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22:01
If you have a global variable that many functions depend on then you can't just reuse those functions in another program that doesn't have the global variable. ...This is not a great explanation..
You will understand when you get older..
:|
Also, it makes testing a pain, as well as thread safety if your globals are mutable.
@Maxpm It makes your program harder to understand, because every line of code could possibly modify global state.
@FredOverflow Ah, that makes sense.
@Maxpm which was the reason for information hiding with classes in c++
sbi
sbi
22:06
@johnathon Note that classes weren't invented with C++. Stroustrup copied the concept from SIMULA.
@johnathon I don't think I know what you mean.
@sbi indeed.
@Maxpm if foo has a A , then bar cant modify A
@Maxpm unless bar it's self has it's own A
classes didn't get rid of globals. evidence: Singletons.
2
22:07
Mmh.
singleton !!!!!!!!!
@cHao singleton
ugh Singletons
everybody drink!
@Maxpm Suppose you write a tetris game and all your game state is in global variables. Then you proudly show your game to everyone and they think it's cool. Then you want to impress them even more by adding multiplayer feature. That's when you discover that you practically need to rewrite all of your code...
22:08
lol
cout is a global, too, of course. I really think that kind of output belongs in free-standing functions, but I can see the rationale.
@keithlayne i actually did
@StackedCrooked Hmm.
Makes sense.
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Really, you enter the room and the subject immediately switches to something nasty, like Singletons. Why do you have to do that?
@sbi oh, damn :( didn't mean to do that
22:09
@Maxpm iostream is not the best thing to compare to
we can talk about sex if you want?
I could post a NSFW picture?
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Sex isn't something that should be talked about so much, except with a person you are having it with.
@TonyTheLion I am at work. :-/
@keithlayne Why not?
@sbi But you are talking about sex right now, with us!
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi It's 11pm?!
sbi
sbi
22:11
@FredOverflow I am talking about talking about sex. (For all you geeks here: That's like the difference between SO and MSO.)
@Xeo 11:10, actually.
Meta isn't that geeky of a concept.
oooh, talk meta-dirty to me
@Maxpm The fact that std::cout has state (like precision settings and stuff) is IMHO one of the worst design mistakes of C++.
sbi
sbi
@keithlayne Let's not do this, or the meta police will be over us in no time.
@FredOverflow That's an interesting observation. @jalf, do you copy?
Oh, he's gone.
Compilers ought to issue warnings when people write singletons.
3
22:13
@FredOverflow: You think that beats std::vector<bool>?
Bosses should fire when employees write singletons.
compilers ought to emit electric shocks through the keyboard when people write singletons.
std::cout is an ostream instance that outputs to stdout. Since there is only one stdout I see no problem. However, it's a good practice to design your APIs so that they output to a user-provided ostream object instead of cout.
@MooingDuck I have never been bitten by std::vector<bool>, so I couldn't tell.
@sbi was there any progress on the iostream replacement discussion?
sbi
sbi
22:13
@Xeo To answer your implicit question: When I take care of the kids, I don't get to work as many hours as my contract says, so I am working longer hours when I do not take care of the kids.
@keithlayne Yeah, just now! :)
And there's also a high-scoring question/answer today about vector<bool>.
If you check the 10k list...
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial Yawn.
@Mysticial yea, there was like 50 people on that instantly
@MooingDuck Is that the bit compression thing?
@StackedCrooked yes there's only one, but when I do << setprecision(20) << 3.0f; the people after me get really confused. Also, I believe the state thing is why it's (in MSVC at least) slower than printf.
@Maxpm Yeah, the bit compression thing. It was a bad idea. std::bitset is far superior.
22:15
What I don't get is how a week old answer I did, suddenly gave me 15 vote today...
I think someone linked it or something...
@MooingDuck Probably, yeah.
@sbi I have continued to think about the problem...but sadly I'm just a dumb AOL
Oh, my CPU has cooled down to 40°C, that's quite a difference from 65°C under stress.
@MooingDuck have you had a bad experience with vector<bool>?
Haha awesome, my first interesting TinyPTC executable is only 16k large :)
22:16
@FredOverflow Replace CPU with 'my body' and it becomes an incredible story.
Does GCC ever have an "out of stack space error"? I run into it all the time when I try to be clever in MSVC. makes it hard to pin down.
