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19:00
@refp erm...
sehe@natty:/tmp/q$ php5
<?php

function func () {
  return 123;
}

var_dump (func ());

?>
int(123)
@sehe did you actually question yourself there? that was the whole point of it!
@sehe Ha, you were fooled!
Xeo
Xeo
1
Q: Specify the type of a vector with a string

shizzleHow do you specify a type with a string? I mean: string s = "int"; Vector<s> vec; And I want vec to be vector<int>. Is this possible? I want to make a class where the user can type in a string and a vector with that type will be created.

Not again...
user142019
In C++ is a char 8 bits wide, or is it one byte wide?
19:02
0
Q: Extra copy constructors when std::function is used

SerikIn my project, there are two components: producer and consumer. Producer is responsible for processing some information and giving the result to consumer. The result is passed with help of function object. I am using a function for passing this information. You could see how it could look in th...

user142019
@RMartinhoFernandes Thanks!
And one byte must be large enough to hold a UTF-8 code unit, thus at least 8 bits.
Xeo
Xeo
@WTP Char is defined as being one byte, and CHAR_BIT is the number of bits in that byte.
if there is an answer on how he can circumvent that specific problem, should you post it? :/
Xeo
Xeo
@refp Sure
19:04
@Xeo it's a bit.. off though, since that is only a sample snippet.. and not production code, he probably has a reason for all those moves (but he could just use a reference to the Data defined in Producer::process)
What was the old minimum for char? 6 bits?
@Pubby: 7 bits
as said; is it a "solution" that is too specific?
@MooingDuck It's required to use ascii?
19:05
Xeo: see what I mean?
@refp refp good thing I know nothing about php. So what's the deal? Functions not allowed on codepad? Security flags active? Version differences?
You could post it, and let the OP decide ;)
@Pubby It's required to be able to hold the values from 0-127 if I recall, but standard doesn't say ASCII
@sehe nhaa, you can reproduce the problem at your own computer
with the options I am missing. I;'ll research it. Back in 5 mins
19:06
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm afraid of down-votes, even though he did ask for a solution..
@refp In that case, just delete it. You get your rep back, and you may get a badge :)
@RMartinhoFernandes I've always wondered how much code would break if compiled for a Ternary Computer because people assume there are bits instead of trits.
@RMartinhoFernandes I mean; "Is it possible to get rid of these extra constructors?", answering "yeah, don't use the object at all, heck - kill yourself", please will probably think of it like a post like that
@RMartinhoFernandes really, do you get your rep back if you delete a post?
@refp Yes. It may require a recalc, but you can trigger those manually now.
@Pubby The only requirements the standard puts on the character encoding of char are the ability to represent a bunch of basic characters, and that the digits 0 to 9 are consecutive.
@RMartinhoFernandes how do I do that?
Xeo
Xeo
19:08
@RMartinhoFernandes not 'a' - 'z' and 'A' - 'Z' to be consecutive?
No.
Just digits.
Xeo
Xeo
hm
That would rule out EBCDIC.
@Xeo Nope, not in EBCDIC
Xeo
Xeo
Wtf is EBCDIC. And who uses that?
19:09
No one.
but in practice, therefore, groups of 10 letters (e.g. A-J) will be consecutive
So '\0' won't always be 0?
'\0' is 0 by definition.
No, only 0-9 is guaranteed by the standard
\0 is octal!
I doubt anyone's ever devised an encoding where A-F are nonconsecutive, which are the only letters ever reasonably treated as digits
19:10
2.3/3 IIRC
people ask that question too often on The Internet
@MooingDuck The standard requires stuff to work as binary in a few places (notably shifts), so a C++ implementation on a ternary computer would need some emulation.
It's a fairly silly concern. And C++11 gives you Unicode character constants which do have an entire consecutive alphabet.
@RMartinhoFernandes C++11 § 3.9.1/7 seems to imply that only binary is allowed, but I'm not sure. Also you're right that shifts are defined in terms of bits, so those must be emulated.
For ternary computing, the platform would supply nonstandard native types and emulate the required types using a library.
> A byte (...) is composed of a contiguous sequence of bits
This does not forbid a ternary implementation.
19:15
@refp ok, time's up time for the punchline. I can't figure it out in 5 mns
But it does make it difficult.
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm pretty sure a bit is defined somewhere as 1 or 0.
@sehe it's a " " and not a proper space, ie. it it's equivalent to writing function foo () {returnabcdef;} /* php will assume it's a undefined constant, and foo goes without return-statement */
@RMartinhoFernandes: the standard implies base 2 for "bitwise and" only in the name of the operator.
blargh.. it was converted here to, hold on
19:17
@Potatoswatter Yes, but you could use a trit and waste some information storage ability.
@sehe < > 160, Hex 00a0, Octal 240 <- it's that
Or you could just slap a layer of bits-to-trits translation on top.
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually doing math that way would require an emulation library, though… so you're back to separate types for emulated vs native.
@Potatoswatter sure a bit is 1 or 0. So in those places a trinary computer must act as if it were binary
@Potatoswatter don't need seperate types, merely a translation. Same way C++ does bitfields.
@Potatoswatter Right, that's what I meant.
19:21
§ 3.9.1\4 Unsigned integers, declared unsigned, shall obey the laws of arithmetic modulo 2n where n is the number of bits in the value representation of that particular size of integer. That will slow down the emulation quite a bit :(
They should make it easier to create a C++ compiler for a trinary computer. I'm sure quantum computer compiler writers will thank them.
@refp Ah, sorry, to trigger a recalc, go to stackoverflow.com/reputation. There's a button at the end.
@MooingDuck That modulo operation can be implemented as compare-and-subtract. Division would be overkill.
You may only do so once a day.
@RMartinhoFernandes thanks, I found it earlier though.. triggered a recalc, got less rep, cried eyes out.
Does it make a snide remark the second time?
19:25
@Potatoswatter: yes, but it's still triple the operations, for a simple i++;
@Potatoswatter yeah
@refp you lie! Also that just cost me almost 200 rep.
@Potatoswatter no, the snide remark is "you can only do it once a day"
The system owes me 10 rep. I already made a recalc though :(
19:29
it's subjective, you know..
@RMartinhoFernandes you'll get it eventually. There's no reason you'd need it right now
@MooingDuck maybe he wanna spend all rep on a superbounty!? of course he needs it now, FCUK!
@RMartinhoFernandes let's occupy something I've heard that is the way to make yourself heard
let's.. occupy.. erhm.. THE INTERNET!
I'm occupying.
are you occupying?
you better be occupying man, I'm tellin' ya
come on, OCCUPY!
goes off for a smoke (sorry about that, I get a bit carried away sometimes)
Occupying the internet would amount to a DDOS attack…
Yo'mama so fat she's DDOSing every worldwide McDonalds as we speak
lol
StackOverflow sucks. I wrote almost no code today.
Attack of the killer rectangles:
0
Q: SDL Every image becomes rectangles

