« first day (426 days earlier)      last day (4749 days later) » 

15:01
I can declare and define free functions and use them inside member functions right?
I have declared some free functions inside a header, the definitions in a cpp file, and using them in a member function of a class results in a Linker Unresolved symbol error. Should I declare them as extern in my header?
what's the most awesome city in the world?
come on, please answer. I'm doing a poll.
@IntermediateHacker Gotham City?
No wait, Sim City!
I mean a real city
@TonyTheLion Function declarations are implicitly extern. Linker error means you're not feeding everything to the linker. What IDE/make system do you use?
like new york, dubai , tokyo etc.
15:08
@FredOverflow vs
Atlantis
@IntermediateHacker A "friend".
@TonyTheLion Are the free functions actually function templates?
@TonyTheLion Visual Studio normally takes care of this. Can you post the exact error message?
anyway.... @TonyTheLion what's your fav city?
15:09
@StackedCrooked Showing some code would be nice, too.
cpx
cpx
@TonyTheLion you just need to include the header into the source where your class definition is present.
@TonyTheLion Maybe the signatures in the header and source don't match.
@cpx If he didn't include the header, he would get a compiler error, not a linker error.
@FredOverflow no
oh damn. guess I'll have to ask my classmates, or worse facebook friends. :(
cpx
cpx
15:11
Functions definition at namescope scope level have external linkage by default.
thanks for all the help.
@TonyTheLion Show us the declaration and the definition and we can talk.
@IntermediateHacker Why do you even care what city is greatest in our opinion?
@FredOverflow cuz I don't want to fail in my Social Studies Tourism project.
@IntermediateHacker The project asks you to ask other people about their favorite countries?
cpx
cpx
I see. guess we need to see what causes the linker error.
15:13
@IntermediateHacker So you're doing masking a survey as a social conversation? :D
no, i am assigned to poll random people on the street for their fav cities. To find out which city is the ideal site for tourists. Since I'm too lazy to hit the streets, I'm asking u guys
@StackedCrooked yeah. :D
not to mention, people on the street will think I'm crazy.
@IntermediateHacker Sorry, I don't travel much, so I wouldn't know which cities are awesome...
@FredOverflow ok
@FredOverflow If u had a chance to go to any city in the world, where would u go?
void rename_file(const std::wstring& f_old, const std::wstring& f_new);
15:15
@IntermediateHacker On vacation, or to live there?
@FredOverflow vacation. as a tourist
@IntermediateHacker I hate vacations :)
void rename_file(const std::wstring& f_old, const std::wstring& f_new)
{
	if (MoveFile(f_old.c_str(), f_new.c_str()) == 0)
	{
		/*Move failed*/
		DWORD dwErr = GetLastError();
		std::wstringstream error;
		error << "MoveFile Error: ";
		error << ErrorString(dwErr);
		ErrorMessageBox(error.str());
	}
}
@FredOverflow there it is
@FredOverflow curses, I thought u had finally decided to answer seriously.
Does anyone know of a gcc compiler extension that throws on null pointer dereference?
15:17
LNK2019: unresolved external symbol "void __cdecl rename_file
@TonyTheLion Looks reasonable. Are you sure the header file is in the "headers" part of your project, and the cpp file is in the other part which name I forgot?
@TonyTheLion And the header declaration? Maybe declaration and definition are not identical.
anyway, guess It's PLAN B. (I write up random answers, it's not cheating, :D)
@TonyTheLion Is that the entire error message? I don't see a signature.
@FredOverflow yes that's correct
15:18
@TonyTheLion Can we see the code that actually calls rename_file?
@FredOverflow yes
here it is
@StackedCrooked lol
Dammit you were just a little too fast.
@StackedCrooked I have checked that, they are the same
Then show us the exact build error.
@TonyTheLion Tip: You can type if (_ptr) instead of if (_ptr != NULL).
Just like you can type if (!ptr) instead of if (ptr == NULL).
15:25
Is _ptr a member? Why do you have a raw pointer member? Shame on you!
@StackedCrooked I know
@FredOverflow because it interfaces with C code
@TonyTheLion perhaps you put the declaration and definition in different namespaces.
@StackedCrooked nope
This is a shot in the blue, but double check that every #ifdef in your headers has a corresponding #endif at the end.
Also, can you add some nonsense in your function definition? Just to make sure that the compiler actually sees it. Like uvfd vfodvnfdvnfd vfdniovfd vfod;
my solution has multiple projects, and two of these have a header with the same name, could that cause an issue?
the projects have no dependencies though
15:29
Does every project have its own cpp file? That's what matters.
@FredOverflow yes
Can we see a screenshot of your project?
