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Tin
Tin
10:00
@RMartinhoFernandes, so when defining the operator=, there's no need to use std::move, but std::swap for instance, is it correct? One would need then to add only the move constructor, in case the compiler doesn't do it by default.
I mean, as long as there's a move constructor available.
@Tin Yep, all you need to do in operator= is swap.
@RMartin been thinking about the old shader uniform stuff... for the camera, you have a perspective matrix, that is more or less constant for the entire scene, so obviously a uniform there. But I was thinking... if the camera simple returns a view matrix... and then I have a stack of matrices for moving objects around the 3D sceene... I would combine those into a modelView matrix and then set is a second uniform... perhaps even combine it with the perspective so I have a single matrix...
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, thanks!
That's what is usually called an MVP matrix.
It saves you a multiplication in the shader.
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, @thecoshman just by curiosity, are you computer graphics guys?
10:06
I'm just relearning OpenGL.
yeah me too
did a bit a while ago, then moved over to DirectX now, I am back on the openGL bandwagon
what gave it away?
@RMartinhoFernandes I figure that it is worth doing it once on the CPU rather then say 1000 times in the shader for a complex model/sceene
Might be. And it doesn't complicate the CPU code much.
There they are again, the nasty multidimensional arrays. stackoverflow.com/questions/8587802/…
Tin
Tin
ok, it's only because i use to work a bit in computer vision and since you were speaking about perspective matrix, i went curious :-)
@cpx questions about l/r-values may look superficially trivial, but they always end up with many incorrect answers because the subject is not simple
I did some computer vision for my honours project ¬_¬ that was a pain
Tin
Tin
10:13
@RMartinhoFernandes, some time ago, I asked in SO a question and I get an answer related to the move assignment operator and swap functionality. Do you also agree on the suggestion he gave me to obtain high performance? stackoverflow.com/questions/8479938/…
@thecoshman, it's painful for me as well. what was your honours project about? If i can ask ;-)
sure, it was basically trying to make a clone of the eyetoy that was out on the PS2. So trying to use a camera feed to detect player movement and then use that to interact with a game environment
Tin
Tin
@thecoshman woww, sounds really interesting!
it was a big pain. Mainly because I couldn't get a camera compatible with the library, so ended up having to use recorded footage to demo it, but in theory, it would work exactly the same if it had a live stream. It was still processing in real time
@Tin Yes, the operator= Howard shows is probably a bit faster because it does a single assignment (copy-and-swap does a move into the argument, and then a swap). If you end up in a situation where it matters, it's handy to know you can fallback to that. I usually prefer the copy-and-swap because the performance difference is not likely to be a lot and it can be done for copies and moves.
Tin
Tin
@thecoshman, yes, i can image how painful it was. people seem also to like the kinect for games. have never used it, but it's something, that's on the back of my head.
10:24
off for some breakfast :D
I love work :D
> @ Howard, and also thanks because one other doubt was cleared, I tought, the move semantics was only used for moving allocated memory resources (i.e allocations on the heap by pointers), and it seems to be that it also is used for objects in the stack (i.e as the std::string name in your example). – Tin 1 hour ago
@Tin move semantics is not just for memory.
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, thanks!
You can move files, mutexes, network connections, etc.
Any kind of resource that needs cleanup may benefit from move semantics.
@RMartinhoFernandes There is no need to move here.
@curiousguy Why not?
FWIW I'm not initializing a variable, I'm assigning to it.
10:30
Morning
@RMartinhoFernandes "I'm not initializing a variable" Yes you are.
The argument of operator= is initialised.
And that is done with a move or copy.
@RMartinhoFernandes Or not.
10:32
The argument is taken by value.
You can't not move/copy.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes. That's what I am saying.
Then how can operator= take its argument by value without involving a copy or a move?
hi
when i program with sockets, how can i make them work over the internet rather than lan
@myax I suspect you need to read up about NAT.
@RMartinhoFernandes How are you?
10:38
upnp?
@RMartinhoFernandes Of course you can not.
Tin
Tin
So there are basically two ways to obtain high efficiency?
First way:
1. Define a move constructor (either the generated by the compiler one or defining our own).
2. Assignment operator following the copy-swap-idiom, e.g. `foo & operator = (foo)`, i.e. passing by value and using for instance `std::swap`
Second way as in Howard:
1. Also a move constructor.
2. Move assignment operator, e.g.` foo & operator = (operator &&)`, where we use `std::move` on the class members.
3. Supply additionally a `friend swap` method? Actually, if in this other way, if we're not following the copy-swap idiom,
@curiousguy Can you show how?
@RMartinhoFernandes The argument just need to be constructed.
