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03:04
That's all the basic types, right?
Use the "share" button
You're missing unsigned/signed/long double/bool
@ParkYoung-Bae Oh, right
char16_t, wchar_t, char32_t
03:08
The unsigned/signed I take care of next section
I also plan to cover auto and decltype
signed char, unsigned char and char are different types.
@Rapptz hm...
They are, aren't they?
Yes.
How important is the signed-unsigned char thing, though?
I understand the w_chart thing
The language considers them as different types
03:09
wchar_t sucks.
@ParkYoung-Bae The language considers a lot of different types
I'm looking for a basic introduction without overload
Then skip those
@ParkYoung-Bae Yeah...
But how do people currently store UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32?
In both '03 and '11?
In C++, they mostly don't.
Unicode in C++ is a mess.
char for UTF-8, char16_t for UTF-16, char32_t for UTF-32.
conversion to/from unsigned char and char is valid so it doesn't matter
03:18
The only reason to ever use wchar_t is WinAPI calls
yep
Simple. Use a superior language such as American.
There’s no reason it shouldn’t.
03:43
It looks ugly but it works.
Achievement Unlocked: No templates used all day.
Oh, that kind of rating? I think there was a misunderstanding yesterday.
Yeah.
I thought you meant things like user score on comments or content :v Number of stars etc.
@LucDanton yeah me too
I should have used ranking.
My bad.
lol just found a typo
I'm switching over from my home made ranking system to Glicko-2.
03:48
@Rapptz For what?
A game?
tournaments
@Rapptz yeah, but for what?
what game?
Smash Bros.
@Rapptz Oh.
Well then.
Let me guess, you play melee
Smash 4 and Project M.
03:52
@Rapptz oh boy.
Are you still in college?
Or are you like high school?
None.
Middle school?
lol jk
Hm, strange but okay
... what?
03:53
idgi
@LightnessRacesinOrbit :P
@Cinch How so?
@Jefffrey Lisp is just...
(defun queue-get (queue &optional (default nil))
; return DEFAULT if the queue is empty."
"Get an element from QUEUE
(check-type queue queue)
(let ((get (queue-get-ptr queue))
(put (queue-put-ptr queue)))
(if (= get put)
;; Queue is empty.
default
;; Get the element and update the get-ptr.
(prog1
(svref (queue-elements queue) get)
(setf (queue-get-ptr queue) (queue-next queue get))))))
It's literally reverse-polish programing
Who uses a reverse-polish calculator here?
Anyone??
Also would you tell someone to go look at Haskell for a C++ tutorial?
Definitely. It would probably be the only line of the tutorial.
04:00
Bartek get out of Jefffrey's account
user3010322
@Rapptz What does your field use to do stats work on findings. ;~;
user3010322
I can't take R anymore.
user3010322
Is it Python?
Haskell is extremely good as a first language. It puts you in the right mindset from the beginning.
As opposed to say, OOP crap all over.
That you then have to forget.
Functional and object-oriented are not incompatible
04:02
I know
Python is a good first language.
Haskell is not.
But if you teach like Java, where everything is OOP, then what you have is a bunch of scrubs that keep asking where classes and objects are in every goddamn language.
@Rapptz How so?
Java being shit has nothing to do with OOP
@Jefffrey Don't really know how to explain.
My experience has been tainted when I tried to help teach beginners.
I don't think Haskell does any good there honestly.
user3010322
Haskell's operators and stuff are... confusing.
user3010322
04:05
The language has such a compact, concise syntax that it's hard to get used to.
user3010322
It doesn't read easy.
Right. Syntax.
@Rapptz You can teach programming with Haskell. I don’t know if that counts as 'a first language', but Haskell is not something that needs to be kept out of reach of students.
I'm not saying that it should be out of reach.
Haskell seems interesting
04:05
I'm talking strictly first language experience.
It actually makes more sense with C with it's function-orientated paradigm
@Rapptz A clarification that needs to be said.
Maybe you are right.
@LucDanton I don't know what else I need to clarify from "first language"
You appreciate Haskell much more after you have seen the crap.
04:07
@Rapptz Well then I don’t know what it is you wanted to say.
So maybe as a second language?
@LucDanton Absolute beginners with no programming experience decides to pick a programming language to get their feet wet into the world of programming.
Is that clear enough?
Nothing wrong with Haskell then.
Then I respectfully disagree.
Tell him Luc.
Show him.
04:08
I’ve seen OCaml do the job, Haskell can work just as well.
Round 1:
We have Luc IPlonkEveryone on the left, Rapptz FuckHaskell on the right.
2 messages moved to bin
Bets are allowed until the final round.
@LucDanton FWIW I don't think it's impossible, I just think if I was given the choice between teaching beginners Haskell or Python I'd go with Python every time.
@Rapptz What's your problem?
04:10
Why not teach both?
It's noise.
lol
Noise as opposed to what? There's no discussion going on. Literally nothing.
