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10:00
@AndyProwl that code is what I had in mind from the very beginning. Last time I did clang tooling was some time ago for an NVIDIA project, I haven't been using it since then and my memory is terrible (I'm probably getting old at an astonishing speed)
FTR there is some agreement that copy elision should be made mandatory, and auto x = non_movable{} would be legal
So if I got this right
rvalue = deletable reference
"loose reference"
Need a better phrase than "design paradigms", for a section heading in documentation that will explain the way certain DB tables are organised and arranged and named into groups related by <factor>
@MarcoA. Yeah, tell me about getting old. But your snippet looks promising, I'm working on it
@LightningRacisinObrit DB?
Database...
what no the entire doc is about the database
wow. Advanced.
this section is about the way certain DB tables are organised and arranged and named into groups related by <factor>
@Rapptz Has to be DragonBall
10:01
@Cinch You. What. Padawan
Design Methodology or summat
@LightningRacisinObrit Cinch is asking what DB stands for probably.
user1804599
@AndyProwl #define let auto const&.
10:02
@LightningRacisinObrit chat.stackoverflow.com/… It's really really bad
@rightfold let me be a silly imperative programmer
Andy The Imperative Prowlgrammer
imperator andy
with my mutating things and so on
10:03
@Rapptz vroom vroom
@LucDanton lol
I think last time I posted it you made a car joke too.
hmm Model is quite close, but I've used the term already got the whole thing "data model"
@Cinch how many bugs nah mis-interpretations of the specs oh wait unexpected creative assumptions of missing specs did you find in my answer to that exercise?
@LightningRacisinObrit Design Rationale
?
10:04
@sehe sorry what
Data Model Rationale?
@Ven funny that did not get de-duplicated
not trying to defend the design, just list the table "groups" and explain them
@Cinch Don't. Tell. Me. You. Missed. The. Link.
10:05
Rationale seems like a better word for it. That's all I got.
@LightningRacisinObrit Organization of Tables by Factor
something that means decision, bible, that kinda thing
Data Table Guide?
Data Table Almanac?
yesterday, by sehe
@Cinch so, you're still alive? http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/32d4a1ac4b525481
Dans Ton Cul
10:05
"here's a section that tells you the rules we've I've chosen to use to name and organise tables"
con something
@Cicada you first
@sehe Oh that
I thought it was the first Boost.Spirit example I could make a head and tail of
@sehe alrite
@LightningRacisinObrit Table-Naming Guide
@LightningRacisinObrit Schema Requirements™
10:07
"Table Name Guidelines"
y'all suck
these are worse than the crappy ones I came up with already in my head
I'm just playing around at this point.
I can't speak for Cinch.
@LightningRacisinObrit I don't get it
I don't get how elegant or what type of style you want
unfortunately the best word I can think of to explain that is the word I can't think of right now
Man Accidentally Shoots Armadillo After Bullet Bounces Off Mother-In-Law
10:08
Should it be tongue-in-cheek? Is it spec level? Should it be extremely formal? Or how about loose and hung low like DISCS?
which is pretty much why I'm trying to think of it
WARN: LRiO attempting to think
Cicada Purposely Reposts Headline
Curiously Recurring Headline Pattern
Ven
Ven
oh, c++17 will remove bool++ :[
10:10
RIP muh generic code
"conventions" gets me closer but doesn't sound authoritative enough
bool++ was an aboolmination anyway
or perhaps Design Conventions is precisely what I need
@Cicada Masaabbomil
but I doubt it as this doesn't feel very satisfying
10:11
@sehe Nice to meet you
your mom's an aboolmination
and I feel like there's an obvious word waiting for a "Eureka!" moment
@MarcoA. Hm, it still fails for me. Maybe I'm doing something wrong. It gets to HandleTranslationUnit() in my ASTConsumer, but when I call TraverseDecl on my visitor, VisitXXX functions are not called, as if the content were empty or something. Will do some more troubleshooting
@LightningRacisinObrit "Eureka!"
Some say LRiO is still waiting for his "Eureka!" moment to this day.
10:11
fuck it Conventions must be it
@LightningRacisinObrit Design Specification
Design Standard
Design Protocol?
