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19:00
Like that!
@curiousguy That's a good question. Maybe I would say it's only a declaration.
@Xeo Maybe I'll give it a quick spin...
Speaking of: Is it "degree Kelvin" or just "Kelvin"? Star Trek has messed me up, but what's the right way of saying it?
@jalf Indeed. And I notice that I currently seem to know more about Java than my coworkers who have been doing Java professionally for over half a decade. For example they didn't know about "static import". They also didn't know that RuntimeException, Error and their subclasses don't require a throws specifier.
Xeo
Xeo
0
Q: Including template headers SOLUTION

CycoMattoHow bad at programming am I? Am I a horrible person for this? //templates.cpp template <typename TYPE> void some_func(int arg1, ...) { //do stuff } Then: //templates.h #ifndef TEMPLATES_H_INCLUDED #define TEMPLATES_H_INCLUDED #include "templates.cpp" template <typename TYPE> v...

Oh boy.
@KerrekSB Just 'Kelvin'
@StackedCrooked are subtypes -> and subtypes?
19:01
What the other guy said.
@FredOverflow Err, fixed..
@StackedCrooked static import is 2004 or something, so they should know it.
Yay, argument by majority consent :-)
@StackedCrooked OMG.
@RMartinhoFernandes I know.
19:02
@StackedCrooked So they thought all exceptions were checked, and you taught them unchecked exceptions? What a relief that must have been :) Did they declare you their new god?
static import is cool. Gives you the feeling you're using free functions.
> OMG but free functions are not OOP we're all gonna die!
@FredOverflow That's what Pokemon Exception Handling is for. :-)
1036
A: New programming jargon you coined?

Woot4MooPokémon Exception Handling. For when you just Gotta Catch 'Em All.

@Mysticial You mean catch (...) in C++?
@FredOverflow I don't know what they thought. One person had to implement an enhancement in my code and when he tried to throw an exception he noticed that the compiler started complaining about lack of a throws specifier but it didn't complain about my exceptions. He asked how come.
Xeo
Xeo
19:05
I still wonder why all those "pure OOP" languages didn't start the program in the constructor of a Main class, with an out parameter - the continuation. Wouldn't that be way more "OOP"?
try {
    throw pokéball();
} catch(pokémon&) {}
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes That would imply a pokémon is a pokéball
@Xeo Continuations are not OOP.
@Xeo Java isn't in the business of doing OOP right. They're in the business of providing a layer of buzzword paint on top of C.
7
I'm falling in love with GoboLinux.
Xeo
Xeo
19:06
No wait, do implicit conversions apply during exception catching?
They had a main function, but decided that everything must be in a class. So they put main in a class. Simplest, easiest way to achieve their goal
it was never supposed to be an elegant language or show the world what programming should look like
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Sorry, "delegates"
@Xeo Java despises delegates.
Xeo
Xeo
19:08
Okay, so what about C#?
MS added them to their old implementation as an extension and it caused an uproar.
@Xeo f.ex. recursion, 0, +1, if, <
Ultimately lead to .NET.
I'm starting to consider switching to Gentoo at work instead of Ubuntu. The claims about faster execution seem to be valid.
@FredOverflow Also love the "Hindenbug"...
19:08
@RMartinhoFernandes Microsoft Java had delegates? Cool, didn't know that.
@Xeo Same story, basically
Microsoft wanted to do like Java did, and polish it up a bit here and there
@FredOverflow "POO" is OOP in French.
3
the last thing they'd want is to scare Java programmers away with new concepts
at least until v2.0 or so, when they've already got people hooked
French object-oriented programs are crap.
> Refuctoring - the process of taking a well-designed piece of code and, through a series of small, reversible changes, making it completely unmaintainable by anyone except yourself.
> We had a guy come in and immediately strip out comments and whitespace from our code "to make it faster".
Dying of laughter here :)
Xeo
Xeo
19:10
@FredOverflow Refuctoring is awesome.
@FredOverflow The "except yourself" part is too optimistic.
@KerrekSB There is no picture for the Hindenbug :( I was expecting a floating beetle or something.
@FredOverflow Hey! Don't laugh. You just said that adding a random comment changed your code's performance characteristics some minutes ago.
@RMartinhoFernandes But I didn't do it on purpose, it was a random observation.
@RMartinhoFernandes Were they immediately promoted up and out of harm's way?
@Maxpm I'm sorry, that looks like a terrible approach...
19:13
> I've started Loch Ness Monster bug for anything not reproducible / only sighted by one person. I'm hearing a lot of people in the office say it now..
> Is that related to the legendary Bugfoot?
lol
@KerrekSB Are you replying to the right message? I can't make sense of your question in that context.
