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user1804599
19:00
@milleniumbug You can't do that in most languages.
@milleniumbug There are lambdas?
user1804599
Most languages don't have templates at all.
user1804599
@πάνταῥεῖ No he means this:
user1804599
void f() {
    struct S {
        template<typename T>
        void g() { }
    };
}
@πάνταῥεῖ C++11 with no polymorphic lambdas
19:01
@πάνταῥεῖ o_0 four cheese with extra cheese?
user1804599
@thecoshman Formagii, not fromaggi.
@thecoshman ...and a side order of cheese to go with it! :-)
@thecoshman Yup. I mentioned I'm an addict! One could see clearly if I'd post a pic of my belly :-D
This is inconsistent clusterfuck
@milleniumbug This sentence appears to be redundant.
user1804599
19:03
Let's see whether D allows it.
Anonymous types aren't so useful, because you can't declare constructors
user1804599
void f() {
    class C {
        void g(T)() { }
    }
}
user1804599
It compiles!
@milleniumbug Well, if you do a little work on it, I'm sure you can make it a clusterfuck much more consistently.
I haven't written anything in C++ (or for that matter, any language) so this wasn't a problem for me
but now that random things compile and random don't
It hurts me
19:07
@рытфолд bah
@milleniumbug <random> compiles, yes
user1804599
Also, I had a wonderful idea.
no you didn't
user1804599
ifelse if is incredibly ugly because the conditions don't line up.
@milleniumbug you can. c++14
user1804599
19:08
So how about Lisp-like cond.
user1804599
Or even better, Go-like switch.
user1804599
In Go switch { … } is the same as switch true { … }.
@sehe Oh, they must have fixed it to make polymorphic lambdas work
Make a language that has no syntax
user1804599
19:09
Those already exist, like Clojure.
This way, no one would complain about the syntax
Because it's not there
@sehe wait, what? you sure?
AFAIK that restriction wasn't lifted
modulo generic lambdas
user1804599
All Lisps actually.
cond-else
user1804599
cond
    case foo => a
    case bar => b
    case baz => c
end
19:12
cond om
It will protect you from unsafe code
I'd make a namespace std joke, but those are overdone
@рытфолд Definitiely needs some more cheese on top.
@MohammadAliBaydoun Did a more abstract one ...
user1804599
true and false as keywords or as identifiers?
as values
user1804599
Of course, but I mean syntactically.
19:20
Like in data Bool = True | False
19:39
I want apple pie.
Lounge<Apple Pie>
@StackedCrooked Oh- I have read that one. The protagonist literally gets dicks for hands at one point.
Literally?
Yes.
What the hell.
you've read it? It's a real old one I believe.
19:41
In some website, some 6 years ago.
Nov 22, 1989 to Dec 23, 1995
@Nooble it's the best anime that's currently airing
Hard to forget the eye-hand monster thing.
really
MAL rating is 8.72.
Downloading EP.1.
@AndyProwl is my point
19:44
@sehe eh, with limitations
@Nooble No Lounge<Eucalyptus Pie>? You're surprising me :-O ...
is creating a user interface where every element is pinned to a layer a bad idea
@πάνταῥεῖ Eucalyptus Pie isn't as good as Eucalyptus Cake.
@Pris Depends on the necessary structures
'necessary structures' wut
19:48
^ of the UI interactions (thought user friendly)
i want to pin things to layers so i can 1. render things more efficiently, and 2. figure out where input events should go
What do your layers represent semantically actually?
they represent 'z' or depth in a typical 2d ui. If ButtonA is on layer 0 and Button B is on layer1, ButtonB is drawn on top
@tpg2114: NASA mostly goes to space. — Lightness Races in Orbit 4 mins ago
lol
i cant help but think im being short sighted though
19:59
@Pris I didn't look at this from a technical point. I well got that layering means Z-order. The question is how does the Z ordering of UI elements help to solve the actual use cases of your forms, and being smoothly and intuitively adopted by an experiencing user. It's usually not about the question which can be rendered easier, but user experience. That's my point.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I'd keep tabs on that — sehe 10 secs ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit lol, I guess the definition of 'rocket' has eluded the poster completely.
@MartinJames yeah
20:02
@πάνταῥεῖ it doesnt really help usability. in fact i feel like it adds complexity. but i dont really know what else to do. I think most other toolkits use hierarchies which is more intuitive ie (Window->Canvas->Border->Button)
@Pris that diagram on the left is the wrong way around. it doesn't match the diagram in the middle in terms of orientation.
@Pris It's a good idea if you want to drag forms around. MS thought it wasn't a bad idea.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit thats just a pic from google's material design; i posted it to illustrate what i meant by layers in a ui
@Pris "it doesnt really help usability. in fact i feel like it adds complexity" Such is a no brainer, isn't it?
