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00:00
Hi.
hi
seems that somewhere it's morning now
I've perfected the act of procrastination.
I managed to even not chat for the last few days.
did you only watched chat?
If there were Nobel prize for doing nothing, I'd get it for that.
00:06
well, Fuck This Shitâ„¢
I'm gonna go play Starcraft
00:21
@DeadMG Is that some metaphor for using Interface Builder?
what on earth is Interface Builder and why would I bother being metaphorical about it?
It's the Xcode version of Forms Designer or whatever you windows-folk use
Using it is a lot like playing starcraft - getting what you want is a matter of clicks-per-minute and swearing.
Hmm, can I rely on static_assert having same behavior (other than message) across compilers?
yes, that's why it's a language feature
@Pubby Effectively yes
00:25
What else would it do?
Make coffee?
It wasn't always a language feature, I first came across it as a bool template with only a true specialization
who gives a shit about that?
it's a language feature
2 messages moved to bin
It's not a language feature for all compilers, yet.
@rvalue it's a language feature of the language
1 message moved to bin
00:27
which is the only place you can have language features. ;)
now.
yes. But we're living in the now.
@rvalue Even Visual Studio has it.
the reason I asked is because I'm using it to give a error message to a type error
If you're worried about compiler-portable code, you're not depending on C++0x
00:27
oh hai jalf!
I wanted to ask you a question, since I know you have a lot more real-world roots than me
@rvalue but that doesn't make it any less of a language feature :)
export was a language feature too, even though only one compiler ever implemented it
Well, that's not strictly true. If you're worried about code portability and don't know which compilers you need to support, you can't rely on language features of C++0x.
@DeadMG sup?
@rvalue Depends on what versions. If I was writing code to go on Windows and Unix, I'd be perfectly happy to use rvalue references and stuff
@jalf I have a data structure. I access it from multiple threads. I threw a lock on every access and it corrupted my heap.
Yes, and I agree with that, sorry if it didn't come across as so.
00:29
how can it possibly happen that you have a data structure that you modify just once, under a lock, and it still dies?
I assume the data structure is left in a consistent state any time you release the lock? ;)
this irks me greatly
yes
it's an unordered_map and I call insert().
sounds like a bug
just insert, on it's own, nothing else
bah
in someone's code
might be yours ;)
00:30
again? I already had one in the PPL
On the matter of static_assert - if you are only targeting modern compilers, go ahead. Should you run into one that doesn't implement it as a language feature, for 9 uses out of 10 you can implement it as a template+macro.
@jalf :P
Plus, it's an assert - if somebody has trouble compiling, they can remove it.
if I had to guess, there's some place where you're missing a lock
I used a class wrapper that only implemented one function
i.e., insert
so it would fail to compile if I called any other member functions
00:32
and you made it non-movable/copyable too?
then locked it in said member function
yep
is it volatile?
with a scoped lock, too
does the bug occur both with/without optimization?
yes
00:34
Is this wrapper by composition or inheritance?
it's irritating because that was Option B, after the concurrent unordered map that ships in the PPL fails
I mean, it's a concurrent_unordered_map, you're supposed to insert into it concurrently
@rvalue Composition, I've done this before.
which compiler?
msvc10
I assume so, but it's good to ask. I don't mean to offend or anything; just checking.
oh, I know that composition by inheritance is all too often people's calling card
00:36
with sp1?
pretty sure
my money is still on a bug in your code, since the locks should be pretty damn well-tested, and as long as they're correct, it's hard to imagine any implementation of unordered_map that'd fail
yeah
But dunno, seems odd
Haven't done VS for years - your design seems sound. Compiling with -mt?
00:37
I know that concurrency is legendary for being difficult
@rvalue they removed the singlethreaded crt entirely, so you no longer have the option of doing otherwise ;)
but I only have one shared data member, which is accessed in a very predictable way, and all the rest of the functionality is pure
About time. Like I said, haven't used it in years.
anyway, bedtime for me
Have a good one
00:38
night night
@rvalue I think they did that in vs2005
but yeah, I don't think anyone's really missed it
@jalf That's about when I was last using it. Most of our stuff was Borland C++ builder...
ah
Yeah. Not with that company any more.
=)
I do not miss the 16k line source files.
my whole project is less than 4k
00:41
An accomplishment in itself =)
haha
indeed
of course, arguably that's cheating a bit, for example Bison generates ~4k of code all on it's own
Nah, generated code doesn't count, IMO.
agfreed
here's the real problem with concurrent code
when you get it wrong, there's nobody who can help you
if I posted i++ + ++i, I'd have people crawling all over it to answer it
but say "My concurrent code isn't working as expected", even if it's like less than 100 lines, nobody will look at it
Oh, gawd - I think my eyes bled at that.