@RMartinhoFernandes The OOP "philosophy" stinks in any language.
@KerrekSB The filesystem hierarchy is pretty much the only thing I don't like about 'Nix.
@RMartinhoFernandes The programmer who removed whitespace -- he should be promoted away from where he can do more harm than good....
@Maxpm Shape it to your image with links.
19:14
@Maxpm Hm. Let me think about it a bit. How do binaries get found? Do you have a massive search path?
@RMartinhoFernandes That's exactly what Gobo does.
@FredOverflow Really, who measures performance right after adding a comment?
Only a madman.
@Maxpm So... the file system is the packet manager.... apart from the fact that you still have to maintain all those symlinks separately?
73
A: New programming jargon you coined?

Scott Smithn-gleton - a class that only allows a fixed number of instances of itself. I've recently seen another (perhaps official) term for this; something like multiton or polyton.

@RMartinhoFernandes I was commenting out a line of dead code :)
@KerrekSB Package. Packet is generally used for network packets.
@FredOverflow Ah! Then it was not exactly a random comment!
Maybe that code wasn't as dead as you thought.
19:17
@RMartinhoFernandes D'oh. I knew it as I was typing it!
And you killed it!
Too much of the whisky...
Xeo
Xeo
The idea behind GoboLinux sounds interesting. I'm quite confused myself where to put something
You're a code murderer.
You should be locked away.
@KerrekSB Gobo puts all executables in /Programs. It transparently maintains symlinks to /Programs from /usr/bin, /usr/bin, /usr/local/bin, etc.
19:18
@FredOverflow When do we get the zeroton? I want my class to be that safe that nobody can get an instance.
@Xeo ~/progs, and links in ~/bin
@KerrekSB Abstract.
(But everyone should know which instance it is they can't get!)
@RMartinhoFernandes It was the declaration of a variable that was unused. Pretty sure the compiler would have slapped me if it weren't so :)
@Maxpm But presumably that's a per-package setup?
Can you mix distro programs with self-compiled ones?
@KerrekSB lol, you could have a const global empty vector for that purpose :)
19:19
@KerrekSB I doubt it.
@RMartinhoFernandes I have really grown in to the /usr vs /usr/local thing. It's practical and straight-forward.
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB Comment it out.
@Maxpm but why bother? It seems like those people trying to write Java in C++. If you don't like the way *nix does things, don't use it. Trying to fight it and pretend it's something else is only going to end in tears
@KerrekSB "Regular" Linux programs will work on Gobo. You can check out source code and use a makefile and it'll work as expected, if that's what you're asking.
@FredOverflow Awesome. Thank god that .data() is well-defined for empty vectors.
19:20
@KerrekSB I just let things go where they want to go.
If they don't know where they want to go (i.e. there's no package for it), I just stick them under ~.
@RMartinhoFernandes Nah. If something is just for giggles then I don't install it at all. But for instance GCC 4.6.2 goes into /usr/local, because I have to build my own
const std::vector<int> zeroton;   // there you go!
@KerrekSB Oh, I'm used to having packages for pretty much everything under the sun on Gentoo.
@jalf Because switching operating systems just for the filesystem hierarchy is overkill. I love Linux, but I merely tolerate the directory layout. Gobo gives me the option to have my cake and eat it, too. Why wouldn't I be interested in that?
@RMartinhoFernandes Even for the Ur-Quan Masters 0.7.0??
Xeo
Xeo
19:22
@FredOverflow Tons of zeros in there?
@FredOverflow Nice - not even unique_ptr<int>? You're an abbreviative maniac.
@RMartinhoFernandes Gotta love Portage. ;P
@RMartinhoFernandes Hmm...
@RMartinhoFernandes You kids and your gentoo....
19:26
wasn't gentoo practically dead for a long time?
Do we have Gentoo0x now? :)
@jalf Never heard of that.
Maybe you meant this?
> This continued until 2008, when it was announced that the 2008.1 LiveCD release had been cancelled in favour of weekly automated builds of both Stages 3 and Minimal CDs.
Oh, Chrome OS uses Portage.
I currently dual-boot Funtoo and Vista.
@RMartinhoFernandes Does it?
@Maxpm That's what it says on wikipedia.
I'm not interested enough to check.
I think Chrome OS is silly.
If local variables go out of scope, do temporaries go out of full-expressions? :)
Xeo
Xeo
19:36
> When writing a specialization, be careful about its location; or to make it compile will be such a trial as to kindle its self-immolation.
Normative text in the standard.
Which one? Is it still in there?