Or upload the whole thing :D
cpx
cpx
hmm
15:33
My best guess is that the cpp file with the implementation is actually in another project, or you have somehow excluded it from the build. The fastest way to tell would be to introduce some nonsense into the function, like I stated above. Have you tried that yet?
Yesterday I had the strangest automake error. If I added the "-Werror" flag in the configure.ac file I got a error message saying: "mylib.la.exp not found". Removing the -Werror flag fixed it. Google was of no help at all. I ended up putting the flag in Makefile.am instead of configure.ac.
that's Make for you- a massive pile of bullshit
@TonyTheLion It's likely a problem if they have identical include guards.
@DeadMG Automake mainly. Make in itself is way less complicated.
@StackedCrooked Not if they're in different projects.
the entire idea should be totally unnecessary
15:38
@FredOverflow If you include both headers in the same source file then it's still a problem.
just band-aiding over the fact that you don't have a proper platform to target
@StackedCrooked You can include header files from different projects? Then I didn't say anything.
@FredOverflow I was assuming that.
15:58
The amount of spam on my gmail account has increased enormously compared with two years ago.
It's not feasible to sort out the false positives anymore. I just delete it all.
I don't even look in the Spam folder.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: You're just an idiot. ;-) LOL :-) :-) :-) [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
btw. where did that come from?
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Alf P. is drunk ;-) LOL :-) :-) :-) [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
:D
now it's just a tradition
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: We only pretend to care about your feelings. That's what the smileys are for. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
16:11
How welcoming.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: People only pretend to care about your feelings. That's what smileys are for. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
There, reads better
hoe about robots?
@AlfPSteinbach robots can write smileys to. It makes it even more truthful.
@Xaade Now you are just using the room topic to proclaim your own issues.
@StackedCrooked fine, I'll change it back.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: We only pretend to care about your feelings. That's what the smileys are for. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
16:14
@AlfPSteinbach I like that sentence. It stands on its own.
sbi
sbi
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: You are just using the room topic to proclaim your own issues. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: You are just using the room topic to proclaim your own issues. Idiot. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
@Xaade Btw, room topic is not about you.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Admit it. The room topic is a soap box. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
Beer is the world's most widely consumed and probably oldest alcoholic beverage; it is the third most popular drink overall, after water and tea. It is produced by the brewing and fermentation of sugars, mainly derived from malted cereal grains, most commonly malted barley and malted wheat. Sugars derived from maize (corn) and rice are widely used adjuncts because of their lower cost. Most beer is flavoured with hops, which add bitterness and act as a natural preservative, though other flavourings such as herbs or fruit may occasionally be included. Some of humanity's earliest known ...
There is no room.
16:18
Orly?
tea > beer?
@AlfPSteinbach That statement is disingenuous. Should read. "Beer is the world's most widely consumed and possibly oldest beverage."
Water is not a beverage. It's a need. Shouldn't count it as popular.
And east Asia would drink beer if they knew how to make beer from rice (instead of sake).
@Xaade reportedly they know how to do that in nepal
@Xaade Beer is very popular in Japan.
@Xaade but then, reportedly in nepal they also drink some bitter tea with jak butter
@AlfPSteinbach share the wealth. Rice beer would be cheaper, and possibly better for you.
16:21
There's a foreign beer shop down the street from me, sells beers from all over the world
@robjb Really. Last I checked they don't even have a Specs down the street.
@AlfPSteinbach that's yak butter !
@FreakEnum J is Y in those northern places.
@Xaade Ha, I tried a supposedly popular Japanese one and can't say I'd recommend it :/
Butter tea, also known as po cha (, "Tibetan tea"), cha süma (, "churned tea"), Mandarin Chinese: sūyóu chá () or goor goor in local Ladakhi terms, is a drink of the Tibetans and Chinese minorities in southwestern China. It is also consumed in Bhutan. It is made from tea leaves, yak butter, and salt. Usage Drinking butter tea is a regular part of Tibetan life. Before work, a Tibetan will typically down several bowlfuls of this beverage, and it is always served to guests. Nomads are said to often drink up to 40 cups of it a day. Since butter is the main ingredient, butter tea is a very wa...
16:23
@Xaade ohh , we call it yak that's why said that ( I'm natively from Nepal :)
sbi
sbi
@Xaade We pronounce "J" like the English "Y" here in Germany (and I wouldn't call this a northern place), but still spell the animal "Yak".
@FreakEnum he he, i just read about in a silly stories book by Kim Stanley Robinson, "Escape from Kathmandu". He starts off with rescuing a yeti, aided by Jimmy Carter's Secret Service. And it gets wilder, all in Nepal.