@DeadMG did you asked on SO ?
00:47
1
Q: Crash using concurrent_unordered_map

DeadMGI've got a concurrent_unordered_map. I use the insert function (and no other) to try to insert into the map concurrently. However, many times, this crashes deep in the insert function internals. Here is some code: class ModuleBase { public: virtual Wide::Parser::AST* GetAST() = 0; virtu...

there is a lot of details, and all looks OK
try to investigate if it's concurrency problem or not - add a lock around insert()
I did
that just changed it form access violation to heap corruption
so it's not a concurrency problem
the serial code works fine
it works with another lock or there is heap corruption?
00:57
This is annoying, I have a nice RGB LED but instead of having 3 Anodes (one for each colour) and one ground/cathode, it has 3 cathodes
@Abyx there's heap corruption with the additional lock
so it crashes without any parallelization
or it's not insert()'s problem
no, it's fine without any parallelization
the serial code executes perfectly correctly
@KianMayne Why is that an issue? You can control the LED on either +ve or +ve side of the circuit.
also, not very C++-ey.
I'm just bitching
@rvalue But I'm using a microcontroller
01:05
@DeadMG, try to remove if or just MakeUnique() call, or create minimal code which will reproduce this issue
(I think you already know that)
I got it
@DeadMG I'm concerned about the Module/DynamicModule being destroyed during or before the make_pair due to some aspect of the library's implementation not handling move construction well. I'd be sorely tempted to print this in ModuleBase::~ModuleBase and compare recent ones to the values in the call stack when you encounter the crash.
I think you're accessing them after free, and the single threaded case is working because the memory is intact until it's used.
01:21
it's a unique_ptr
it doesn't free before it's ready
Yeah, if nothing is moving it into a temporary internally.
doesn't even matter if it is
what they do internally is their own internal business, not mine
I've had too many cases of templated containers screwing with pointer wrappers to trust them.
they won't move it if they don't know there's a space for it, because that would be really bad
I suspect that the map's insert is copying the result of "std::make_pair(module->name->name, std::move(m))" and expecting the copy to have the same contents as the parameter later on.
01:34
for a non-copyable unique_ptr?
don't get me wrong, I don't have any particular trust of it, but that one seems unlikely
There'll be a lot of generated code in there, and some of it will have moveable references to that m
... I expect.
it doesn't matter what you generate
Look, I could be wrong.
unique_ptr is non-copyable
and secondly, since the function takes an rvalue reference, whoever wrote it must be aware of move semantics
I don't have the source to ::insert
But sure, they could be.
Isn't ::emplace the move-aware one?
Nevermind
01:40
not for associative containers
A breakpoint on ~ModuleBase shouldn't be hit at all until your map is destroyed, if I've read you correctly. That'd decide it pretty quickly.
@DeadMG Yeah, still pre-coffee for me. I thought of that just after I said it
I don't have a lot of confidence in this diagnosis, but I can't run your code, and the obvious things are obviously working =)
user406009
01:54
Fuck the standard. Two new great, expanding the world of C++ great, features are added, rvalue references and lambda, and the stupid committee manages to forget to let the features work together. WTF
you mean how you can't move into a lambda?
user406009
Yeah
02:09
can tools like lex do primitive brace matching?
no, of course not
they're finite state machines, brace matching requires a stack
02:29
@rvalue That's not exactly true. The concurrent unordered map moves it into a node, and then fits the node into the unordered map, and destroys it if it can't find a place.
but as that can only occur if there is already a value at that position, and I never re-use the ModuleContents, then it's no big deal
What significance is @end? My editor is syntax highlighting it
end of input
what do you mean?
it's for lexing input files
so end of input file
03:21
Hi, how many compares is a heapsort is supposed to make? (is this a set number for n? e.g. comparing 32 items will give 320 compares exactly every time?)
user406009
And the prepocessor takes another victim! stackoverflow.com/questions/8640818/…
05:24
are there any programming languages that are regular?
05:56
@Pubby Objective-C syntax uses @{interface|protocol|implementation} ... @end blocks
Last time I was generating ASTs I used Boost.Spirit.Qi
The documentation is complete, but not concise.
06:40
Hello all !
I remember someone telling me how to update the standard c++ on my Mac, can that kind soul please repeat their advice ?
 
3 hours later…
09:22
hi
hi
09:57
hi
@angryInsomniac if it was on the chat... search for it?