Xeo
Xeo
FDIS atleast
§14.3.7 p7
argh
my source code is 2223 lines
:P
19:39
if it was one line less, it could have been 2222 lines
@Xeo There's no §14.3.7.
@DeadMG: Remove the blank line after the includes
@DeadMG Kill a comment.
lol
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Woops, §14.7.3
19:41
not worth it, I'm going over now anyway
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't think so. Seem to recall there was some kind of leadership crisis and more time being spent bickering over that than actually adding stuff to new releases. But not sure, I might be thinking of something else... Haven't really kept up :)
Xeo
Xeo
Nice. I get around 0.4 flag weight per helpful flag.
75 flag weight till badge
That probably means 400 flags.
19:45
> We have two objects of foo, called, f1 and f2, if f1 and f2 are concurrently running, can we guarantee the synchronized method being accessed by only one thread?
@KerrekSB Isn't that the whole point of synchronized methods?
@Xeo I know that the positive flag weight decreases per flag at a certain point, but does negative flag weight remain constant?
@FredOverflow They don't give mutual exclusion across objects.
Xeo
Xeo
@keithlayne Yes, always -10
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh, I thought f1 and f2 were the callers instead of the callees. In that case, wrap the method body in a synchronized (Foo.class) block (or any other shared object), right?
19:47
@RMartinhoFernandes that's not the real issue, is it?
@FredOverflow Hmm. Maybe. The wording is clearly inaccurate anyway.
Objects don't run.
oh, never mind. Why would the OP care?
interesting fact, my grammar forbids switch statements with no case
sure they do...what else would a Runnable object do?
@FredOverflow Yep. I don't like to use Foo.class though: it's public. Locking on public objects is a recipe for disaster.
19:48
Sure objects run, that's why it's called runtime!
Right, so private static final Object lock = new Object(); and synchronized (lock) it is.
That's what I do.
I remember reading about that, probably in that famous Java concurrency book with the trains on the cover.
you should call your lock swimmer
vroom vroom
I also avoid synchronized on method signatures because that's the equivalent of synchronized(this) and this is public too.
So, basically, Java gives me a monitor on every object, and a monitor on every class, and I just ignore them.
19:51
@RMartinhoFernandes Hmm, interesting.
Isn't Java awesome?
lock, mutex, semaphore, monitor... I somehow always confuse these terms :(
A monitor is a mutex with stuff.
@RMartinhoFernandes and .NET copied that design error
19:52
@RMartinhoFernandes I just checked out a Niven book at the library, but the selection sucked
every object lugs around a monitor which is basically never safe to use
You have to pay with bloated Objects everywhere, for nothing.
the same as they copied the T[] = Object[] error
@DeadMG But that's not as profound.
but just think, they gave us beans. It's a tradeoff.
19:53
Object is everywhere. You can't escape it. Arrays you can.
Arrays are objects in Java :)
Having Object is terrible for lots, and lots, and lots, of reasons
I think that "Performance" is not terrifically near the top
You forgot a couple of "lots" there...
@DeadMG Having badly designed Object is even worse.
after all, running on a VM with enforced-reference semantics in many, many places is pretty goddamn bad
19:54
I always found it funny that you can instantiate java.lang.Object :)
@FredOverflow I always found it awesome! How else would you create monitors? ;)
@RMartinhoFernandes Erm, pick any other object?
Yeah, I guess class IUseMyOwnMonitorsFuckYouJava {} would do.
That class name looks like an interface name at first glance :)
Is it legal to nest packages inside the java package, like java.faq.u?
Object should have: protected constructor, no builtin monitor, no clone(), and no equals() or hashCode(). That's a lot of design mistakes just on the foundations.
.NET copied them all, except for clone().
19:59
Was Java the first language to have an Object.equals(Object) method?
@FredOverflow I already stumbled over the question itself. You "run an object"? Like... an int? Or a map? How does it run?
Spaghetti code is a tangled mess; lasagna code has too many layers.
@KerrekSB ints are not objects in Java.
@KerrekSB You run an object by invoking its operator() of course!
being able to make a plain Object might be useful - it's the equivalent of "everything has a unique address"
20:01
@Maxpm But real world lasagna does not have too many layers :(
@awoodland What's the use of a plain Object? It has no behaviour and no data (other than the builtin monitor).
@FredOverflow I've never heard anyone describe spaghetti as a "tangled mess," either. :P
@RMartinhoFernandes it has .equals() which you can be sure hasn't been overridden
I think "spaghetti code" should mean code as nice as spaghetti.
@awoodland But why would you instantiate an Object to compare it?
Also, you can just use the operator == in Java and be sure it hasn't been overloaded :P. You don't need a method for reference equality.
