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22:00
@Puppy unless you can look into the future I'll just consider that as your opinion, and not fact
I believe otherwise
can one really say that by the way; "I believe otherwise", to say that you believe the opposite of what someone says?
I don't think so.
what would be the appropriate way to form such sentence?
"otherwise" is equivalent to "if not".
Try "the contrary".
@FilipRoséen-refp Hmm...interestingly, Ada had strong typedefs, and the syntax they used could also be used in C++. A normal one looks like using X = Y;. A "strong" one would be using X = new Y;.
@E_net4 It sounds okay to me
22:02
@JerryCoffin yeah, and I actually have been discussing exactly that syntax with a friend of mine
@JerryCoffin The syntax isn't the problem; the problem is that nobody can agree on the exact semantics required.
@FilipRoséen-refp Overloading on e.g. ForwardIterator and RandomAccessIterator.
@FilipRoséen-refp You can, but it doesn't really specify that you believe the precise opposite, only that there's some difference between your belief and their statement.
You can say "I believe differently" if you want to be more... precise about it? I dunno, I think "I believe otherwise" is valid
OH MY GOD C++17 HAS BEEN CANCELLED
2
22:02
@Puppy Yes, I know. In the end, syntax is almost never the real problem.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ???
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what
bs
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Oh thank god
@Pris I may look further into it, but I've been told from believable sources that if replacing "otherwise" with "if not" doesn't sounds right, then it's not right.
22:03
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Quick everybody star it before anyone figures out the truth
template<ForwardIterator It>
void f(It begin, It end);

template<RandomAccessIterator It>
void f(It begin, It end);
like that.
@milleniumbug meh
@E_net4 You can use it as an adverb: dictionary.reference.com/browse/otherwise
@Rapptz yeah, that would require a little bit of redirection
@FilipRoséen-refp Yes, that's perfectly fine.
22:04
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ??????????
Only feature I'm honestly looking forward to because it's annoying to implement with SFINAE.
@E_net4 I'm sorry to say that your "believable sources" are unbelievably full of shit.
Do you guys think that C++ will ever be abandoned
guys
22:04
@Rapptz it's not that annoying to implement
can we ignore stupid english rules
Binary sure.
if it makes sense, it works
Good luck with multiple overloads.
22:04
inquam, blastfurnace and R Sahu frustrates me to no end. stackoverflow.com/questions/29110330/…
@LightnessRacesinOrbit As in, in the scope of your career's lifetime
@Blob That's a vacuous statement. You just said "if it makes sense, it makes sense".
@Blob Doesn't really help us to determine whether it makes sense.
So tell me, LRiO, could I say something like "Otherwise, my friend." instead of "On the contrary, my friend."?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit if the people you're talking to can understand you, it's good.
@Pris I shall live for another 2,000 years so...
@Blob That's grossly oversimplifying it.
22:05
The amount of boilerplate needed for multiple overloads based on traits is very annoying IMO.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit i feel it's better than the reverse
@Blob You could talk in pig latin and I could understand you, with effort, but there are so many reasons you shouldn't do that and I'm not even going to bother listing them all for you
@LightnessRacesinOrbit For us mere mortals that have 20,30 year careers then
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ok, how about we ignore only the stupid ones
Sure, let's also remove stop words in our conversation. They add no semantics, so hopefully we can understand ourselves all the same.
22:06
Most of the times I resort to derived-to-base conversions.
And mangling sentences just because you think people will be able to decode your meaning based on context, is absurd. It's bad for the conversation you're having, it's bad for conversations you'll have in future, and it's bad for the language whose evolution you're steering in a stupid direction.
Using a choice<N> trick.
@Rapptz Yes, quite. When you start thinking of macros to generate all the overloads, you know something's wrong.
It's surprisingly easy to get these things "right" so just do that and then there can be no disagreements.
@Blob So which do you want: to converse with LRiO, or to ignore the stupid ones?