@LightningRacisinObrit schema conventions, design rules, now that I found your "doubt"
@AndyProwl I'll go and have lunch in the meantime. Keep me posted
Database Design Conventions
Lightness Bikesheds in Naming
@LightningRacisinObrit architecture
10:13
potato
@Cicada naming-conventions naming conventions
potatoes are great
potafingers also
@MarcoA. Enjoy. Thank for helping me out
I used to think fries were the best things to get out of potatoes
but then I discovered hashbrowns
10:14
#browns
(I'm leaving aside soups with potatoes in them which are on a whole different level)
@Rapptz ouch. That would certainly count as a bad code smell in my book
It doesn't look like that anymore.
Good. I take it you changed the color scheme :)
That screenshot's actually a month old now.
10:15
@sehe Dat auto doe
Old enough to thrive!
Upon a closer look though, it's still there in another part of the code.
But it's kinda unavoidable in this case since all intermediate variables are needed.
The cAAAncer has began to spread.
what's the deal with AAA anyway?
I take it it's not about AAA games :P
pfft
this isn't AAA
10:17
and probably nothing about anti aliasing
Adaptive Anti Aliasing = auto?
I tried to read about FXAA and see if I can understand anything
"polymorphic behavior-construct to not name names" => auto?
I gave up at this step
> 1. FXAA takes as input non-linear RGB color data which it converts internally
into a scalar estimate of luminance for shader logic.
That's about right
10:18
@AlexM. non linear?
@Rapptz I'd love to see the actual code to make up my mind about that
@Cicada it should be, it's nvidia's doc
ITT sehe steals intellectual property
#define var auto&&
#define let auto const&
the derp is strong in me
10:21
sharing is caring, @sehe is sharing with the rightful owner of the code
Oh wait, it does.
@Rapptz does the iterator return temporaries? Does as<object> return a temporary? Does the operator[](...) && do something else than operator[](...) const?
I feel a bit ashamed but I like how it looks like
@fredoverflow Why would it not
@AndyProwl s/how/what/ || s/like//
10:22
they're all temporaries except the one I explicitly marked as a reference lol
@Rapptz All we know is, he's fucking brilliant
@sehe Thank you
sod LaTeX btw all I want to do is pass 0 or 1 to a macro and have it emit a tick symbol when the argument is 1
not easy apparently
@Rapptz ow, that's one copy fest then. Anyways, what's the idea of explicitly making them rvalue-ref declared?
When dealing with T&&, should I seek to use std::forward or std::move?
10:23
yes
I mean forward just forwards
correct
Ven
Ven
so "asmr" is actually a term people use to describe music. huh
forward doesn't forward and move doesn't move
@Cinch ?!?!?! nope.
10:24
but move is more general, like a regular static cast
actually I think the names can be const auto&.
but it's just a string
@Cinch Don't "seek to" do things.
@sehe It's perfect forwarding right?
nobody's perfect
@Rapptz Precisely. Or, just auto in that case
10:24
std::forward will forward an object type exactly as it is
@Cinch No. It enables perfect forwarding (when used appropriately).
@sehe But isn't that basically just cast to itself exactly?
i.e.
@Cinch It's not useful to keep stating what you think you know, when you already know you don't
sehe so polichincally correct
I'm not inclined to reiterate this. There are canonical answers on Stack Overflow
10:26
@MarcoA. MS makes money on very few things. OS & Office are def moneymakers for them.
@sehe no love for ref?
learn to edit fool
I'll wait. Someday you'll read up :S
sorry, I was more interested in insulting vOv
Oh.
So if I pass a templated rvalue reference to std::forward, it will substitute for the type perfectly.
...
What.
10:30
yes
handy when you have a class that stores an internal lambda/std::function and it matters how the parameters are passed to it.
@thecoshman i.e. Sol
...
probably...
how is that
is that even
That's... static?
what do you mean?
> return std::forward<int*&&>(ptr_i);
lol
10:31
You’re supposed to perform std::forward<T>(t), not std::forward<T&&>(t). It doesn’t make a difference, but the former is nicer.
@LucDanton makes sense
I’m sure.
so basically, "forward the type perfectly"
perfect forwarding
lol
think if you have overloads, one that copies and one that moves. if you don't forward, you will always copy, even though you could just move.
(I am in no way an expert on this matter)
10:33
Okay so it's basically compiler magic for overloading
std::forward will resolve to a specific static function for forwarding
while std::move will resolve to a specific static function for rvalue conversion (or identity)
user1804599
Hi.
Buzzword alert
Ohhhh...
But that must mean that the application can get pretty bloated with the extra overloads
(not)
@Cinch move is an unconditional cast to rvalue. forward is a conditional cast to rvalue.