@jalf isn't that like.... very very very old
no clue
I haven't seen it before
10:38
Can anyone please tell me why this is invalid code in c++03 : ideone.com/umjbK but valid in c++11: ideone.com/7t4pN
I didn't know it was not valid in C++03.
> "We turned off all the cameras in 1990," Stone says, "and all the other instruments that were designed just to look at bodies as we flew by. Space is really empty. And Voyager will never be very close to any other object in our solar system, or even in our galaxy, for that matter."
Poor Voyager, forever alone.
but but what if it passes a flying saucer tomorrow? 
It won't know :(
C preprocessor macros are true generic functions with complete type-inference.
it makes me thinking that type inference is evil, as macros are
What? No. There are no types on the preprocessor. How can there be type inference?
10:53
e.g. this pseudocode is a generic function `func foo(a, b) { return a.x * b; }
What does this supposed to mean : non-static reference cannot be assigned using the compiler-generated assignment operator
but it's the same as #define foo(a, b) (a.x * b)
No it's not. The preprocessor is just a dumb text replacement tool.
@MrAnubis you should define your own operator= if class has T& member
It accepts foo($, $), for example.
10:54
@RMartinhoFernandes no matter how it works, I'm about syntax
It doesn't infer anything, it just goes on replacing.
@Abyx and copy-constructor too, right?
when we don't have any constraints on types, it looks as inferring
@MrAnubis no
There are no types.
Just text.
@Abyx aah, thanks :)
10:56
what is difference between func foo(a, b) { return a.x * b; } and #define foo(a, b) (a.x * b) ?
It's that foo(*, *) only works for the second.
no, it doesn't because it won't compile
The preprocessor is fine with it.
but not compiler
The compiler has type inference, but the preprocessor doesn't.
The preprocessor knows about text, not types.
10:58
think as if preprocessor is a part of compiler
you just write a code, then "compile" it
no matter how compiler works internally
Ok. Given func foo(a, b) { return a * b; } and #define foo(a, b) (a * b) what's the difference?
foo(x =, y) is only valid on the second.
ok, #define foo(a, b) ((a) * (b)) - I just omitted parentheses
No, no, don't run from my example.
My example proves my point (even with your preprocessor+compiler thingy).
I don't run from it.
My example has no parentheses.
Because those are not needed for text.
11:04
those are needed by coding standard.
Well, the preprocessor does have type inference. It only has one type: text.
one more thing: user defined assignment operator != template user defined assignment operator ? i.e suppose I have foo<int> x,y; x=y; , won't it work if I don't define user defined assignment operator but template user defined assignment operator?, consider foo has reference member
for now, I'm rewriting some C code with a lot of macros, and I replace them with inline functions. But I see, that I replace cool code with type inference with old school code with explicit types. This makes me sad =\
no, I'm rewriting it in C++
11:09
Well, then, your type inferred buddies are templates, not macros.
@RMartinhoFernandes Can you please look at my last Q also? chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/2213297#2213297
Arrgh, fuck vaccines. This shit hurts.
they can be templates, but I see where they are used, and I see that can be non-template functions, and it looks better because it's really easier to get code with explicit types.
@MrAnubis Do you have a link?
Typing with one hand sucks.
Why, oh why did she inject it on my right arm?
@RMartinhoFernandes What happened to your other hand?
11:13
1 min ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Arrgh, fuck vaccines. This shit hurts.
@MrAnubis I don't see any difference there. it should work with operator=<T> too
@RMartinhoFernandes vaccines for what I mean?
@MrAnubis I'm not sure. I know the thing is a bit fuzzy with copy constructors vs templated constructors in C++03 vs MSVC bugs vs C++11. Not sure if it's the same about assignment.
@MrAnubis No. I took a vaccine and it hurts.
At least this time I didn't faint.
I'm a wuss.
6
@RMartinhoFernandes aah , I'm sure you'll recover quickly than any of us humans :)
Xeo
Xeo
11:31
@RMartinhoFernandes Know what hurts even more? Getting hit on the spot where the vaccine was injected. :)
@jalf try this for some _very_ amusing reads landoverbaptist.net/showthread.php?t=64512
hilarously so. It's hard to tell who's trolling whom, but I'm afraid there are some 'true believers' too
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe Not that site again..
@sehe It's mostly atheists trolling atheists.
Sometimes a believer is caught in the middle, but mostly, it's atheists that get trolled there.