> I couldn’t think of any other git commands that were so well suited to running from inside the editor as the Gblame example I gave above. Turns out that was just down to a lack of imagination on my part. Fugitive.vim is as bad as its author claims. I think it already is illegal in some states.
20:04
@Pris It looks like self-assembly instructions for a flat-pack kitchen cabinet.
For the record I think Material Design looks like utter shit. I wish someone would pay me to come up with stuff that ugly
WANT
reminds me of the Sheraton in NJ
@Pris I'm happy. Customers pay me for ugly stuff all the time. Luckily, they only see it after it's been built.
anyway, it's the new hotel in the Shard and apparently the restaurant is excellent
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I somehow doubt that I'll be staying there for the unconference.
20:08
@MartinJames I might save up for it :D
Goddammit, someone reported a bug in my program when trying to run some constant to 15 billion all in ram. That's 92 GB of ram. Where the hell am I gonna get 92 GB of ram? lol
I only have 64 GB.
lol
£550 per night. Blah.
I thought that server boards ran to 128GB these days
I thought that was what swap files were for.
20:10
@Puppy I have no idea what he's running. But he says AWS so it isn't even his machine.
user1804599
user1804599
This is good.
Can I use C++ code in an html file?
@DonLarynx yes. add "//" before all the html stuff.
qt does something confusing where they mix hierarchies and relative ordering
@DonLarynx maybe if you transpile it to js
20:12
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Yeah, not worth it. Stay at the Dorchester instead. Last time I was there, it was £1700 a night.
Oh right yes okay I'll do that
-.-
So no repro at 1 billion digits. Before I try to repro at 7.5 billion (requires 48 GB of ram), I'll need to ask him what binary he's running. Since they use different algorithms which can fail in different ways.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit OK, see you in the lobby bar:)
Interesting.
20:14
@Griwes It's sad that placement new uses void*
@milleniumbug Indeed.
@MartinJames cool
@Mysticial Keep us informed.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or not. :)
@milleniumbug Still, even though it does that, a compiler should yell at you for trying to do this.
@Griwes Why do you expect pre-allocated memory blocks to be type-checked against the objects that shall be placement-newd into them?
20:16
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ..frantically searching for 'fleabag hotels under £30'
@Griwes I would quite like it to require void* or char*, to be fair.
Placement new is a construct the compiler should understand, lol.
@Mysticial I know. :)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Because I'm compiling with -Wextra!
:D
@Griwes File an enhancement request then, but expect people to ask you when you'd ever get into such a mess that you needed this. (Yes, yes, I know, warnings are there precisely for this kind of reason :D)
20:19
Well, it's not exactly the code I've written... :P My code involves doing some silly things with PODs in mmaped memory.
hmm
"Requested: One low-yield nuclear warhead. Purpose: Surprise party for foreign dignitary."
user1804599
nnoremap ; :
nnoremap : ;
user1804599
This is so fucking awesome.
user1804599
I use ; so rarely.
@Puppy What do I use to insert a block inside another one? for things like: void foo() { int x; { int y; } return x; } ?
20:24
in LLVM?
also that code doesn't make sense unless you meant something completely different with that syntax.
user1804599
Just remove the curly braces.
user1804599
It's semantically the same.
user1804599
Except for shadowing, but just don't shadow.
@Puppy err that should be return x; and yes, in LLVM
user1804599
20:26
In LLVM that function is the following:
LLVM does not give two shits about blocks.
blocks do not exist in LLVM.
you don't do anything to insert a block in LLVM.
user1804599
The code doesn't even compile.
they are a source-language construct.
not an LLVM IR construct.
Hmm... that's annoying
user1804599
20:27
You try to return an integer from a void function.
user1804599
Also basic blocks have nothing to do with compound statements.
user1804599
Code generation can just flatten them unless } does special stuff like calling destructors.
@рытфолд It will call destructors and shit
user1804599
You only need basic blocks when you branch.
even if it does they can still be flattened.
source-language blocks and LLVM IR blocks have nothing really to do with each other.
user1804599
20:28
int x; { int y; } return x; doesn't branch so it can be compiled to just a single basic block.
except that in some cases you must create a new block in both systems.
like catch blocks or branching.
i must advise each and every single one of you
do not fall in love with a froot loop
in fact, do not even take froot loops seriously.
or you will go froot loop mode.
0
A: Narrowing ourselves into irrelevance

Lightness Races in OrbitStack Overflow does not have to cater to every single kind of question you choose to think of. It is not a blogging platform, or a tutorial platform, or an index for third-party resources, or a forum, or a discussion board, or a chat. The example questions you posted are mostly pretty rubbish bu...

and source-language level blocks are a source language implementation problem.
20:30
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Why is there an apostrophy in site's?
@Puppy I might defer implementing those until later then...
