.
So, from the point of view of the loader everything is exported.
I find stacks so confusing
@rubenvb but none of that has to do with WIndows as an OS
19:31
@ManofOneWay stacks as in the ADT or the call stack?
The list of exported symbols matters, and that list always exists, on every OS and using every compiler. The difference is only in how the compiler determines which symbols to put in the list
GCC puts everything that has external linkage, whereas MSVC puts everything decorated with dllexport.
Keyword being the compiler.
yup
Windows has no say in any of this
Windows just provides a loader which, given a list of symbols, figures out how to load the dll
exactly like its Linux equivalent does
neither of those knows whether or not there were once any non-exported symbols
@jalf wrong: GCC on Windows does exactly the same thing as MSVC, and every other Win32 compiler has the same behavior (Borland, Clang, Intel,...) It's more of a convention became silently standardized by being the default.
@awoodland Stacks as in, all kinds of different stacks.
First there are the stack and the heap in RAM memory. That's not so strange.
Then there are stack based machines? And some people say they don't have registers, at best they have an accumulator, which is one known register.. But that doesn't make sense either since the data must be in registers before the CPU can do anything with it. Which means that there must be multiple registers in stack based machines too.
19:33
@rubenvb so? It's a convention followed by compilers
And it is followed because the most popular compiler on Windows uses it
Nothing prevents Hell++ from not following it and making a mess. (rest assured, that's exactly what it would do if I were to ever implement it)
but you are correct in the fact that the functioning OS has nothing to do with this. I only meant the OS as a compilation target.
not because Windows dictates that Thou Shalt Use dllexport
@ManofOneWay you can always take your operand(s) for any instruction from the top of a stack and push the result of the operation back onto the stack
so when you say that Windows has a better linking model than C++, you mean...?
19:35
@awoodland top of the stack as in main memory?
@ManofOneWay doesn't have to be general purpose memory - it could be entirely within the processor, or a separate physical chip, or a page or two of main memory
@awoodland So what kind of memory is it then? It must be somewhere? And the CPU must have the data in registers to be able to use it right?
`std::vector<std::string> vec = { "hello", "goodbye" };
std::vector<std::string>::iterator it = vec.begin();`
Why doesn't that work?
compiler? error message?
@FredOverflow error: conversion from 'std::vector<std::basic_string<char> >::const_iterator {aka __gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<const std::basic_string<char>*, std::vector<std::basic_string<char> > >}' to non-scalar type 'std::vector<std::basic_string<char> >::iterator {aka __gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<std::basic_string<char>*, std::vector<std::basic_string<char> > >}' requested
19:37
Did you g++ --std=c++0x?
@awoodland But are there actual CPU's that are implemented as a stack?
So that you don't explicitly say which register to put data in
@ManofOneWay yup. But they've kind of fallen out of fashion
@ManofOneWay there are stack based architectures, yes.
because the register-based model is better :)
@FredOverflow Yes, of course :)
19:38
you could encode your operands in the instruction itself
@ManofOneWay The .NET VM is stack-based, no registers. Not sure if that counts.
I can't use auto either :/
@rubenvb You don't have a license?
@rubenvb That's another stack! I was coming to that
Actually, the x87 FPU in your CPU is semi-stackbased
19:39
Stacks like CPython or JVM uses. What kind of stack is that?
That's some Code stack?
stack of bytecodes ?
@ManofOneWay What about Stackless Python?
@StackedCrooked I have a blue "L" in the back of my car. Technically, I have a license, just not a full one :)
Ignore stackless python :)
@rubenvb Please show us more code. this works perfectly.
Did you by any chance write that code outside of a function body?
@FredOverflow yes, but it's a const_iterator, and I would like to assign something: for_each(list.begin(), list.end(), [&](const file& item) { *dest++ = item.first; })
with dest being the iterator from before. If I auto dest, the assignment will fail, if I vector<string>::iterator dest, that initialization will fail, for exactly the same reason: vector::begin() returns a const_iterator, and I don't want that :(
19:41
@StackedCrooked So that kind of stack is more a general implementation of the virtual machine? it has nothing do to with the actual hardware right?
@ManofOneWay I suppose.
@rubenvb Please show a complete ideone example that fails to compile.
I'll set up a small example
@FredOverflow There, ideone.com/d8Dv9. I was first. I win.
@RMartinhoFernandes That's another stack! I was coming to that (it was meant for you, I usually just tab when I press r)
19:43
@RMartinhoFernandes lol I meant related to his problem, of course :)
Java has two stacks, a call stack and an operand stack. Just thought I'd mention this since we just love Java, don't we.