@awoodland Non-overriden Object.equals is just reference comparison.
@RMartinhoFernandes But that's not exactly the same: a.equals(b) will throw an exception if a is null, whereas a == b does not.
20:05
Ah.
What's the point of that?
What do you mean?
When would you want to throw NPE?
Oh, I guess never.
Xeo
Xeo
Why is there no lord operator in C++? The corresponding standard section on overloading it would be called [over.lord]...
If you want to test for null the member access operator is the worst possible choice.
20:07
@Xeo What named operators do we have besides sizeof, typeid and decltype?
@FredOverflow exactly, so new Object() is similar to saying void *unique_address = new char;
That's useful?
@FredOverflow The cast operators?
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow Well, it doesn't have to be named that, it could just be the name the standard gives to the operator. :P Like [over.ref] for operator->.
@awoodland Except that new Object() probably eats up a little more space than new char ;)
20:08
@RMartinhoFernandes I've seen it in C before
@DeadMG right
@FredOverflow UDLs?
@RMartinhoFernandes marking something as invalid in a container of some sort
20:08
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh, I thought they were postponed till after C++11?
you know there's absolutely no way anyone can ever legally ask you to store that
they're in GCC now
Xeo
Xeo
It's just that no compiler supports them yet.
Oh, they are?
yeah
20:09
I wouldn't have guessed that there was enough demand for UDLs.
@awoodland Ok, I see the reasoning. I'd probably use optional objects for that.
Xeo
Xeo
They're like, totally cool. Especially the part with template<char... Chars>
I'm a fair fan of s".." for std::string literal
or maybe it was "..."s?
20:10
@DeadMG ".."_s.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Shouldn't that be ".."_s?
I don't recall offhand
but I know that the Standard library can use prefixes if the committee defines it to
that's why user ones are _suffixes
Oh, so I can say "hello"_s instead of std::string("hello") now? Neat!
Xeo
Xeo
20:12
Well, It's not like ".."_s is much different from string("..").
It's cooler. Helps fight global warming.
well, it kinda is
Xeo
Xeo
It's just a syntax without parens, which might be appealing to some. It also occasionally saves typing.
a friend of mine used _key as a UDL for keys in Lua tables
so you could do lua_table { foo_key = value; }, I think was the syntax
that's somewhat cool
Xeo
Xeo
The one cool thing about it is template<char... Chars> for compile-time operations on strings.
Or numbers.
20:13
@RMartinhoFernandes But it doesn't help at all with global cooling!
@Xeo Numbers only :(
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton What?! D:
What happened to my compile time format strings. ;_;
template<char... Chars> struct A {}; compiles fine...
How's that relevant?
Xeo
Xeo
@Griwes Only that we're talking about something completely different here.
20:15
@Xeo I too had intricate plans in my head :(
Everyone had!
What is template<char... Chars>?
Xeo
Xeo
variadic template of chars
Introduces a template with a parameter pack of chars.
@FredOverflow Like template<char Char>, but variadic!
20:16
how's that irrelevant?
@LucDanton So... chariadic?
Oh, I see. Never used char as a template parameter :)
Think std::array<T, 20>.
@Griwes template<char... Chars> struct A {}; is not a UDL.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Yeah, like auto bf_code = "++++++++++[>+++++++>++++++++++>+++>+<<<<-]>++.>+.+++++++..+++.>++.<<+++++++++++++++.>.+++.------.--------.>+.>."_brainfuck; bf_code();. :(
20:17
Oh, the possibilities!
That random code?
Xeo
Xeo
Hello World.
@Xeo Can you do it at compile time?
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow Sadly, no, according to @Luc
Only numbers get chariadic UDLs
@KerrekSB That's good word coinage. @Xeo is already using it.
20:18
Only valid forms for string UDL are the non-templates accepting (const char*) or (const char*, size_t). It limits the compile-time operations available.
Xeo
Xeo
IOW, it sucks.
:)
D can do quite a lot of stuff at compile time that C++ can't, right?
Xeo
Xeo
Or "randombase64string"_decode64
@Xeo Welcome to C++, where you can have half your cake, but cannot eat the other half.
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, like conditional compilation of code depending on a template parameter.
static if would be very welcome in C++
Same with replacing the preprocessor and merging it with template metaprogramming.
20:20
Oh, that'd be so sweet.
@Xeo The non-compiled code must still be syntactically valid, right? ;)
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG, what does WideC offer on compile time stuff.
everything
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow I assume, dunno.
@DeadMG Dammit. I was going to say that in jest!
20:21
@RMartinhoFernandes Grand. Until we all die of chariardiac arrest.