22:08
in an ideal world, i could do both
That's a low blow Jerry
actually
in an ideal world i wouldn't be here talking to you people
i swear, everyone here is messed up in some way
Jerry makes idiotic, puerile "low blows". More breaking news at 11
@Blob In an ideal world, nobody would be stupid--but in the real world, some people are.
@Rapptz yeah, it's not exactly a walk in the breeze -> paste
22:10
Most immature elderly man I've ever had the displeasure of not meeting.
> displeasure of not meeting
@FilipRoséen-refp C++ so ugly
plis engllish
can be written shorter though now that I think about it
@Blob AHA! I GOT YOU!
22:11
@LightnessRacesinOrbit no, i'm just being a dick.
@Blob weren't you literally just lecturing me about how we should do the reverse of dictating strict grammar rules in conversations?
@Blob ;)
where is my pizza come on pizza
oh fuck hang on what TV am I going to watch with it I finished SGU halp halp halp
TV?
for that much money you could buy me a nice computer
@CaptainGiraffe Do you want me to delete my answer to that "uninitialized variables" question? You seem to have an issue with that.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I would say: "LRiO makes an ass of himself again.", but that would be false--to make an ass of himself again, there would have had to be at least a moment when he wasn't an ass.
14
same thing done differently, though could lead to problems due to the interface change (takes two arguments instead of one)
22:14
Blast, I have an issue with 17 upvotes being given to a poor question given 3 poor answers.
guys guys guys it's here
It's there.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit C++17?
It's everywhere.
My comment was first by 2 minutes. Bah.
22:14
could watch a movie I suppose
a neater way would be to use a class template specialization
@CaptainGiraffe url?
found it
I don't see 17 upvotes
you're insane
maybe 17 total upvotes?
22:15
I upvoted that answer. It's a great answer.
It was significantly reduced. I mass =) downvoted answers
The only person being inappropriate on that question is you, giving answers/"hints" in the question's comments section. Stop doing that.
@CaptainGiraffe No, that is not how it works. I can see the upvote/downvote breakdowns.
There are upvotes that has been withdrawn.
Also a -3 question should not gather 20+ votes.
@JerryCoffin I'm really tempted writing a proposal for strong alias-declarations, what worries me is that I'm also tempted to include "semi-strong" alias-declarations. using explicit id_t = new int; vs using age_t = new int. The latter is implicitly convertible to and from int, whereas the former is only convertible with a cast
@CaptainGiraffe wot
22:19
Just use using explicit id_t = int;
Why the new?
@Rapptz to ease up on the grammar
how does that ease up the grammar
the wording would be far simpler if strong and semi-strong alias-declarations both would require the new
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Lets say SO wanted to be a searchable forum. And lets say Google agreed.
that way a powerful alias-declaration is one where the type-id of the alias-declaration is prepended with new
one could then have added wording if the using is followed by explicit
or using U = new explicit T
that might actually be neater
but I'm quite sure, if I ever were to write such proposal, that I'd make the new part of both strong and semi-strong
22:22
We have all agreed that +1 is for stuff that is good for the archivers of our knowledge.
Not so much for repeating the comment section on a non-googlable title.
if only one could make money by thinking about C++
niggah be broke as fuck
@FilipRoséen-refp new for strict aliasing and no new for semi-strict aliasing would make more sense
@FilipRoséen-refp I only brought up the new part because it happens to be how Ada did that. Offhand, I don't see much wrong with just explicit using X = Y;, and that seems to fit better with how things work in the rest of (current) C++.
but wtf is semi-strict aliasing anyways?
but new would be used as the english "new" and not C++'s
@Blob no, using X = T would make X be equivalent to T, whereas using X = new T would make a X a new type that can be implicitly converted to/from T - so there's a difference between the two
@JerryCoffin you don't agree that mandating new would make the standardese involved simpler?
@JerryCoffin that both versions would easily be identified as "stronger" alias-declarations?
22:25
@FilipRoséen-refp It might--I was thinking primarily in terms of the grammar being unambiguous.