@FredOverflow :D
vector<bool> is very slow
Reminds of that funny Stroustrup interview where he says that even hello world takes up 2.1MB :)
We use Boost.Format and Boost.IO to keep state of std::*streams consistent
22:17
@Maxpm no, it's mostly a theoretical distaste. std::vector<bool>::iterator::iterator_category is a matter of debate, since *it doesn't return a reference to the object in question, so technically can only be an output iterator...
@FredOverflow Think of it as an investment.
sbi
sbi
I'm usually opposed to singletons, but I decided to make an exception for this one... http://twitpic.com/3z5x2p
@StackedCrooked yeah, it's slow as well
@MooingDuck Mmh. It makes an exception without good reason.
myFormat % boost::io::group(std::ios_base::hex, std::setfill('0'), std::setw(4), myInt)
22:18
> The executable was so huge, it took five minutes to load, on an HP workstation, with 128MB of RAM. Then it ran like molasses. Actually, I thought this would be a major stumbling-block, and I'd get found out within a week, but nobody cared. Sun and HP were only too glad to sell enormously powerful boxes, with huge resources just to run trivial programs. You know, when we had our first C++ compiler, at AT&T, I compiled 'Hello World', and couldn't believe the size of the executable. 2.1MB
sbi
sbi
@keithlayne What does it mean to be an AOL? I thought there was only the AOL?
@sbi Perhaps he is the AOL.
@FredOverflow Bjarne Stroustrup was pretty irked when that article came out.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Then he would be the AOL.
@sbi The 'A' stands for "buttocks".
sbi
sbi
22:20
@FredOverflow No, for "Merkins".
Oh, wait...
I want that sucky-performance topic back in the Lounge :(
@sbi That's more or less what I was intending to say. I guess..
@sbi I think that gentleman automatically wins the singleton drinking game. Assuming he ever wakes up.
sbi
sbi
22:24
BTW, when I was trying to create a room named "sucky performance", the system suggested the R and C# rooms as already existing alternatives. Sometimes this chat system's intelligence is truly amazing...
6
@keithlayne An infinite drinking game loop.
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi Awesome
@sbi that is amazing
@sbi omfg you gotta be kidding me :))
22:25
Hahaha.
@sbi Damnit, I can't change the topic of that room!
At least I can talk to myself.
in sucky performance, 15 secs ago, by FredOverflow
Then we loose performance and it is suck.
sbi
sbi
@johnathon No, it's really true. (I even made a screen shot, but then I blew it by putting something else in the clipboard before saving it.)
phooey, your clipboard needs a history :))
I'm out of cornbread. :(
@sbi no Java?
22:27
@sbi Hey, that's my technique.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Well, I realized that the C# room indeed exists, so you can have performance discussions there.
Also, I noticed there is a way to actually change something in the const room.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Nope, no Java. In order for the performance to suck, there has to be performance in the first place, I guess.
@RMartinhoFernandes Humans learning from the robots. Be proud!
@RMartinhoFernandes Flag a mod?
@sbi Star messages.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I am not impressed.
22:29
I wasn't trying to impress you.
Just stating a fact.
sbi
sbi
A dull fact.
Anyway, I guess I'd better go home now. Sigh.
You're still at work?
sbi
sbi
16 mins ago, by sbi
@Xeo To answer your implicit question: When I take care of the kids, I don't get to work as many hours as my contract says, so I am working longer hours when I do not take care of the kids.
@sbi have a safe commute
@sbi Have a safe pointer.
sbi
sbi
22:31
@johnathon Thanks. I wasn't overly concerned, though.
@Maxpm I hack C# for a living. :(
@sbi Can I overload operator== for C# classes or only C# structs?
@TonyTheLion lol about what?
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow TBH, I would look this up. I don't think I've ever had to do this.
@FredOverflow lol about lol
just lolling
22:34
Being happy is nice.
Also, my quicksort blows up with an totally insane exception.
afaik only structs can have operators overloaded. but i've never done it in c#
Does anyone , at all, know how to make vs2010's help viewer (v 1.1) filter out everything but say stuff related only to native C++ ?!?
> By default, the operator == tests for reference equality by determining if two references indicate the same object, so reference types do not need to implement operator == in order to gain this functionality. When a type is immutable, meaning the data contained in the instance cannot be changed, overloading operator == to compare value equality instead of reference equality can be useful because, as immutable objects, they can be considered the same as long as they have the same value.
22:36
Everytime i look up anything in that bloody thing it drives me insane
@cHao No, anything can have operators overloaded.