Xeo
Xeo
Might be like #ifdef only on template params
@KerrekSB Now that's pushing it.
@RMartinhoFernandes Pushing it like a pack of chars! Anyway, I'm still charred from my foray into GCC 4.7, which broke everything. Never again.
UDLs can wait.
Xeo
Xeo
I want lambdas in Clang, everything else can wait.
lol
@Xeo And list initialization!
20:24
(Ahh, 410 rep -- that's a first.)
Xeo
Xeo
Woah?!
I'm using return { blah, blah }; almost everywhere!
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Isn't that uniform initialization?
@RMartinhoFernandes Why return one thing if you can return many things? Interesting philosophy.
"The Amazon Pattern"
20:25
Maybe there should be something like return auto; which returns a tuple of copies of all local variables.
@Xeo You mean that clang already supports that syntax, just not <initializer_list>?
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Uniform initialization != initializer_list.
@Xeo Ok, and what does Clang support?
I just wish clang compiled libeigen3 :(
(I need both, btw).
20:27
lol
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, seems even { 42, "1337", 3.14159 } is called an initializer list
@Xeo It's list initialization. There's no "uniform initialization" in the standard.
Xeo
Xeo
Atleast that's what clang 3.1 tells me
I see.
std::tuple<int, char const*, double> foo(){
  return { 42, "1337", 3.14159 };
}
I find it sad that this doesn't work.
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't because of explicit. How do you manage?
20:29
std::tuple has an explicit ctor.
@LucDanton I don't explicit everything.
Xeo
Xeo
Hmpf
> error: non-aggregate type 'std::pair<int, const char *>' cannot be initialized with an initializer list
std::pair<int, char const*> foo(){
  return { 42, "1337" };
}
GCC compiles fine
Gnarf.
Clang doesn't support that feature.
Let's check the Standard for explicit.
Xeo
Xeo
Sounds like it.
pair(const T1& x, const T2& y);
Should be fine.
There's a perfect forwarding one, too.
20:36
@Xeo What about return { {42, "1337"} };?
Oghch, cppscript has a library function called static_assert...!
I can tell when someone has been playing with compiler snapshots.
Xeo
Xeo
Clang still complains.
"Maybe I can throw more braces at the compiler!"
Xeo
Xeo
Sometimes, it works!
@Xeo Sometimes it ICEs.
20:37
@Xeo Clang doesn't support list initialization!
Xeo
Xeo
Like throwing more typenames, templates and this->' at the compiler.
Sometimes all you need is an upgrayedd.
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes :x
sorry, unimplemented yet!
Note to self: if you find yourself wondering why the other screen is totally black, try turning it back on.
sbi
sbi
20:45
Bruce Schneier (1:49), James Gosling (2:48), & others in what Bruce Schneier (aptly) describes as a "transvestite-themed rock video:" youtube.com/watch?v=gmPta19GSFU. I like the comments at Bruce's blog: "I am lost for words..." "Interesting direction to go with your celebrity image. ;)" "Now, when you say 'first cameo'..." "And...now when you google Security or Transvestite, Bruce will be at the top of the list!"
i guess when they could call a more rational fortran "ratfor", then a more rational windows api should be "ratwin"
?
@sbi You can link to the middle of youtube videos. Saves me the trouble of seeking myself!
i'm just looking for a name for a very shallow simple c++ binding for some aspects of the windows api, for the blog postings
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, but the start of the video is good to see, too!
Apparently, the others are supposed to be celebrities, too. However, I know none of the others.
20:53
@AlfPSteinbach When I did my xulwin project I started to factor out the windows code into a thin C++ layer. It never amounted to much, but for what it's worth: WinUtils.h and WinUtils.cpp.
@AlfPSteinbach That's one letter away from a public outing!
It was a cool project but I did it over two years ago and now I think my code from back then sucks.
I should resume it though.
nice idea with restoring original current directory
:)
dint like tchar though
Neither do I today.
could you actually run a xul app?
sbi
sbi
20:55
@StackedCrooked System_blahblah() — what's wrong with namespaces??
@sbi I am a chaotic person.
I tend to try out random stuff all the time.
@sbi Another reason is my dislike for hierarchy.
@AlfPSteinbach Please ignore "System_GetEnvironmentVariable". I don't know what I was drinking then.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked But where's the difference between a System_ prefix and a System:: prefix — except that the latter uses the feature provided by the language.
@StackedCrooked Given how @Alf's ability to type has deteriorated, he might be drinking the very same stuff.
@sbi Today I would certainly use namespaces.
@AlfPSteinbach I could render xul. It doesn't support JavaScript.

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