Also if you were to bin noise, you would have to move 40% of the transcript too.
@Rapptz I’d start with something statically typed, but it’s a preference as well.
You go ahead, I'll wait.
I'd argue that Haskell has some interesting concepts
It seems natural and weird at the same time
04:11
dat pun
@Jefffrey Noise as in "this is adding nothing of value except to irritate others".
Which is still something of value.
Unless you irritate a room owner, apparently.
You're not just insulting me.
My grab bag of 'sure, try it, you can’t go wrong' for absolute beginners is { Python, Lua, Scheme, something ML-y }. Order or exhaustiveness doesn’t matter. Only important thing is to try static typing.
So?
Also I consider something else as "insulting". And that was nowhere near it.
04:14
Haskell seems interesting for AI as well..
It seems pretty easy to add on new cases for a function
2 messages moved from bin
Here you can have your shitposts back.
Yes, thanks. That was the whole point of the discussion.
Having a couple of messages back in what is now transcript.
I was simply trying to explain why I think you acted based on personal feeling rather than as a room owner.
actually I wouldn't mid dropping Haskell into an Intro to CS course
It seems... nice.
What personal feelings?
That's a question for yourself.
I can't tell you your feelings.
Pretty sure I asked you.
Since you're the one implying.
Hey guis chill
@ParkYoung-Bae ^
They need to stop pressing each other's buttons
@ParkYoung-Bae ^
04:18
@Cinch I'm extremely calm.
Question:
Why is character starting rom -128 now in C++14?
@Rapptz I have no idea why you did that. And it's also irrelevant. The point is that it was a bad decision.
char is -127 to 127
but char in C++14 is -128 to 127
Bad decision because it involved you?
Why is it like this?
04:19
lol
Yeah.
It's a shitpost. If I could I would remove all shitposts on here.
Good night all.
@Rapptz You can! I believe in you!
@Jefffrey Buona notte
Night.
04:21
@Rapptz That would be a significant, if not majoritary, amount of content
ikr
Your avatar shows up as black btw
So what, uracist?
nvm FF issue
@Jefffrey Good night.
FF is racist.
Also I can't get decide what nick to get next :(
user3010322
04:23
I liked Capybara a lot.
Yeah. Go with that pattern.
@ThePhD I don't know. Probably C++.
I like Capybara also. Bring it back for some time by popular request?
TIL you don't have to do f<>().
user3010322
04:28
@Rapptz For a function?
yea
I suspect you have to for a variable template, although I haven’t checked for sure.
Of course you have to, argument deduction cannot possibly be connected to which specialization of the variable template you want.
dunno how defaults work out though
It makes me sad that there's no constexpr version of <cmath>.
@Rapptz Explicit instantiations are also quite smart in that respect.
E.g. template<typename T> void f(T) {}; template void f(int);
Friend declarations as well. I try not to use that 'feature' because if you get the declaration wrong you declare, well, something else :<
@Rapptz Proposal!
04:34
Eh my bad, friend declarations are 'clever' but that’s irrelevant, you still need brackets.
04:48
???
...
Is there any reason why I can't create a compiler that makes all of the data types like 100 bits wide and then uses it as a cryptographic shell?
100 bits-wide types compilers are explicitly forbidden by the NIST
05:22
> Nope. short and int are exactly the same size– at least 4 bytes.
Not sure where they're getting that information from
short and int are certainly not guaranteed to be the same size and they are at least 16 bits, not 2 (though they said 4) bytes.
@chris yeah hm...
weird
long int (long) = “long integer” – This is a longer version of an integer. It stores at least to 8 bytes of data. It’s range is from -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647.
long long int (long long) = “double long integer” – This is a much longer version of an integer. It holds 16 bytes of data, and it’s range is from -9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807.
i checked the reference so i asssumed i was wron but okay
05:26
This is also wrong
Did this amazing proposal get posted here yet?
> 12/06/2013 DeadMG I seem to have missed your paper about changing these things.
I'm gonna say yes, it has.
Thansk for telling me
I swear why is that reference on there
Protip: learn C++ before you write a tutorial about it.
@ParkYoung-Bae Figured as much
But yeah, if you're going to go into that much detail on the types (although I wouldn't expect a beginner to memorize a table like that), at least get them right
K chat
05:34
why'd you take a picture
Because it's hard explaining that behaviour in words such that everyone knows what I'm talking about
I take it the chat isn't supposed to randomly jump up to end at the middle of the screen
@ParkYoung-Bae ikr
Uh-oh. Tutorial 0 says "Do not learn C++ as your first language."
Guess I failed that one unless you count BASIC for my calculator or the Lego NXT graphical programming thing
@chris that kind of does count
for what it's worth, for non-programmers
or people that haven't really dived into stuff yet
I have people learning C at my school for the first time with no prior experience
To be honest, I was very confused in my first C++ class
05:37
and VIm
Even with the prior minimal dabbling in programming
@chris exactly
which is why I have such a large section devoted to Level 0.