@Griwes I know this already
10:34
oh, [[deprecated("")]] is nice
Go on, compile with -O2 and try to break on a forward call.
You use std::move to basically force a move, which is good if you want something to take over a resource
@Cinch You use std::move to cast to an rvalue.
@Griwes "optimized out" I'm guessing?
@Griwes Right, but this seems to be the only way of doing this generically
10:35
Do not add any useless words to it.
yes, but in my head, it's good to connect it to an action-visual
@Cinch Doing "this"?
@Griwes which you do if you "want something to take over a resource", learn to explain
@Griwes using std::move to forcibly create a rvalue out of a lvalue or rvalue
10:36
@LightningRacisinObrit Orthodox Easter.
Apr 3 at 16:30, by Lightning Racis in Obrit
@AlexM. It's about Western vs Eastern Christianity. basically everyone vs Orthodox
and then std::forward is to preserve rvalue/lvalue semantics across calls and passes
@fredoverflow Did he dye his hair or what
@thecoshman ...
and, for real context...
Apr 3 at 16:27, by Lightning Racis in Obrit
@AlexM. um normal Easter mate
:P
10:37
std::move seems interesting
It seems like std::move would be helpful for multithreading
6
> Justin Bieber put in chokehold, kicked out of Coachella
@Cinch That sentence uses some words that don't mean anything. It casts to an rvalue, that is all it does.
@Cinch lel
Was it that bad?
10:38
Still not sure if elaborate troll
@Cinch it is
Oh.
Because it seems that std::move is the way to literally pass resources from one thread to another
i.e. Reader/Writer
Am I getting this?
@Griwes when trying to understand something complex, it helps to not talk about it in the complex terms, unless those are well understood (and thus arguably no longer 'complex')
yesterday, by Cinch
it's actually character-encoded binary strings
my favourite
so far
@Cinch kek
10:39
@LucDanton Oh, pretty good
I've actually had something similar in a real-world spec
I have a headache, maybe I am going to die from brain hemorrhage tonight
@Griwes Is that "I wish I could ban you?" or "Fuck you?"
"Alphanumeric MD5 hash on 16 bytes" <- not possible
@Cinch in C++98 some people recommended auto_ptr for passing resources to another thread.
@StackedCrooked ...
10:39
so it's an old idea
Ven
Ven
@Cinch "kek" is "lol"
I guess I could do that
@thecoshman This is not complex. Also I am doing that! If he knows move casts to an rvalue, and he knows that move ctors/assignment operators work with rvalues, he can connect the dots.
Ven
Ven
(wow meme)
@Cicada Obviously it means 16 bytes per alphanum, silly.
@Ven Oh, I used to play a game where they said it before they kicked you from a room.
@LucDanton When I asked what they meant by "alphanumeric on 16 bytes" they replied "it means it can be numbers or alphabets"
3
I should go back to scientific computing
Yeah that sounds like 16 bytes alright!
@Griwes you do realize that rvalue and lvalues have almost no meaning that can be inferred from their name, really?
@MarcoA. I got it to work, at least when I only provide one FrontendInputFile (thank you!). What's bugging me now is that if I add more than one remapped file/ FrontendInputFile, like this, I get an assertion at run-time when starting to process the second input file. It complains a buffer is being overwritten by the same buffer or something. Any idea how to work around that?
10:41
ITT Cinch teaches Griwes how to C++
01Latin8Greek2Coptic
Or maybe I shouldn't even be wanting to process more than one FrontendInputFile at a time
@LucDanton Seems like a valid MD5 to me
To a newbie, "lvalue" means nothing and "rvalue" is the shiny new thing that still means nothing
Which means our sum of understanding is negative
because knowing more nothings is worse.
@Cinch I do not realize that. Probably because the names are both descriptive and short, but require you to have some knowledge of what's happening there?
10:42
@Griwes Which is both good and bad.
Ven
Ven
prvalues are better than xvalues. </kek>
@Cicada He was probably recommended to Griwes by Puppy
In Iran they use abjadnumerics.
10:43
@Cinch Said newbie, unlike you, would head to the one and only SO answer describing them and fill the lack of knowledge he has.
@Griwes I read that answer at least 10 times by now
I've read several articles on rvalues
Ven
Ven
@Griwes there are several answers explaining what {l,r,x,pr,g,..}values are
I've read cppreference for xvalues too
@Griwes you understand it, thus to you, it is not complex, to those who do not understand it, it is complex.
@Cinch Then your understanding should be complete.