@FreakEnum Yeah, it's sounded as Yak. But what I mean is that in older tongues, Y was spelled J. In names like Mjoll. In, Valtyr, y becomes a strong i (yr -> ear)
@sbi Probably an Anglicization of the word.
So, Jyr would sound like year.
@AlfPSteinbach :D, yeti's are myth I think
@FreakEnum Jety.... lol.... just kidding.
16:29
reportedly they live up in the mountains on the border with tibet. and in underground tunnels. :-)
@AlfPSteinbach Those are just monks that choose not to shave.
I'm sure if I never groomed, I could easily pass as a yeti or bigfoot.
0
A: c++ print out arrays incrementally

XaadeI'm assuming you want to concatenate and not sum. string text; for (int i = 0; i < rows.count; ++i) { text = rows[i] + text; TractMultBox->Text = text + newline; } for less lines of code. string text = newline; for (int i = 0; i < rows.count; ++i) { TractMultBox->(text = ...

Why do people always suggest nested loops. I've just removed a lot from my code because it's so slow.
16:46
@Xaade One of the guys on my senior project wrote a triple-nested for the other day. I was tempted to add the comment (from an old SO thread) // O(scary)
@robjb I love when they have a native dimensional array, then assume that they need nested loops to sum the entire array. It's an array, just sum it linearly.
Ha, yea
@Xaade: What is the TractMultBox->(text = rows[i] + text); syntax that you used? I have never seen that before.
@Mankarse if you assign, the return from the assign is the thing you assign to.
that's not the problem
the problem is TractMultBox->(
that's not valid syntax, I'm pretty sure
16:51
So I'm prepending rows[i] to text, then setting tractmultBox to the value of text.
@DeadMG You know.... thanks for the catch. But seriously....
what?
The guy after you, "Worse yet, it's been done in the name of optimization."
lol
@Mankarse Should read TractMultBox->Text = (text = rows[i] + text);
technically speaking, you can overload operators to make that happen
16:57
That's not optimization. It's lazy typing. Code isn't any faster for that.
@Xaade: ... Shouldn't it be TractMultBox->Text = (text = rows[i] + text);?
What's slow is having an inner loop do the same thing n times.
@Mankarse That's what I said. Except the '?' That might be a syntax error
@DeadMG What, have the -> assign directly to text. That might break other things.
well, -> is a unary operator and you can do whatever you want with it
if you overloaded to return, say, std::function<void(std::string)>
@DeadMG: That would not be particularly fun, it would force you to call it as bla.operator->().
no it doesn't
I did it when I was trying to figure out how to use operator->, I had it return a T& instead of a T*
then I compiled code like silly_ptr<T>->.function();
17:02
Interesting
Hm, 16 byte aligned SSE loads and stores only give a 6% overall performance improvement over unaligned loads and stores. I would have expected more.
@DeadMG did you overload T. to return T*....
@DeadMG I've never seen it abused in that way, maybe I should start a trend.
@FredOverflow How are you testing it? And what machine is it?
lol, I didn't even know that was possible
17:06
@Mysticial _mm_load_ps vs. _mm_loadu_ps on a simple physics simulation. Note that I'm not saying load is 6% faster than loadu, I'm talking overall performance improvement for the entire simulation.
are you sure you're not just bottlenecking somewhere else, e.g. cache?
Some CPUs treat a loadu as load if the address is actually aligned
@DeadMG How could I be sure? :)
Ah, ok. From my experience, unaligned loads/stores can suck hard....
but otherwise, they do suck hard
at least in my experience too
17:07
lol
They suck even harder when it splits a cache-line or a page-boundary
yup
just a shame C++ is so bad at handling these kinds of alignment requirements
By the way, making a vector 16 byte aligned was quite simple. I just overloaded operator new and operator delete, forwarding to _aligned_malloc and _aligned_free :)
On Nehalem and later, loadu is as fast as load if it's aligned
On Core 2 and older, it's slower.
recent AMD cpus do the same trick
17:09
I have a Core 2 Duo from 2006.
I think they were first to do it, actually
On Sandy Bridge, apparently there is almost no misalignment penalty at all. The only thing is that misalignment will clobber two memory banks instead of 1.
fuck
I hate Bison, no non-POD values
@DeadMG That seems to contradict §13.5.6, and doesn't compile under clang.
meh, I compiled it under Visual Studio, nobody says it's Standard
17:20
Wow, today has been quite a rep surge -- I'm on 380 right now. That's almost half of Jon Skeet's daily rep :-)
lol
@KerrekSB How do you get so much rep on one day?
lol I've never even hit daily limit, I don't spend enough time answering questions.
