« first day (1576 days earlier)      last day (3601 days later) » 

Ell
Ell
23:00
imho type is more natural on the rhs
not that Wide's syntax is perfect.
but I've definitely solved that particular problem.
argh fucking ICE
Ell
Ell
what type inference does wide have?
what, my code evolved to a higher plane of existence or something?
I'm looking at your repo, and I might be dumb because I can't make complete sense of your syntax
which part of the repo?
@Ell Local variable, function parameter, return type. A few bits and bobs.
> Wide / Wide / WideLibrary / Standard
these files actually
use github.
the bb repo hasn't been updated in quite some time.
but then, nor has that part of the repo really
return function(range1)[range2 := move(range2)] { this i don't follow and in the few files ive opened all the types seem to be infered. I guess that's a way to go.
function(args) is a lambda, and [] is captures.
C++ has a similar capture-initialization feature in C++14.
effectively you can initialize the capture to any arbitrary expression
23:07
right but in C++ it looks like [T range2 = std::move(range2)](T range1) {}
the Wide syntax isn't that different
the captures just come second instead of first.
also inference.
@Puppy any reason for that?
I chose it because most lambdas should not require explicit captures.
ah so its optional
so the lambda should open with the most important part- the lambda and it's interface.
23:08
and the function keyword is only there for disambiguation purposes?
effectively.
ok, that makes sense
I might revisit lambda syntax at some point though.
so lets say I want a default constructed string in wide? what do i do? foo := string(); ?
yep
but by and large, Wide's language and library classes will not permit default construction.
Ell
Ell
23:12
string() isn't default construction?
@Ell It is.
it is, i think he's saying most types wont have default ctors
you'll need to provide arguments
the main syntactic problem I have though is initializer lists.
right now they don't support multi-argument constructors which is somewhat awkward
this x := T() thing is worth considering. I was sad I ran out of "brackets" for tuples.
Ell
Ell
how would you construct an empty string?
string.empty()
I guess no public default ctors isn't a terrible policy
23:16
@Ell str := string(""); most likely
Ell
Ell
probably just str := ""
just "" should be fine.
Ell
Ell
will you permit default ctors?
they'll be permitted
just bad.
I mean default ones make sense for containers (empty ones anyway). I'm not terribly fond of x := vector(0);
Ell
Ell
23:17
x := vector.empty()
not really feeling the need for default constructors for containers.
@Ell so. much. typing.
people either explicitly construct them as empty, or construct them and then fill them- IOW they construct from a range, it's just that C++'s library is too shitty to express the required initialization as a range.
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader x := [] then vOv
container default construction isn't all that useful if you have ranges.
@Ell Fuck no, what kind of savage do you think I am
Ell
Ell
23:19
@Puppy what's wrong with that?
it implies that direct language support is for some reason required for containers.
@Ell gl infering the damn type
the only container meriting direct language support is a string.
all the others are library-only.
Ell
Ell
vector<idk_yet>
@Puppy stack arrays?
Ell
Ell
23:20
@Puppy why?
or wtv theyre called
non newed arrays
eh
you could express a value array just fine in Wide as a template, I believe.
it wouldn't be pretty but it would be doable.
@Ell Why do strings merit it, or why do other containers not merit it?
@Borgleader std::array? :p
@melak47 std::array is built on language support for native arrays.
@melak47 you got woofed
23:21
you could not implement std::array without that support.
at least not in C++.
ideally in Wide I will be able to (although it wouldn't be tremendously advisable)
Ell
Ell
@Puppy why do strings merit while containers don't?
@Ell Strings merit special language support exclusively because their contents are meant to be human-readable. Presenting them in a human-readable format in source is simply preserving their function.
regular containers are not meant for humans, they are meant for programs.
@Ell Do you really want to write: str := { 'H', 'e', 'l', /* fuck all this typing */ };
@Ell I don't understand what he's saying, but I almost always need std::string while I don't need other containers nearly as frequently.
@Blob you're a moron
23:24
can you make games with Wide
Me? >.>
apparently not
@AlexM. Why not? they're just programs.
i took "language support" to mean built into the core language
that is what I meant, yes.