HasslarnThere has to be something simple that I'm missing right now but i cant find it. I try to add an image which is a rectangle with rounded corners. However on the screen it becomes a pure rectangle. Even when i add a cirle image to the screen it becomes an rectangle! Player* p1 = new Player( "Image...

19:36
Oh noes, sharp edges!
hilarious!
I won't suggest that he take off his glasses…
19:47
@refp Thanks. That's cunning. No idea why copy and pasting from both sites was converting the silly characters, though. I'll try using controlled environment
Aha:
PHP Notice:  Use of undefined constant return 123 - assumed 'return 123' in /tmp/ideone_4OOHS.php on line 4
NULL
Those "notices" are weird.
Notice: You've been served.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah sorry I had extra test cases added in a clone on ideone :) Removed the other output
And housemate throws up a party, of course. I'll get no sleep at night in here.
LOL "throws up a party"
either "throws up at party" or "throws a party"
19:53
Oh shush.
It could be both, actually
Point is, there's a lot of people and lot of noise.
I hate both.
Alcohol makes me tolerant of other people.
Had to go to a party some time ago and I couldn't drink because I had to drive. It felt like work.
Worst comes to worst, you sleep through it. Unless your friends are assholes, in which case it can be much worse indeed.
Fortunately, all my friends have always been awesome.
Yeah, rambling. Gnite evvybuddy.
@StackedCrooked Usually you don't realize how much of a dipshit others are while drunk because of how much of a dipshit you are while drunk.
20:46
Err... what???
The "while loo"?
They got published!
just needed to tell, someone.. cool story huh?
yeah, bro.
sbi
sbi
@KerrekSB He's fixed that since.
@refp What are you talking about? To me that seems to be a spam link.
@sbi Nhaa, I work as a model and some new pictures just got published - for some reason I'm still hyped up when that happens
sbi
sbi
@refp Ah. That is you? Ok, then I understand.
mhm
time to get back to writing code I guess..
sbi
sbi
20:58
@refp I suppose everybody here is now thinking "couldn't he've been a female model?" :)
yeah, I know I would have thought exactly that
evening all
what's going on in here?
did you miss me?
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion We're discussing female models, and you appear.
oh lol
accident
sbi
sbi
@refp Well, anyway, the high density of females is not exactly something to come to the C++ room for.
@TonyTheLion Of course, of course. We'd never think anything else!
21:00
@sbi pff.. liar
hrm, I didn't think virtual pointers would add as much overhead as I'm seeing. Stupid multiple inheritance and virtual inheritance and vtables.
The only reason we are online is to surf porn (incognito, of course) and hanging out at SO showing off our rep counters, I mean - IF a girl would to get online and read what I write here, fo'shiznit we be married.
wait, do I need virtual inheritance if the common class is abstract without members?
So it's empty?
21:02
@MooingDuck I don't think the standard makes any difference between an empty class and a superawesomebloat one, and "need" is subjective
@CatPlusPlus It has member functions, no member data
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck If you have a diamond inheritance graph, and the base class isn't inherited virtually from, than you cannot implicitly cast from most-derived to that base, because the derived is two bases.
@sbi yeah, that's what my test shows.
I was making my own boost::any_iterator, but my internal "iterator wrapper (for char*) is 28 bytes, 4 of which is data, the rest is vptrs. Though I can't think of any reason my design should have more than 2 vptrs. (12 bytes total)
show uz da code
@sbi Can I add a conversion operator as a workaround you think? Internally convert to one side of the diamond, then to the base from there? It should only be a vtable.
21:07
why are you causing a diamond problem, at all?
@refp it's 959 lines of uncommented and remarkably confusing template code
suit yourself then..
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck You mean you want to rape the proper design to safe a few bytes, and to compensate for this to fail you want to add an implicit conversion operator? Ugh.