It all worked out
@chris There's countless others where it doesn't
I remember a time where I found char* easier than std::string
I have no clue how
05:39
@chris That's the same case with our class right now
The class is not comfortable right now
where's my Oops?
Wouldn't Coliru time out on that?
Printing 4 billion strings
@JerryCoffin :( Welcome to the club. :(
@JerryCoffin Sounds like my ex wife.
@sbi "[..]My 2nd ex is still learning this. The very hard way.[..]" I wonder what you mean by this.
06:08
Lawyers maybe?
06:32
Actually, I have a court hearing regarding access to my children today. Wish me luck! :)
> why was std::move designed to take both lvalues and rvalues?
Because it is designed to cast both lvalue and rvalue to rvalue unconditionally. — Nicky C 1 min ago
lol?
I would be happy toupvote this question, unfortunately I basically don't understand anything it's talking about so I don't even understand if it's a good question or not. Are we so sure that C++ was in so deseperate need of more speed that this added level of complexity was justified? Really the main problem of C++ is that it's slow? — 6502 31 secs ago
Why can't I downvote comments?
Not sure whether 6502 was referencing this in particular or move semantics as a whole
@Jagannath: mine was just a rant about the very sad state of this C++ part. We simply got more possibilities for undefined behavior and complex semantic with special cases (and THAT is the problem of C++, not speed). — 6502 20 secs ago
@chris Does that answer your question? :)
!!!
I just added 0.6 and 0.7
sorry 0.5 and 0.6
so excited
I almost posted a big comment with benefits of move semantics
06:41
> std::cout &lt;&lt; &quot;Hello World!&quot; &lt;&lt; std::endl;
2
Surely there are much more understandable online resources for that, though.
I don't think you can explain move semantics to a C++ hater in the limited space that a comment provides :)
@wilx I don't see any problems
I just loaded the page
> I will heavily conform to the C++11 standard.
awesome
@FredOverflow Is that sarcasm
?
06:43
> C++ is a statically-typed programming language, but has also inherited some dynamic-typing boons in order to make it easier to use, such as the new C++11 keyword auto. More on that later.
C++11 auto has nothing to do with dynamic typing.
@FredOverflow auto is a dynamic-typing like construct
no it isn't
That's actually very important
int  a = 42;   // the type of a is int
auto b = 42;   // the type of b is int
06:44
it's an attempt to try to ignore it or at least shorten
that's not what dynamic typing means
auto is completely static-typed. Jon Skeet went into great length on that with var in C# in Depth
Good thing I'm on here
I'm writing this tutorial as a learning experience for myself as well
proves to be a great experience! :)
Where's puppy? I'm too happy right now I need flames of wrath
3
Trying to capitalise on Cunningham's Law is not going to last very long I imagine.
Great, now I almost feel bad for saying this, but just so you know, in 0.1, flash memory doesn't use magnetism
06:49
@chris ???
> Long ago, people used to use punch cards–a hole might represent a “1” while an untouched space might mean a “0.” Nowadays, a hard drive or flash drive might use magnetism to store digital values.
fine i'll add electro in front of it
okay i did
It's mainly just a glorified capacitor
Why would a C++ beginner be interested in capacitors?
Guess that Digital Computers course was actually useful
Apart from teaching ARM assembly
06:52
@FredOverflow It's an intro to CS part
it explains how computers are able to do logic
i.e. if I can make my computer add and do more complex things... i can reiterate until we have an os and programming
It's a bottom-up way of teaching which I think is better than top-down, which is how I learnt
It's also how C++ was developed
Oh boy I don't even want to
> thanks to John Boole
ARGH
my god.
you're a EE or CompE?
Software
Ah.
I'm CompE right now at a 4-year
Freshmen, but hey
I'm trying to do a good thing for everyone
@Cinch Does that mean you are going to teach arrays and char pointers before std::vector and std::string?
06:56
@FredOverflow I'm going to teach them along side in the same lesson
Each concept will be constructed from the ground up
i.e. once I get to iterators I will get to auto
Once I get polymorphism or generics I might try to include decltype
I clearly don't know enough yet to write this on my own which is why I come here
Teaching C++ from the ground up means students learn the hard, error-prone parts first, which should not be written in idiomatic C++ code anyway.
@FredOverflow Yes, but it's necessary teaching them why they need to use the new C++ stuff
otherwise they'll just keep writing C++03
It's like Java's GC was optional and students were forced to start out with manual memory management, only to be told later that you should never turn off the GC in practice.
@FredOverflow It's the reason I chose C++ as my first major language to study
And Java was written in C++ initially anyways
@Cinch Lots of C++ teachers will disagree with you on that one. First and foremost, Bjarne Stroustrup, the inventor of C++. You should read his book "Programming: Principles and Practice using C++".

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