@RMartinhoFernandes The argument must be constructed, by some constructor.
@curiousguy Yes, and that's a move or a copy.
10:40
@RMartinhoFernandes No, that's any constructor.
@Tin Implementing your own efficient swap is a useful thing to do, because some algorithms take advantage of that.
@curiousguy If x is of type foo, and we have operator=(foo), and do x = foo(), which constructor do you think will get called?
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, ah ok! in regard to the 2 ways that I summarized before, do they look OK? did i forget something?
@Tin Also, remember that if you implement operator=(T&&) you may need a operator=(T const&) if copies are also allowed.
0
Q: I have a matrix class like below:

zhongchaotemplate <size_t M, size_t N, typename T> class Matrix { public: Matrix<M, N, T> operator +(const Matrix<M, N, T>& B) const; template <size_t P> Matrix<M,P,T> operator*(const Matrix<N, P, T>& B) const; template <typename T2> operator T...

Can someone shed some light on the situation?
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't know. The copy constructor may be called.
Or another constructor.
It depends on the function foo().
10:45
foo is a type.
It's the type of x.
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, in regard to the T & operator=(T const&), does it use the copy-swap idiom? i'm familiar in the case, where we pass the parameter as value and then we avoid the self-assignment check. how does your suggested overload would look like?
@Tin Yes, you can still use copy-and-swap, even with a reference argument. Make the copy a local variable: T copy(arg); swap(arg); return *this;. But if you're going for performance I'm not sure this will be the fastest.
It's exception-safe at least.
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, mmm, going for performance would mean then following way 1 from my previous chat message? because in way 2 (Howard) and also following your suggestion, we would need then the additional operator=(T const&) (I've also a copy constructor and therefore copies are allowed)
Howard's implementation is likely to be faster than copy-and-swap. I don't know how to implement a copy-assignment that is safe and fast without copy-and-swap :(
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh! I am doing too much things at the same time.
@RMartinhoFernandes The default ctor.
hey robot
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, i think, there's a piece that i'm missing, why in Howard's solution, the >.copy assignment operator is implicitly deleted (following his comments)? and you suggested previously, i need the additional copy assignment operator=(T const&)? is there something i misunderstood (I think, it's probably the case)?
I had a rather nasty experience with Mercurial
11:04
@BjörnPollex I added a comment.
and I was hoping that you could explain/fix the isse
@Tin If you provide an assignment operator, the default generated ones are deleted.
I committed my latest build to my repo and shit, and then I pushed it to bitbucket
but when I got home, it still showed a five-months-old build
So, if you provide a move assignment, the compiler will no longer generate a copy assignment. You need to provide it yourself.
@DeadMG Did you pull?
Just checking.
Did you update after the pull?
11:06
There you go.
I committed, then I pushed, then I came home and pulled, and I was like, WTF is this
so I went and looked on the bitbucket site
The commits are there, right?
no
that's the problem
Oh.
Are you sure the push did not fail?
Workbench didn't say anything went wrong
11:07
Hmmm. That's weird.
yeah
just a little :P
Tin
Tin
@RMartinhoFernandes, great! So, that's why you mentioned NOT to forget to provide by myself the copy assignment definition. So, whenever we define a move assignment operator, we MUST as well provide the copy assignment operator.
@DeadMG Ah. The workbench sucks at reporting failures.
Did you look at the little status bar at the bottom?
don't think so
This is how it fucking reports failure.
11:09
I just pushed it again from my home machine and it's up just fine
I would expect at least a modal message box saying "Something went wrong."
yeah, I'm pretty sure that the green bar at the top said that it had completed
But no, all I get is that tiny notice in the bottom. Maybe it failed and you didn't notice?
11:11
but I did three updates and pushed three times
What green bar?
I don't see a green bar.
at the top just under the toolbar
oh, it just disappeared when I clicked some other UI element :P
Can you post a screenshot?
Can I assume you didn't mess around with branches?
use Qt Creator.
11:14
what are branches?
Ok, maybe you didn't.
:)
not that it would be beyond me to start messing with functionality of the system that I don't at all understand
But just to be sure... In the BitBucket site, right below the tabs, there's a "branches" thingy. If you hover over it it lists all the branches. Since you didn't use them, there should be a "default" and nothing else.
@DeadMG Hey! I don't have that! Maybe I should update this.
maybe I'm the one with the old version?
say, five months or so old
Mine is from March.
11:18
ah
Did you check the branches on the Bitbucket site?
yes
none
except default
must have just been a connection error or something, pushed fine from this machine
WTF. If it pushed successfully it has to be on Bitbucket.
uh
it pushed successfully here
that doesn't mean it did yesterday morning
although I'm fairly sure that it said it did
although my commit history is quite entertaining, as the code randomly completely changes :P
lol. You're looking at the right repository?