I offered my help but apparently I'm not white enough, yes racist card has been drawn. s(o.O)_b
What's the tragic overhead, anyway?
sbi
sbi
21:09
@refp Does this miss a smiley? Or should I flag it?
@refp it has to have different operations based on the iterator_category of the template iterator. So I have to have a class for forward iterator/input iterator/output iterator/base iterator which form a dimond.
wait.. do I really need to append a smilie so that people know I'm being sarcastic? shiznit, the internet is full of morrons. :D :D :D ;-) ;P,P;p;P;p;P;p;p;PPP,;P
@CatPlusPlus Basically, my "wrapper" for my 4 byte char* is 28 bytes. 4 for the char*, 24 for the six vtable pointers
Inheritance for iterators?
@sbi happy?
21:10
@MooingDuck Why are you wrapping char*, and how many of those wrappers you create during the lifetime of the program?
If it's less than 1000, then stop bothering.
lol, I read that as "If it's less than 1000, then stop breathing"
@CatPlusPlus it's intended as a learning experience, and it's a library thing. Basically a type-erased iterator.
Okay. What's the use of type-erased iterator?
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus You iterate over your types and it erases them? SCNR.
Wouldn't that be type-erasing iterator? :P
21:14
@CatPlusPlus ideone.com/n8bgd
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus Ah, indeed. In fact, that's what I read...
I don't see why you'd use two maps of different types for that, but really, you could just return boost::optional<user>. Or, if you really want iterators, boost::variant<unordered_map::iterator, map::iterator>.
Though I can't see how returning an iterator would be useful.
The point of encapsulation is to hide implementation details.
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus Because then an unknown user can be represented by an end iterator?
Right. Like it's a unordered_map/map internally. And yet you return a boost variant iterator that exposes that implimentation detail
the encapsulated way would be to return a any_iterator<std::pair<std::string, user>, std::bidirectional_access_tag>
@sbi Again, optional.
sbi
sbi
21:19
@MooingDuck Unless you're using a pimple, you expose that, anyway.
@sbi: Yeah, it uses pimpl internally
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus Yes, I got that. Still, I was answering your question. The first thing everybody thinks of would be to return an iterator, because that's what the std lib does.
@MooingDuck Haven't I seen this any_iterator thing somewhere before? Did you copy the idea from some article? Rakes memory.
well, I thought boost had an any_iterator, but I can't find it now. The article is thbecker.net/free_software_utilities/…
Though it's discussed here with several links to implementations. Including Adobe's.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Ah, Ok, it's from Thomas. I must have run into it before.
Actually, I'm not sure I need to be able to convert. Maybe I don't need the hierarchy. I'll have to think about it.
21:24
You could define a user iterator type if you really want to avoid exposing the underlying container.
It just strikes me as unnecessarily complex solution to a relatively simple problem.
The simplest way to hide implementation details is to not mention any container constructs at all. What if it were downloaded through network or something?
Another simple solution is to simply throw if the user doesn't exist. And provide a hasUser(...) method.
@CatPlusPlus: it's simply an advancement of the encapsulation concept. But you're right that pure encapsulation makes things unnecessarily complex. In the real world, you just don't bother.
Iterators exist where you deal with containers.
Well, I don't really care for OOP dogmas, but hiding implementation details helps reduce API breakages.
And simpler API makes for a happier API user.
Law of Demeter comes to mind.
21:28
@CatPlusPlus Another pro is that you can replace the internal container type, and users that use the library dynamically don't have to recompile. The return type hasn't changed in the slightest.
Well, yes, ABI compatibility, too.
yeah, that
@MooingDuck A potential downside to that reasoning is that you're building a mountain of abstraction for a minimal amount of application.
0
Q: What am I doing to cause inconsistent output from this program?