So I can overload operator== and override equals at the same time? Wow.
@FredOverflow If you do the former you should do the latter.
seems kinda redundant
@RMartinhoFernandes Does that also hold the other way around?
22:38
@FredOverflow for value types, yes. for reference types, imo it's better if == retains its meaning of reference-equality
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I haven't written a quicksort in 15 years or more.
@sbi I'm experimenting with stuff in ducks Haskell. Quicksort is the tool, not the goal.
@cHao Is there an "Effective C#" that a) discusses issues like these and b) is as good in quality as "Effective C++" and "Effective Java"?
though the 'if it's immutable' argument has merit
@FredOverflow Yes, there is.
22:41
@cHao That's basically what C# strings do, right?
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow a) yes, b) no.
seems so :)
@RMartinhoFernandes Are you ducking because of duck typing? :)
and the only book i know of that discusses odd issues like that is "C# in depth". not sure how much depth though...lol
Is operator!= provided magically in C#, or do I have to do it myself like in C++?
22:42
@FredOverflow Yourself.
skeet skeet skeet skeet!!!!
everybody drink again!!!
deep, deeper, skeet. And no, that's not a porn title.
@FredOverflow Are you sure?
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually, no :) What I meant was that it was not intended as a porn title :)
sbi
sbi
22:45
@cHao Actually, Effective C#, while leaving much to desire, does discuss the issue: Item 6: Understand the Relationship Among the Many Different Concepts of Equality.
well, that works. :) never read it, so i dunno
sbi
sbi
> Write operator==() when you create value types. You should rarely override operator==() when you create reference types. // @Fred
Why pinned that?
Who unpinned that?
Anybody know a shared_ptr workalike where (ptrOne == ptrTwo) => (*ptrOne == *ptrTwo)?
instead of ` => (ptrOne.get() == ptrTwo.get())`
Why do you want that?
22:51
I have a managed handle class and always want to compare equivalence, not identity.
Specifically, if two collections of handles get deserialized from different archives, the collections aren't equality comparable because they don't refer to the same object anymore.
Yay, it works!
@Fred Quicksort took more than 30 lines.
@RMartinhoFernandes now remove all whitespace
23:06
@MooingDuck Whitespace is significant in Haskell.
@RMartinhoFernandes then you're in the wrong chat room :D
sbi is not here :P
I'm starting to think that VC is the only IDE that handles C++11 syntax very well.
whitespace is significant in Whitespace.
@keithlayne which part? I haven't heard that before
23:08
@keithlayne It handles only a little of it.
@rvalue good call
@MooingDuck @RMartinhoFernandes well, my vs10 experience is about 30mins last night, I didn't realize it was less than good
@keithlayne no variadic templates makes me cry. But I've never bothered to learn GCC so... At least in the next version they'll add =delete and =default.
^ I'll just make a wrapper around boost::smart_ptr<> for the deep comparison problem. Seems weird that I'm the only one that seems to have ever wanted it, though.
@rvalue It is a weird request.
23:10
syntactically, the biggest changes are rvalue refs and lambdas, right? Oh yeah variadic templates, but I think of that as more or less recycling syntax in another context
Well, what other IDEs did you try?
I tried your mom last night :B
didn't work very vell
vim chokes on lambdas :( I've been considering learning how to mess with those syntax files for a while now, but I been expecting someone else does it.
23:12
I'm talking more about not freaking out with syntax at the editor level, not the compiler.
Any IDE you can't add syntax and styling rules to isn't worth the trouble.
Ideally, on a per-project basis or based on some other expression.
I'm yet to work on two projects with the same coding style, and not having the organisation's style at least supported by the front-end tools is a recipe for time wasting.
@keithlayne According to wikipedia, there's a LONG list of tiny language changes. I attempted to list them, but the message was too long. MSVC10 has at least half. It's also missing initializer lists, which depends on variadic templates
erm...there aren't many ide's that you can add arbitrary syntax to. little details like spaces vs tabs and brace styles and such, sure. but there's a limit...past that limit, you end up having to define a whole language
@MooingDuck Adding a line break helps.
The bulk of the changes are standard library improvements and support for the significantly less intrusive language changes
23:16
@cHao vim.
(I guess emacs too).
vim is not an ide. regardless of what its fanboys say.
@cHao Well, we were considering the editor part of IDEs.
emacs, maybe. hell, emacs could be a whole freaking os on its own.