Ell
Ell
23:25
I think in most cases strings aren't string literals
I do see the rationale of language support
that's entirely correct.
anyway I have work tomorrow so tata
@Puppy oooh, I'll make a game with it when you inaugurate the language
don't hold your breath
there's a lot of work left to be done
Ell
Ell
@Puppy bye :)
23:40
I just used this example to prove why one shouldn't just reinterpret_cast between unrelated types for some guy in ##c++, his reply: "yeah, but can't you see.. it doesn't crash!". The Internet has spoken, if it compiles and runs; don't bother checking if it does what you want.
user3010322
##c++ ?
user3010322
Also
abusing undefined-behavior to show that someone is doing something wrong = bad idea.
user3010322
std::priority_queue<int, std::reference_wrapper<std::vector<int>>>
@ThePhD IRC, freenode, channel.
user3010322
23:42
I wonder if that works.
@ThePhD why on earth would that work?
user3010322
Dunno
@ThePhD when we can overload operator., sure.. it might
@FilipRoséen-refp that reinterpret cast is dumb
user3010322
Maybe std::priority_queue<int, std::vector<int>&>
23:45
why wouldnt you just downcast to C*
@Puppy well, I suppose this doesn't quite count :p coliru
@Pris are you trollin', or acting stupid?
how am I acting stupid?
If you think your A* is actually a C* try downcasting it
oh wait
@Pris the whole point of that reinterpret_cast is that it is stupid, to get the behavior you'd "want" you should static_cast<B*> (static_cast<C*> (a_p)).
something something multiple inheretance doesnt work with dynamic casting
user3010322
23:47
@melak47 Thats. Uh. Interesting.
@Pris there's nothing dynamic about reinterpret_cast
@ThePhD what have I done D:
user3010322
@melak47 Nothing!
@FilipRoséen-refp If i understand correctly, the offset from start of B to B::g() is found, but then applied to A, which gives memory address of A::f(), right?
user3010322
main.cpp:9:47: error: 'std::vector<int>&' is not a class, struct, or union type
std::priority_queue<int, std::vector<int>&> priotityq( container );
23:47
i never said that, i suggested that you downcast instead of reinterpet_cast
@melak47 nothing
user3010322
What kind of
user3010322
bogus error is that.
user3010322
It should WORK, damnit. D:<
@ThePhD you can't hold references in containers..
use reference_wrapper?
23:48
@ThePhD are you talking about std::priority_queue<int, std::reference_wrapper<...>>? that shouldn't work, it would never work.
user3010322
That's the "container" type argument.
user3010322
Not the element type argument.
how do you expect it to use a vector...reference as a container
@ThePhD std::reference_wrapper doesn't have the member-functions which are part of the requirement of the Container passed to std::priority_queue, of course it doesn't work
You can't have a priority queue with an external container.
user3010322
23:49
The constructors for priority_queue have one that takes the Container C.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you can fake it, but not with std::reference_wrapper
user3010322
I guess I'll just subclass priority_queue privately. .-.
@ThePhD Yes, and they copy it internally.
@melak47 (just for the record, since @ThePhd left you hanging) your array implementation doesn't have the required semantics of std::array
What you're trying to do is misguided.
Again.
Unsurprisingly.
23:51
@ThePhD just write a proxy-class
user3010322
Oh.
user3010322
Well, titties.
@FilipRoséen-refp pff it's got everything there! except like iterators and runtime random access :p
Why would you want the container to be external anyway?
user3010322
Well.
user3010322
23:52
I wanted to iterate over it.
user3010322
The priority_queue
user3010322
But tehre doesn't seem to be a begin or end.
top and pop.
@ThePhD There's a reason for that.
@ThePhD The container won't be in the order you want, mind you.
user3010322
There's no guarantee to the underlying order?
user3010322
Well, titties.
23:53
So I just won a Civ5 game on King difficulty. I'm still way too dependent on lucky starts to be able to move on to Emperor.
@ThePhD I don't know how you think a priority queue works, but it appears you thought wrong.
It will likely be in some heaplike form.
The first element is the lowest, but that's it.
The order of the rest is only partial.
You can still cheaply (log(n)) sort that heap though.
The priority queue code takes care of putting a new lowest in place once you remove the first one.
user3010322
If I create an empty container and stuff it with the stuff in teh priority queue, then
user3010322
Would it be in order?
23:59
@melak47 what was the reason for you writing that anyhow?
The queue will be empty then.
@FilipRoséen-refp Puppy said "you couldn't write std::array without the lnaguage support for arrays" or something like that. :p

« first day (1576 days earlier)      last day (3601 days later) »