The Landover Baptist Church is a fictional Baptist church based in the fictional town of Freehold, Iowa. The Landover Baptist web site and its associated Landoverbaptist.net Forum are a satire of fundamentalist Christianity and the Religious Right in the United States. Origin The site was created by Chris Harper, who obtained his Master's Degree in English Literature from George Mason University in 1993 after being expelled from Liberty University (founded by Jerry Falwell) in 1989 for producing a satirical radio show which Liberty's administration found offensive. Harper frequent...
Xeo
Xeo
11:50
Delete votes here and here please
@Xeo are flags the same as delete votes?
Xeo
Xeo
no
Delete votes are usually faster than mods reacting to flags
dang, can't help you then
@Xeo no problem :)
12:18
is it possible that shell extensions are not very common in stackoverflow?
Xeo
Xeo
Seriously, are we the only chat room that doesn't throw around flags like they are some kind of free candy?
Can anyone tell me the difference between the "size of a file and its "size on disk" ?
morning
@angryInsomniac i think the difference is how big the file content is and how much space is allocated on the disk. this grows in sector sizes which are most common 4kb
yeah
Xeo
Xeo
12:29
@rekire don't forget compression
so generally, really small files will be relatively wasteful
@Xeo compression on the filesystem level is pretty rarely used in the real world though, isn't it?
Xeo
Xeo
True enough. Maybe because it isn't checked by default in Windows and it is a PITA to enable it after 50% of the disk is full? :p
Especially if you're looking at 2TB disks
and because it's just rarely worth it, given that for a lot of people, the files that take up space are already compressed (images/music/videos), and that the extra decompression step tends to hurt overall performance, and most people just have plenty of disk space in the first place
And most people don't know about it.
and that
12:33
0
A: Dev C++ gives different result in case of pointer address

R. Martinho FernandesInitially p1 stores the address of x (which you obtained with &x). Later on you set p1 to store a null address. In the first snippet you decided to print not the address stored in p1, but the address of p1 itself. p1 is a variable like any other, and just like with the rest of them, &p1 ...

Drawn with my left hand!
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes What difference would that make to a robot? :)
@sbi My left hand is not made with the same craftsmanship of the right hand. Where did you get the idea robots are perfectly symmetrical?
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Can't your right hand fix your left hand then?
My right hand is down due to maintenance.
Xeo
Xeo
RAAAAAAAAAGE. I hate it when my bandwidth goes near 0 for no possible reason whatsoever
Xeo
Xeo
UPPERCASE LETTERS
(I know our Grumpy Old Ape likes them.)
> I hate the fact that you have shared this. I bet we will spend the next year answering silly variations on the usage of this. When in reality we never want to see it again. – Loki Astari 37 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
Well, it's not like that was the first time that construct appeared on SO
yes not the first time
12:52
@rekire So 4 K is the smallest sector that can be allocated to a file , so even if its actually smaller , it'll still occupy the 4k
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Aren't you living in Friedrichshagen? What more reason do you need?
@Xeo i shared it on the secrets of c++ list
@Xeo Hey Xeo , what do you mean by that ?
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi It has nothing to do with the connection itself, it's only our router that seems to be broken for some reason.
@angryInsomniac disk-level compression
@Xeo it's malware
sbi
sbi
12:58
@Xeo For friends I bought a pretty good WLAN router for a very reasonable price (<€10) at ebay last year. Picked it up at some guy's in Berlin, took it to the friends, installed it, and they are happy about it since.
Xeo
Xeo
Well, ours used to work too for over 2 years.
You're trying to tell us that there are routers that work? Nice joke.
Xeo
Xeo
Now it randomly kills the wlan signal, kills the bandwidth, or kills itself
Really, a slow connection is about the only thing that really gets me to RAAAGE
/pissed
The only good thing is that this "near 0 bandwidth" period is only 5-10minutes usually
@Xeo does clang support delegating constructors?
Now I'm pining for those. I guess I just can't have enough C++11 features.
@RMartinhoFernandes yes, since 3.0: clang.llvm.org/cxx_status.html
13:03
Arrrgh. Clang Y U NO LAMBDAS.
6
but not inheriting constructors
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, just why... Even MSVC got them in, and they didn't get variadic templates. :|
I now have a bunch of // FIXME: replace this with proper C++11 feature when available thingies.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
awesome
13:16
Hey people , mind taking a look at my question ? (Not dropping links , please dont automatically downvote)
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8644931/writing-the-huffman-tree-to-file-after-compression/8644990#8644990
write size of compressed data before compressed data, or size of tree after tree
@Abyx I have thought of all those approaches , please check the comment on the one answer thats there
> That's what I thought of doing initially, but the problem is that the tree can be huge ! So I'll have to write an Integer , that's 4 bytes right there ! And If I write it as a character string then I use one byte for each integer that i put in there. Not very efficient for a program that's trying to compress stuff by saving 2 or 3 bits at a time.