11:22
I have just one
(I'm guessing wildly.)
hey, I don't like this stuff, and I don't piss around with it unnecessarily
is the dev system's date+time correct?
is it even possible to have an Internet-connected Windows machine where it isn't correct?
11:24
@DeadMG so what now? You're stuck with five-months old code until you get back?
I've had it, if the time server fucks up
no, what now is I just copied it from my hard drive on to the other hard drive, then pushed the new code from here
I always bring my hard drive back home for this exact purpose
Ah. So you had a backup plan.
bitbucket is the backup plan, this is plan A :D
11:25
Well, the only way I can explain this is if the push failed and you didn't notice. Make sure you check it next time :)
lol
will do
Woot, multiple of 100.
here's a question
for the preprocessor, then when you #include a file, the text is copied and pasted into the including file
is that before or after it runs it's own includes?
There's no preprocessor in WideC, right?
no, I mean the C++ one
11:34
@DeadMG that's a good question
I changed the directory structure of my project extensively, and VS will only accept paths relative to the current file, not the project base
so if you're in main.cpp, then #include "parser.h" will get you nothing, because it's in a directory relative to main.cpp
VS seem to like relative files
It's depth first.
ok
awesum
I think the directories searched for include files are implementation defined.
11:38
I decided to take a little less inspiration from the C++ Standard library
and properly split up my utilities and stuff into sub-namespaces
The C++ standard library has started to learn that.
The new time utilities are in std::chrono.
surely that makes sense... one monolithic library is a pain to use
well
Which makes it a bit painful to use <chrono> without usings.
fundamentally, it's silly to put my language-specific parser and lexer in the same namespace as my more independent FSM and such code
yes
I hate the broken using system
it really needs an unusing thing
11:41
What for?
using is scoped, so you can { using std::blabla; blablablablabalba; }
All it needs is to get rid of the crappy textual inclusion model.
what do you mean?
that too
but unusing would be much easier for C++ to implement as it is now
@rubenvb That's only a help if you're not in that scope.
Get rid of crappy textual inclusion, and it works nice.
11:42
whereas I have every scrap of code except main in my namespace
can't exactly go using things into it
Outside of headers you can.
true
but I have a lot of stuff in headers
@DeadMG you can use using in function scope
But templates fuck shit up.
@rubenvb But sadly, not in class scope :(
@rubenvb Also not terrifically helpful. I have a lot of things that need to be outside function scope.
11:44
ok, ok, you got me
@DeadMG Hey, you know why polymorphic lambdas were not added?
I give up :)
something about they didn't play well with concepts?
Yeah. Seems like they found out how to fix that.
yeah
just don't have concepts :D
11:44
No, they found a way to have them play nicely together.
both ways allow for the introduction of polymorphic lambdas
Yes, but they didn't want to make it impossible to add concepts later.
;p
I wouldn't really mind
getting the hell out of this language before the next Standard
hmmm
now I'm not so sure about what to do
11:51
About what?
I want to make a namespace for my parser with the AST classes and stuff in it
but what do I call the namespace and the parser class? I can't have Wide::Parser::Parser, that's just silly and makes conflicts
namespace my_superbly_crafted_parser_that_menaces_with_spikes_of_microcline {}
lol
I'll just call the central class Context instead
that's probably a more appropriate name anyway since most of the actual parsing takes place in Bison's code
and the Parser class has little to do with it except interfacing between my source code and Bison's generated code
Hmm, what header is reference_wrapper in?
try <utility>
11:54
yup
Ah, no. It's <functional>. Go figure.
I guess it's for std::bind.
yeah, I think that's supposed to be the principle use
oh, <functional> is part of the general utilities library. Sigh
<utility> only has four things.
forward and move, I think
11:56
That, declval, (nigh-useless) operators and swap.
I was about to say that's five things
and std::pair
six
Oh, right, I keep forgetting pair still exists.
11:58
and std::make_pair
obsolete, but still present
@DeadMG I'm counting the operators as 0.
what even are the operators
Default implementations of operator>= and such that use operator<.
and stuff like remove_reference, tuple_size, tuple_element, and a forward declaration of class tuple
That's in <tuple>
11:59
so, like boost operators?
@RMartinhoFernandes The FDIS says: template <class... Types> class tuple; // defined in <tuple>
@DeadMG Yeah, but it's a namespace and only supports a couple of them.
for <utility>
@rubenvb Ah, well, fuck it. It has four things and a bunch of crap.