@milleniumbug froot loop: a crazy woman.
why? they're pretty trivial
remember those tiny boxes of cereal you could get
Well I don't have destructors or exceptions yet, so a block does nothing for now, aside for being a container for multiple statements
user1804599
20:32
void generateCode(ExpressionStatement statement) {
    generateCode(statement.expression);
}
void generateCode(CompoundStatement statement) {
    foreach (statement in statement.statements) {
        generateCode(statement);
    }
    foreach (dtorCall in dtorCalls(statement)) {
        generateCode(dtorCall);
    }
}
// more overloads …
user1804599
It's pretty much like this, you don't have to worry about flattening.
user1804599
It's automatic.
how very awkward, everyone.
I've decided to pick up codeacademy.com again, and for some weird reason there is text like this on the page
user1804599
You only need to create new basic blocks for if statements, loops, try/catch etc.
20:33
<h1>Now what?</h1>
<p>Fuck me</p>
<p>no!</p>
<h1>fffer</h>
@рытфолд Yeah I had for or less this so far:
    virtual llvm::Value* GenerateCode() override
    {
        llvm::Value* value;
        for (auto& s : statements)
        {
            value = s->GenerateCode();
        }

        return value;
    }
user1804599
Yes.
user1804599
If s is also a compound statement, this is simply recursive.
user1804599
And everything goes well and automatically.
user1804599
20:34
Nested compound statements aren't a special case.
statements don't need to return a value.
I particularly like how it returns an uninitialised pointer in the leaf case
user1804599
@Puppy Maybe they're not really statements but more like the comma operator!
@Puppy I haven't cleaned up the code, the BlockNode is an "expression" for the next few hours :P
user1804599
(Like they should be.)
20:35
is there a spec out there for a user interface language? ... excluding html5/css
dafuq is a user interface language?
a forms probably
user1804599
Speaking of which, it's time to implement code generation.
idunno like edje, qml, xaml, whatever the hell android uses for its UIs
A user interface markup language is a markup language that renders and describes graphical user interfaces and controls. Many of these markup languages are dialects of XML and are dependent upon a pre-existing scripting language engine, usually a JavaScript engine, for rendering of controls and extra scriptability. The concept of the user interface markup languages is primarily based upon the desire to prevent the "re-invention of the wheel" in the design, development and function of a user interface; such re-invention comes in the form of coding a script for the entire user interface. The typical...
user1804599
20:37
For the few expressions I can parse now.
@Borgleader plain english
@Borgleader Never mind that. Concentrate on your uninitialised pointer.
user1804599
Oh neat, non-ASCII listchars.
user1804599
I sometimes get confused because I have tilde as trailing space highlighter.
user1804599
But tilde comes up a lot in code.
20:38
@LightnessRacesinOrbit This is not the pointer you're looking for waves hands
@рытфолд compl
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I got as far as'XML', then inexplicably fell asleep.
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it concats in D and Perl 6.
%:include <iostream>
int main() <% std::cout << (1 and compl 2) << std::endl; %>
@рытфолд idgaf
user1804599
@LightnessRacesinOrbit idgaf
user1804599
20:41
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I like that. Curly braces and hash signs are ugly.
user1804599
I should do that.
It's insanely difficult to get a gift fuck in here.
2
I suppose I could try falling back to buying them, but all the hookers are dismembered and packed in trunks.
@рытфолд Make curlies a syntax error, like tabs. And then fall on your sword for being an idiot
user1804599
Curly braces delimit tuples.
Did you know browsers are compilers for HTML?
20:46
@DonLarynx No, because they are not.
You can't reasonably call the result of your browser's rendering engine "a computer program"
In fact, you can't reasonably call a document written in HTML "a computer program"
Aside from that, you're spot on mate.
there are compilers for LaTeX
Yes because those compilers output code
Not pixels
Web browsers reveal a graphical and interactive interpretation of their internal representation of an HTML document
LaTeX compilers produce a translated document. Your PDF viewer (or whatever the heck you're using) is what interprets and shows it to you. Totally different things!
It's not everyday you spot corruption bugs in Boost libraries
@LightnessRacesinOrbit That's true. I was arguing about this
4 mins ago, by Lightness Races in Orbit
You can't reasonably call the result of your browser's rendering engine "a computer program"
Well, this is also the case with LaTeX output
The Star Wars Humble Bundle has reached 3M$
20:53
i wonder if i can rip that out of tizen and just... make it a cross platform lib
@milleniumbug yeah we'll gloss over that part ;p
@milleniumbug shhhhhhh
"List of my favorite things
1.raindrops on roses
2.whiskas on kittens
3.call of duty: modern warfare
"
wut
raindrops on roses. wut
yoooooooooo this looks sick
@DonLarynx greased larynxes
@StackedCrooked Ok, I'm convinced. Beer time.
20:59
lol
beer o clock

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