Er, if the tree is huge, how much does 4 bytes cost?
++
@RMartinhoFernandes Just looking for a way to minimize the overhead in any way possible
13:23
0.001% is not an overhead
It's a constant 4-byte overhead. If it was 4-bytes "per something", that could be meaningful.
If you open a ZIP file you'll notice that they waste 2 bytes just to have a marker at the start (the letters PK).
It's 2 bytes in a file with several Ks or several megs.
@Abyx Probably being paranoid , I haven't really dealt with bit level stuff much ! If I use this approach i guess the initial header size will also be a bottleneck to how big my tree can be ( I guess that's not much of an issue though)
A 32-bit unsigned integer can cover a 4GB tree. If you want to support bigger files you need a bigger header. A 64-bit unsigned integer can cover a 16 EB tree.
Xeo
Xeo
Wait, you're worrying about a single integer overhead for a whole tree? Yes, I'd stamp that as "paranoid" and "premature optimization".
Hm, our bot seems to have a star-happy follower today
:)
I'm glad "I'm a wuss" isn't as popular as @DeadMG's regular "I'm stupid" messages tend to be.
13:32
@Xeo well , my bad !
Xeo
Xeo
-1
Q: Getting argument count of a function pointer

LBgI'm now using this code: size_t argc(std::function<Foo()>) { return 0; } size_t argc(std::function<Foo(Bar)>) { return 1; } size_t argc(std::function<Foo(Bar, Bar)>) { return 2; } size_t argc(std::function<Foo(Bar, Bar, Bar)>) { return 3...

I'm wondering why std::function didn't adapt Boost.Function's nested arity constant
// §20.8.11.2.5 function target access
template<typename T> T* target() noexcept;
template<typename T> const T* target() const noexcept;
because variadic templates and constexpr will make that just fine
Xeo
Xeo
I wonder if it's legal for T to just be std::function again
> Requires: T shall be a type that is Callable (20.8.11.2) for parameter types ArgTypes and return type R.
@RMartinhoFernandes Don't steal my lines!
the question I have is
who the hell stars "fuck"?
13:41
I could think of someone.
Starring is broken.
template <typename F> constexpr int arity<F>();
template <typename R, typename... Args>
constexpr int arity<std::function<R(Args...)>() {
    return sizeof...(Args);
}
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
Xeo
Xeo
No seriously, stop it.
You can only get so far on reverse psychology.
upvotes would be better than stars
Xeo
Xeo
I want both
13:43
stars are more glamorous and glittery though
Xeo
Xeo
Upboats for temporary attention and stars for permanent
"permanent" - like a "fuck"
Xeo
Xeo
Or maybe we should take the twitter approach instead of upboats and just "retweet" messages we agree with
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
no
it's hard to read, if we will often repost stuff
2 mins ago, by Xeo
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
13:49
2 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
2 mins ago, by Xeo
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
Xeo
Xeo
I seriously shouldn't have proposed that.
it's good that I'm too lazy to read FAQ on chat, and don't remember how to quote posts
Oh noes, spam!
at least I can star "fuck"
Xeo
Xeo
Yes, my free-hand mouse writing sucks, thank you.
13:53
Boy, use thinner brushes.
Xeo
Xeo
Never
5 mins ago, by StackedCrooked
2 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
2 mins ago, by Xeo
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
Write with the spray, it looks better.
@Xeo thank you
13:54
31 secs ago, by Abyx
5 mins ago, by StackedCrooked
2 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
2 mins ago, by Xeo
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
This works for all messages, not only starboard ones.
cpx
cpx
49 secs ago, by DeadMG
31 secs ago, by Abyx
5 mins ago, by StackedCrooked
2 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
2 mins ago, by Xeo
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Stop starring me! It's annoying.
@Xeo What have you done?
Xeo
Xeo
5 mins ago, by Xeo
I seriously shouldn't have proposed that.
should we rename this chat room to "sandbox"?
Xeo
Xeo
13:56
Lounge<Sandbox++> - where we play around with everything but those stupid flags
Ha, STL finally updated the source of his homepage. Hi @RMartinhoFernandes in the source!
@Xeo His avatar is from Full Metal Panic :D
Xeo
Xeo
Yep
I now know why STL didn't do any videos in recent time!

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