Emacs could be construed as one - it's got file management, multiple files, build & debug integration
4 mins ago, by keith.layne
I'm talking more about not freaking out with syntax at the editor level, not the compiler.
@rvalue vim too.
23:17
Yeah, but it's modal so nobody cares.
:P
giveupinternet.com/2009/01/29/…: "EMACS is a good OS. The only thing it lacks is a decent text-editor."
4
lol
23:36
@MooingDuck I was really getting at the syntactic constructs that are brand new. I know implementing initializer lists is a whole other ball game, but the syntax is nothing new.
Actually initializer lists does not depend on variadic templates.
@RMartinhoFernandes you sure about that? I thought initializer lists are of the type std::initializer_list<class ...T>
@MooingDuck Nope. They're homogeneous.
@keithlayne std::vector<char>{1,2,3} looks like new syntax to me.
@MooingDuck my bad, that's not exactly what I meant, point taken
@MooingDuck I realize my initial comment at some level makes no sense. It's a good thing I knew what I meant.
23:42
@keithlayne looking at the list though, syntactical changes were minimal
@keithlayne for (int &x : my_array) is new
yeah, forgot about that one
MSVC has ranged-for?
Kewl.
my point is that initializer lists look like array initializers....
variadic templates look like varargs
Lambdas were engineered to look like nothing before.
make more sense in that context?
23:45
@RMartinhoFernandes no, C++11 has ranged-for. MSVC doesn't
It's really just rvalue refs and lambdas that they have, isn't it?
14
Q: C++11 features in Visual Studio 11

HighCommander4A preview version of Visual Studio 11 (the next version after VS2010) is now available. Does anyone know what new C++11 features it supports? (I'm not in a position to try it out at the moment).

or even betterr, from the answers: wiki.apache.org/stdcxx/C++0xCompilerSupport
I didn't realize g++ had ranged-for, but just confirmed for myself. I'm so proud of me.
23:47
@keithlayne g++ has lots of stuff!
4.7 will have UDLs and template aliases, so sweet.
someday I'll get G++ working on my system
@Moo windows?
What's the difficulty?
Yeah. I like GUIs. I love Visual Studio's GUI. I just want to have an option to compile with GCC instead on occasion, to test portability, standards, and speeds.
I just grab a build from here: code.google.com/p/mingw-builds and drop the files into a folder.
Xeo
Xeo
23:49
Seems like I won't reach my repcap today. Oh well
@MooingDuck Oh, that's a bit harder.
> Good stuff man, that is one of the best C lessons I have ever had! – Manolete 36 mins ago
Makes me smile.
you can't configure another toolchain? Or do it with a plugin?
MSVC makes it a PITA to replace the compiler. You can add it as a "preprocessing" step if you're crafty, but I haven't bothered to make it work yet
It's probably possible to make a plugin
Or some MSBUILD target.
how bout a simple makefile?
WWSTLD?
23:53
@keithlayne Those are mythical.
@keithlayne That actually sounds like a good idea.
With a makefile and a custom tool that invokes make you could get "Compile on g++" in a button, with trivial VS setup (making a plugin is not trivial).
@Luc I don't know...I have used make on occasion for some whacky stuff. I guess a "simple makefile" is mythical for anything non-trivial.
@RMartinhoFernandes you're such a prick, you shouldn't be so surprised that I have at least one half-decent idea per year.
:)
morning
@DeadMG Hey! It's still today.
@RMartinhoFernandes I vaguely got the impression that G++'s makefiles and MSVC's makefiles were different, and I never looked into how different. It might be possible that G++ could interpret one.
23:55
I noticed
"It's still today" makes me sound a bit retarded.
I had to get up to pee :P
@MooingDuck MinGW brings make.
@MooingDuck they are different...but g++ doesn't interpret anything
Can make parse a MSVC makefile?
23:57
as you don't know about make format, I don't know about nmake format
@MooingDuck It doesn't need to.
MSVC doesn't have makefiles
You setup a GNU makefile for compiling with g++.
it uses XML project files
23:58
MSVC can totally use makefiles
Then you go to "Tools > External Tools" or something and set up the path to make and shit.
Xeo
Xeo
I wish for the same. :(
Then you edit the toolbars and place a button to that external tool there.
Pronto!
Don't get your hopes up for debugging though.
and release it as vc10sp2
msvc can't debug mingw exes?

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