7 mins ago, by Filip Roséen - refp
@JerryCoffin I'm really tempted writing a proposal for strong alias-declarations, what worries me is that I'm also tempted to include "semi-strong" alias-declarations. using explicit id_t = new int; vs using age_t = new int. The latter is implicitly convertible to and from int, whereas the former is only convertible with a cast
can someone edit stackoverflow.com/a/29110805/3547110 to change ? to ?: and replace "terniary" with "ternary"
@Blob why don't you do it?
@FilipRoséen-refp can only suggest edit
@Blob then suggest such edit.. what's the problem with that?
22:27
urgh
tried
> Edits must be at least 6 characters; is there something else to improve in this post?
@Blob lol
Actually, I can perform edits with less than six characters difference
IIRC
MLM
MLM
@Blob There is some grammar to fix
@Blob I fixed some grammar, and made the changes you proposed.. just because I'm such a nice guy
@FilipRoséen-refp So, how's your paper going
@Columbo been busy with other things sadly
22:30
Or hasn't it started quite yet
ahh k
@FilipRoséen-refp Same with me whenever I want to do anything non-compulsory ://
it's an interesting topic, and I like for the c++ community to come to the realization of what is written in the standard.. but I blame laziness
I mean, those who fall into the urge of doing what is not allowed only have themselves to blame.. and it's not a major thing really
a more important thing would be to make people actually include the headers they need to make their code confirming, instead of relying on the implementation to include them through indirection
help something has gone terribly wrong, cout << typeid(*this) outputs: std::shared_ptr<ks::ecs::Component> ks::ObjectBuilder::make_object<ks::ecs::Component>()::Access
Hello everyone!
@Pris I thought typeinfo didn't have an insertion operator
Isn't it cout << typeinfo(*this).name()?
@Columbo right, thats what i meant to type
22:34
nvm then
I'm calling that from within ks::ecs::Component... how the hell does that even happen
i think enable_shared_from_this makes its a shared_ptr hmmm
progress is best measured in the number of suicidal thoughts you had while doing something
I was wondering if someone could point me in the direction of some information on how std::placeholder works with std::bind to allow the std::function from std::bind to accept parameters
have you read the relevant cppreference pages?
yes
I understand how to use it
but I am looking into using std::placeholder for a pseudo-custom made bind
22:41
accu.org/index.php/journals/1397 might contain something
@MichaelMitchell are you asking how the relevant code is implemented?
@MichaelMitchell You don't need std::bind for a std::function object to accept parameters
I think you want something different, but your question wasn't very precise
I will provide a code example via Coliru
Okay, sounds good :)
so the problem occurs when I pass std::placeholders into the Create function
because it stores the args as _Ph<1> and so on
so when I try to pass the integer or something into the Call function it says wrong type
"cannot convert from _Ph<1> to int
sort of deal
22:50
typeid(this).name() -> ks::ecs::Component const*
typeid(*this).name() -> std::shared_ptr<ks::ecs::Component> ks::ObjectBuilder::make_object<ks::ecs::Component>()::Access
its time to panic
@MichaelMitchell If you're using Coliru, you could make it show the actual error messages ;)
And try to compile it with different compilers there
But it seems you removed the includes so that's not working, as it errors before that stuff
looking through your code right now, and before I got to the buggy thing, I found that lambda declaration...
What is that for??
It's not assigned to a variable, and isn't directly called either
he fixed it
22:55
So you're just declaring a lambda without using it?
he added auto func = in the updated version
auto func?
Oh right
Yeah
so pretty much my issue is I don't know how to deal with the placeholders
I don't know why you'd save that to a variable before returning it, but with the fix it looks better
Yeah I'll get to that, wait a sec :D
uhm...
I don't get an error (other than undefined reference to main) with g++ -std=c++14 :D
Or was your first version broken beyong just the lambda declaration?
just use the updated version
lol
ugh. 'return new ...'

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