Same goes for .NET.
@RMartinhoFernandes first!
@FredOverflow You are giving me goosebumps.
@StackedCrooked If you hadn't wasted precious time writing the "blah" ideone example, you would probably have beaten me.
19:46
@FredOverflow Hey!
I didn't write that!
@FredOverflow Are these stacks related to hardware in any way? Or is it just how they have implemented the JVM?
lol
@ManofOneWay No one ever built hardware for those architectures, but I don't think there's anything preventing that.
hmmm, it seems to work just fine :/
@awoodland "A stack machine implements a stack with registers. The operands of the ALU are always the top two registers of the stack and the result from the ALU is stored in the top register of the stack" - Wikipedia
This means that the two operands MUST be in registers? Not in some random memory?
that's as close to my code as I can get without the whole class etc...
Maybe a GCC 4.6 problem? (I'll check it)
19:47
A stack machine, is that like a desktop tower?
@rubenvb So it works on ideone, but not your compiler? Interesting.
@ManofOneWay No, the operands are in the stack.
@RMartinhoFernandes Which are registers? or loaded into registers?
Or is wikipedia wrong?
@ManofOneWay Hmm, the wording on wikipedia is really confusing.
@rubenvb I just tested it with 4.6.1 and it compiles just fine.
19:49
crapster
@rubenvb Why are you capturing dest by reference? Are you reading from it in the surrounding scope, later on? Iterators are meant to be passed by value.
And by that I mean myself
What did you do?
@ManofOneWay you could view the stack as a stack of registers
@awoodland But they are not really registers or what? Registers as in close-to-the-cpu
19:50
I'm not sure yet, but it must be user error, as a code clone without cruft showed it should work just fine >:s
@ManofOneWay There is nothing magical about stacks, why do you even care? ;)
@rubenvb Are you using an IDE? Or compiling from the command line?
@ManofOneWay they'd be the equivalent of registers in that architecture
All the Java hate is really just hating a language that implies to stupid people that they are capable of programming, and hindering productivity of advanced programmers who expect more control. Java as a language is fully capable of doing what it does, that's all a language can do. The hate is for the side effects. Honestly, hating Java is hating stupid people, and stupid people.... are universal.
@ManofOneWay Sure, in an actual machine the stack could reside in the chip.
@FredOverflow IDE (QtCreator). It's not a -std=c++0x problem, I'm quite sure :)
19:51
Is there something like a "force rebuild from scratch" or something?
Note to self: the TLD for Portugal is not .ptr.
@FredOverflow Because I have a compiler exam and a computer architecture exam, and they are using stacks for different purposes in different context
Which makes me confused =(
@FredOverflow no change. I'll keep looking, must be some stupif type or something ;-)
@ManofOneWay But you're dealing with a virtual machine. How it implements the stack and whether it uses real registers or something else, is irrelevant. The point is that it has a virtual stack where the two operands are in the stack, then the stack is emptied and a single answer is in the stack (or other combination of result depending on the operation).
Well, the cool thing about stack architectures is that you don't have an arbitrary limit on the number of "registers". The uncool thing is that you can normally only operate on the topmost two elements, so directly writing programs for a stack architecture is a pain. I'm looking at you, x87!
@rubenvb "type" or "typo"?
@Xaade The stack is not limited to two operands.
19:54
@ManofOneWay The computer architecture exam shouldn't have anything related to a virtual machine on it. That should clarify a few things.
@FredOverflow that was a typo-pun. Seems to be a bad joke :)
@rubenvb Okay, and what does "stupif" mean, is that also a pun?
@FredOverflow It's a typo!
@FredOverflow (or other combination...)
19:55
@RMartinhoFernandes at least someone got it :)
Yeah, humans suck.
@FredOverflow There is a physical limit at some point. If there isn't, then there's an abstraction layer involved.
@rubenvb Accidentallying all over is not a pun.
@Xaade "typo pun". That's a concept I just invented
@rubenvb Reacting to an accidentally is a joke, not the accidentally itself.
But aren't all compilers using a stack implementation in some way? The code must execute in some sequence, so why not push all the code on a stack and pop one thing at a time?
19:59
@ManofOneWay uh.... that's what an IP is for?
My eyes are starting to bleed again. You guys have knack in doing that to me :(
@ManofOneWay Why would you push code onto a stack instead of executing it directly from memory where it is already loaded into?
<there goes the last keyboard paint job>
Why have a stack, how do you implement goto, do you pop off the stack onto a temp stack?

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