natman3400So I made a basic xor encryption program that asks for a password string and uses it to seed ISAAC Then it asks for the string to be encrypted, and xor's it with the output from ISAAC. For some reason, this is producing inconstant results for the same two string. Is this a problem with my code, ...

Count the bugs.
Wow.
Googling for QTIsaac leads to sydney.edu.au. Homework..?
21:38
Do teacher tell students to use this-> all the time?
@StackedCrooked In this case, it is absolutely a mountain of abstraction for a minimal amount of application. I would never use this. It's a coding exercise. I would still be happier if it were 12 bytes instead of 24.
@Pubby this-> works always, whereas not having it fails to compile sometimes. Students always use it so they don't have to learn when it fails to compile
@Pubby fails to compile when accessing members of a parent class who's type depends on a template parameter btw.
yeah, but the students are too lazy to do their homework, yet they type this-> on every other line
That's because they depend on intellisense for everything.
-1
Q: Why was there a night during the time in the paradise?

Johannes Schaub - litbThat there was a night means that human would have needed to sleep. Why is sleep necessary in a perfect world? What event do I reference? I reference the earth as created by God in the beginning with Adam and Eve on it, before they sinned the very first time. What problem do I see? I don't u...

sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Yeah, when we were young, none of those new-fangled editors existed that know the language you're writing in better than you. We had to make do with our brains...
21:45
@sbi Lol
I feel hesitant to join "Kids these days"-crowd. I'm still in denial about my age.
I never really used IS. :.
@Pubby also: struct a { int a; void set(int a) {this->a = a;} }; local variable with the same name as a member variable must be prefixed with this->. Which is common for novices.
@CatPlusPlus Huh?
lol they downvoted me
morning
21:49
@JohannesSchaublitb Are you actually trying to make sense of the creation story?
@StackedCrooked OMFG NO!
@StackedCrooked i'm trying to fill the SE database with useful questions!
there is no sense in genesis xD
@JohannesSchaublitb A good question to ask is: Why does God require bloodshed in order to make forgiveness for sin possible? If we as humans are capable to forgive one other without requiring blood, then why can't God?
@StackedCrooked great. please ask!
does this mean we are more powerful than god!
@StackedCrooked The obvious answer is that he doesn't, but can't convince people of that.
@JohannesSchaublitb Nah, this is an uncomfortable aspect of my past. I don't want to go there.
21:51
since God doesn't exist, he has no power, therefore we are more powerful
@DeadMG The idea of you going to church makes me imagine a shrieking demon that just fell in a tub of holy water.
why is god spelled backwards "dog"???
It's a clever plot devised by cats, so they can rule out of the shadows.
@StackedCrooked Well, faith is inherently incredibly irrational, so it stands to reason that I would not particularly get along with it
21:55
faith in itself is not "incredibly irrational"
but blind faith is
I thought faith by definition was blind
faith is the definition of "blind"
if there was any significant supporting evidence, it wouldn't be faith, it would be a hypothesis
if you have faith to or in something even though reason says otherwise. but faith doesn't necessarily have to be against reason. some faith can be backed by evidence and even turn out to be true (if could have faith into you being a man ... i guess it would turn out to be true!?)
@DeadMG no you are wrong. get a dict and read xD
if it's backed by evidence, then it is a logical conclusion
else, it's irrational
"Faith is confidence or trust in a person or thing, or a belief that is not based on proof."
21:59
In order to find truth one must be willing to question established "truths". Christians are in a position where they can't do this, which fundamentally undermines their credibility.
there's no scope for non-irrational non-evidence-supported faith
proof != evidence
sbi
sbi
Rolls eyes. The meta police would love the current subject here. Why don't we talk about sex instead?

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