@FredOverflow No idea - all I did was have a nap. When I woke up, it had gone from 320 to 380...
I guess you really can do no wrong while asleep.
How do you get more than 200?
17:26
accepted answers and bounties, I beliee
Today's been very busy... I repcapped at 4:30 AM UTC today. So I stopped answering questions, and I picked up another 16+ upvotes since then for having done nothing...
heh, I've got 298 this week
rep, that is, not upvotes :D
@FredOverflow Accepted-awards are exempt from the cap.
Someone down-voted what I thought was one of my better questions :/
@Mysticial Early-capping is the best -- it frees up the day, and the mind.
@robjb Bastards. Did you find out why?
17:28
Na, it was anonymous
@KerrekSB Agreed. Though early capping also means that I'll overshoot the repcap by like 10+ upvotes...
And I've stopped asking why, anonymous down-voters don't like to be revealed.
Given the timezone that I'm in, if I repcap before I go to bed, I will almost always wake up with a bunch of extra upvotes since the guys in Europe will be online at that time.
Speaking of timezones, did you notice that some time around 1am GMT there's a massive surge of near-identical homework questions?
Or at least that used to be, I think it's got a bit less in the last month.
There's also been 2 days where I repcapped with only residuals.
17:35
hi
@KerrekSB I've definitely noticed floods of near-identical questions, but I've never paid attention to what time they occur. Now I also tend to avoid a lot of the very basic newbie questions that I can't answer in 2 sentences.
@Mysticial Luckily, we haven't had any asterisk pattern printing lately!
You've earned "Enlightened" and 79 other badges. See your profile.

Oh cool, I didn't realize I picked up another accept...
@Mysticial Do you dabble a lot with SSE and stuff? I have only discovered it now and it is a lot of fun. Almost the same feeling as doing inline assembly back in the DOS days :)
@Mysticial "and 79 other badges"...? What? How on earth does something like that happen?
17:40
@FredOverflow Yes, since I do a lot of HPC.
@FredOverflow Do you need to think about this manually? Doesn't the compiler produce SSE'd instructions automatically?
@KerrekSB I never cleared it since the second week I joined the site. I also never cleared my privilege banner until I hit 20k.
@Mysticial also GPUs?
@KerrekSB not really. Most compilers except MSVC can do it in simple cases
@Nils I haven't gotten into GPUs yet. Most of the stuff I've done don't fit that programming model.
17:41
but the keyword is simple
@KerrekSB Apparently not, otherwise I wouldn't have a gained a 7x performance improvement by using SSE intrinsics :)
and yeah, SSE is fun
@Mysticial Oddd...
@FredOverflow Congratulations :-)
@Mysticial uhh "doesn't fit"? I mean it is not worth it since a good GPU port is quite an effort is more often true..
@Nils More like, it vectorizes, but not the extent that it can be thrown on a GPU.
17:44
OpenCL could be used to write a multithreaded, SSE enabled CPU version
@Mysticial ok
Not to mention GPUs used to lack good double-precision, and recursion/function-pointer support.
the new fermi do
well they are not so new anymore
"used to lack"
ok
@KerrekSB Oh, with a corrected formula for gravitation involving a square root, I now have a 17x performance improvement.
305 fps instead of 18
17:46
rofl
I've had double-precision code that got about 10x speedup with manually written AVX.
You can guess at how that happenned...
My CPU doesn't support AVX, it's an oldtimer :(
harhar
Any SQL Server guys around?
this is the C++ room?
17:47
nice
I don't think we've ever talked about SQL here, so probably not.
I'm a SQL server ish guy
@FredOverflow I mentioned it once
@FredOverflow It does come up how we dislike SQL :D
We have complained about about bad MySQL is.
17:48
when I pissed people off by arguing that html and sql are programming languages :)
:/ thought this was just for general chat/lounge... ok... forgot the newbie hints :(
@jalf In what context? Or did you just say that it sucked? :)
@Mysticial which CPUs do AVX? Is that Sandy bridge only?
lol... sorry guys!
there is a general chat
17:48
@Nils Intel Sandy Bridge and AMD Bulldozer
@jalf Well, modern HTML is Turing-complete, is it not?
but this is the Lounge< C++ >
@WilliamHilsum well, it sort of is. ANd we discuss plenty of non-C++ things
@FredOverflow Only when paired with CSS.
but I dont think anyone here has ever indicated any kind of expertise in SQ Server
but no one is going to stop you if you want to talk about SQL
17:49
Is SO the only site without a proper lounge/general chat!? Sorry... I will leave, just had a quick MS-SQL Question... no problem!
bye guys!
there is one
you just probably couldn't find it because it's so inactive
@WilliamHilsum No clue. And again, no harm in treating this as a general chat.