Ven
Ven
10:44
It's funny, in JS, foo() = 5; is a valid parse, but never valid at runtime
@Griwes Guess what? I have <1 year of exp with C++. AM I COMPLETE?
My understanding is still not complex enough to be real; it's still a bit imaginary
@R.MartinhoFernandes So they do. TIL!
@Griwes it is not trivial
@Cinch But value categories are trivial. "these are this, these are that, those are that".
@R.MartinhoFernandes adjectives for numbers?
Ven
Ven
10:45
@Cinch you're never complete
@Griwes Definitions are trivial.
That's pretty much all there is to value categories ;_;
Understanding is not.
@Griwes there is more to it than just knowing there are different types of values.
True understanding comes when you can literally own a concept, use it, and feel it from the inside out.
Ven
Ven
10:45
(Actually, in wsh, "microsoft js", foo() = 5 is used. I pity the ones who use that...)
Dalai Cinch has spoken
But... there ain't really anything to understand there.
@thecoshman Yes, knowing which one appears where.
Ven
Ven
You never own a concept
@Ven You only molest it.
@thecoshman Value category does not pertain to values. (I know, I know).
Ven
Ven
10:46
No, you copyright it first
@Griwes and knowing why 'this nonsense' matters
@thecoshman No, that's separate.
I think std::move and std::forward technically don't need to exist but they exist for semantic and syntactical sugar.
An abjad is a type of writing system where each symbol always or usually stands for a consonant, leaving the reader to supply the appropriate vowel. It is a term suggested by Peter T. Daniels to replace the common terms "consonantary", "consonantal alphabet" or "syllabary" to refer to the family of scripts called West Semitic. The word "abjad" is based on the first letters (a, b, g, d) found in all Semitic languages such as Phoenician, Syriac, Arabic, and Hebrew. In Arabic, "A" (alif), "B" (bā’), "J" (jīm), "D" (dāl) make the word "abjad" which means "alphabet". The modern Arabic word for "alphabet...
They're really needed though
@R.MartinhoFernandes You mean YHWH?
10:47
Also inb4 some functional programming nutjob says that in reality they don't matter since everything is a reference to an immutable piece of data.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ll
Okay
@Griwes Why the long winded phrase for "Bartek"
@Griwes the types of values, on their own, are just pure nonsense. You have to understand how they impact on anything to understand why on earth they would exist
Now let's ask Python if they know what a rvalue is?
Ven
Ven
10:47
@Griwes everything is a reference to an immutable piece of data!
Unless you invent time travel, probably
user1804599
Everything is.
@Griwes Exactly. It would be crazy stating the obvious.
user1804599
And my APL code is more readable than your C++ code.
Ven
Ven
meh, time travel would probably just create a different branching, not modify immutable data
@Cinch Yes; they are literally static_cast<remove_reference_t<T&&>> for move and static_cast<T&&> for forward, modulo typos.
Ven
Ven
10:48
@rightfold no
@rightfold Why do you like APL so much?
Ven
Ven
it's rightfold
Also, isn't... everything technically a rvalue and lvalue (outside of computers and in our minds, so to speak)?
A thought consists of itself and its contents.
A thought is both the rvalue and lvalue in English
we are all xvalues
Ven
Ven
and and and and and
10:50
Lounge<Philosophy>
Okay so..
Ven
Ven
we should just replace "&&" to "and" in every piece of c++ code, it'd be amazing
@rightfold what happened to mill
It's too bad there isn't an "instant reflection" mechanism to replicate items
perhaps this would be possible with quantum computing
If you could dynamically bind with entanglement, this would enable instantaneous copying.
Ven
Ven
EWTF error encountered
10:51
> dynamically bind with entanglement
I'm out
I wonder what Quantum C++ would look like
Probabilistic template instantiations
@vsoftco Hey, Vlad! Want to talk about what C++ might look like with quantum computing?
@Cicada Yeah I still don't get it
I went through the basic 10-minute video lowdown of the wave function collapse
It's mutual
If the collapse is simply probability being determined to a single outcome state... how does that really apply to computing?
Vlad was saying that it had to do with increasing the probability of getting a right answer with complex numbers or something
user1804599
10:56
@Ven ∧
@Ven And & with bitand!
Ven
Ven
@rightfold apls
@Griwes nice catch – good thing someone's watching out
user1804599
I am eating an apple.
user1804599
And drinking apple juice.
@rightfold Soon you'll be pissing apple juice too.

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