Happy now?
12:02
lol
"template argument 1 is invalid" Damn you GCC why can't you just say "Look, you missed a fucking >".
oh fuck
why aren't local structs allowed template member functions?
apparently not
I moved a struct which has no need to exist except in a single function to that function's scope, and it died
Probably the same reason local structs weren't allowed as template parameters: silliness.
12:05
maybe there are no restrictions in C++11 and it's an MSVC-specific thing
Lemme try GCC.
> error: invalid declaration of member template in local class
It's not MSVC-only crap.
wtf namespace do I put an AlwaysInitialized class in?
You need a utility belt namespace.
mm
not sure I like the idea of a generic "utilities" namespace
Anything that doesn't fit anywhere else goes there.
That's what I do.
12:08
what else do you have in it?
I know Luc and Cat do the same.
I made a Unicode namespace for my Unicode string, which is atm just a typedef of std::wstring, but hey
and an Errors namespace for my exceptions and a Memory namespace for MakeUnique and MemoryArena
@DeadMG Let's see. I have make_unique, scoped enum operators, bitwise manipulators... A bunch of stuff, basically.
My lazy template, too.
well
And the <chrono> sweeteners, but now that I think about it, those deserve its own namespace.
12:11
I guess the reason that I don't feel that it fits anywhere is because it shouldn't really have to exist
if primitive types just initialized themselves by default
as they should do
Well, but it has to exist :(
yeah
fine, it can go in Utility for now
also, I changed a few things which had the C++ naming convention to have mine
like from string to String
what?
Why would you spend the time doing that?
12:15
eh
Unless you did #define String string, but then you have bigger issues.
I've got less than 2.5k LoC and most of that was already in CamelCase anyway
there's really not much to be done
Oh, wait, you can just typedef.
I'm silly.
Where's the nearest wall?
Facebook
the thing is, it's not much code, and I think it's a bad thing to be inconsistent within my own damn codebase
it's not like I have anyone else that prefers camel_case coding on the project
I use snake_case in C++, and PascalCase/camelCase in C#. I really don't mind either.
So I just go with what's in the language.
12:18
mmmh
I used to do that
but truth is, I have a pretty strong instinct for PascalCase, and it would always bleed through whenever I used the Windows API
and then just randomly if I didn't use the Standard library for a while I'd start naming things that way
plus
I was going to have to change a bunch of references to use the new namespaces anyway
Yeah, it's weird when you have APIs that use different conventions.
That only seems common in C++ though.
what, to use multiple APIs with different conventions?
well, when I use the Standard classes, I don't call them Vector and UniquePtr
But you just did that with string.
12:23
the difference is that I have to replace string with a Unicode string, eventually
I'm just putting the work off
Ah.
That makes sense.
that's why there's a typedef living in Wide::Unicode::String
it's wstring for now, until I get around to making it a proper Unicode string
what?
also, at some point, I'm going to want a Wide::Unicode::StringStream, too
I doubt that std::wstringstream will accept my Unicode string class
A few days ago, I learned that initializer lists don't work for move-only types. Now I refactored shit and I don't really need to move the things anymore. So all I want is an initializer list of T const&. Guess what. Can't have initializer lists of references. So I resort to reference_wrapper. Guess what. Can't have implicit conversion :(
12:26
initializer lists don't work for move-only types?
haha, mine do
They suck.
@DeadMG Yeah, but yours don't exist.
That's an important property :P
it's true that their implementation is somewhat, eh, ethereal :P
So I can't have neat code like: shader_program prog { { shader_type::vertex, "a.vert" }, { shader_type::vertex, "b.vert" }, { shader_type::fragment, "a.frag" } } :(
12:30
I'm not seeing the move-only ness of this
Each element in the list is move-only.
shader_type::vertex is just an enum value, right?
{ shader_type::fragment, "a.frag" } is a shader_object. It owns an OpenGL internal object.
ah
makes sense, that does
12:32
Wait, maybe I'm seeing this wrong.
What's the lifetime of objects in an initializer_list?
When are they destroyed?
when the initializer list is, I think
brb shit
Maybe I shouldn't have looked at GCC's <initializer_list>s, but the thing in there is just a fancy dress for an iterator + size.
Without magic, that cleans up nothing. Guess I need to read more about this.
Ah, it's supposed to have a magic array that has lifetime equal to the original initializer list object. This is weird.
But I guess I can have my cake after all!
nomnom
how?
The first thing I ever tried works because now I no longer need to move things out of the initializer list.
shader_program(std::initializer_list<shader_object> shaders);
Wait, but that doesn't work with named shader_objects. FUUUCK.

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