Casual chat

This is the room for casual chat in english, hindi & gujarati....
well, let's face it, none of us keep to the room topic, really
at all
Well you can ask me William if you want
@FredOverflow What does "corrected" mean? Before it was both incorrect and inefficient?
17:52
That's the best kind of inefficient!
@Anfurny sweet, we have an official SQL Server expert then!
@KerrekSB No, before it was incorrect but faster (about 50 fps normal and 350 fps SSE), now it is correct but slower (about 18 fps normal and 305 fps SSE).
@jalf Haha, I wouldn't say expert, just willing to give it a shot.
Apparently, calculating the square root is a real performance sucker without SSE.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: ++ [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
17:53
You're the expert now. Toughen up ;)
bloody hell, that's a ridiculous performance difference
So what's c++11 ?
@FredOverflow Ah. Yes, Einstein certainly ruined our hopes for fast realistic physics. Bastard.
the new C++ Standard
@DeadMG Well, I'm doing 1 million square roots per frame :)
17:53
ok, fair enough
get the GPU to do it?
@Anfurny It's like Java, without all the suck.
@DeadMG I wouldn't know how, but I'm sure I'll get there someday :)
No, it's not like Java without all the suck.
@KerrekSB Ifyou took the suck out of Java, you'd have nothing left.
Damn you puppy.
17:54
@KerrekSB C++11 is nothing like Java. GET OUT! ;)
@Anfurny The 2011 version of the C++ standard :)
@FredOverflow D3D11 Compute Shaders, or OpenCL
Sorry, my bad :-)
Cool. I guess I should look it up and see if it changed much.
there's also a Thrust something that's more C++ey, CUDA, and Microsoft's AMP in VS11
17:55
@FredOverflow Why - it has all those methods and classes... :-)
@DeadMG Not quite, I think Java got interfaces right. And their boolean data type is quite nice, also.
@Anfurny Yes. Yes, it did. A lot.
@DeadMG Yay for Thrust
@FredOverflow I don't. Prototypes ftw
@FredOverflow No they didn't! They made checked exceptions part of them!
17:55
Damn, I thought C++ was like done changing after so long
interfaces blow
@Anfurny Haha, most of us think that C++ is a dinosaur that hasn't changed enough
the new Standard is late as hell
@DeadMG My graphics card is 5 years old and doesn't even support Windows 7. I guess that would be a problem for GPU programming, right?
@Anfurny well, this is the first time it's been changed. :)
depends on the vendor
@Anfurny The C++11 standard is about twice as big as the old one.
17:56
@FredOverflow I don't see the appeal of "interfaces". They're a necessary concept in Java to deal with the language's restrictions, but you don't need them in C++.
CUDA has been around for somet ime
Wait..... SQL is now bad? I can't keep up. It was awesome for a long time.
and even oldish GPUs can push a hell of a lot more than CPUs
@RMartinhoFernandes Someday Oracle will deprecate checked exceptions, and then you will love interfaces, too ;)
17:57
@Xaade It's not webscale.
Since you're not forced into a pure OO style in C++, there's no need to clutter up the language with OO-specific aliases for things that already exist.
@KerrekSB The appeal of interfaces is their simplicity.
@FredOverflow Keep dreaming. But yeah, I might agree with you if they removed them.
I'm going to have checked exceptions in WideC
and it's going to work out just fine
I thought Oracle was good, then it was bad, now it's good? GAH!
17:57
sounds awful
@FredOverflow Nobody is stopping you from writing simple C++!
INSANITY!!!!!!!
nah
@DeadMG Okay and what am I going to do with thousands of FPS? ;)
17:58
because you can alter function signatures programmatically at compile-time
@FredOverflow Sell them! That's what they did with BF3 and COD.
so unlike in Java, for example, you can say "I throw what f() throws"
or "I throw what f() throws, oh, and bad_alloc too"
@RMartinhoFernandes Please define: webscale. Extra please: Give example of some database that is webscale.
@FredOverflow eh... Ducktyping is simple. Interfaces are boilerplate code and a mental barrier you have to get past any time you want to do anything
or "Kindly deduce my throws specification for me"
17:58
@KerrekSB You should look at my C++, it's more like C with cout/endl.
@KerrekSB C++ "interfaces" require a lot more boilerplate code. It's not that it can't be done, but it's clumsy.
@DeadMG sounds interesting
@Xaade I don't know what webscale means. It's a silly joke, not something serious.
@jalf Do you suggest dynamic typing?
yeah

« first day (426 days earlier)      last day (4749 days later) »