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10:00
@Columbo just wait and see, but as said; the current proposed "fixes" won't fix anything, the "problem" is much deeper than what the reflector seems to think
@Columbo to put it this way; one can make this work entirely without using templates.
@FilipRoséen-refp I wanna see that. Please.
@Columbo you will, when I've published the article
I unfortunately have to assume you're bluffing, until the article is published. :(
@Columbo just as you assumed I was bluffing until I published the first one, correct?
@FilipRoséen-refp Nope.
@FilipRoséen-refp Why not help the reflector?
10:01
@Columbo I'm not really the bluffing type of guy, and why on earth would I claim such thing on a public board - with a nick that contains my real name?
@Columbo because they have pretty much been ignoring me, I've tried to get in contact with them on numerous occasions - even before I published the article
@FilipRoséen-refp Err, what? lol
I don't believe that, ever. There is no way they're simply ignoring somebody.
@Columbo one of the reflector guys replied with "I don't see why this is important", the others I tried to get in contact with didn't reply at all
@FilipRoséen-refp Seriously!?
Wait, who is the reflector?
@Columbo No, I'm making this up because its a funny story for the grand kids
@FilipRoséen-refp No worries. That was just an outcry of rage. :)
10:03
@Columbo the reflector is a closed group for the "specially invited", that discusses things behind close doors
@FilipRoséen-refp Why not just post things as core issues then?
@Columbo there is one for CWG, EWG, LWG, etc
@Columbo like all the defect report that I've sent without hearing anything more about?
@FilipRoséen-refp It may well be that your trick is ill-formed, and you haven't noticed yet. That's possible.
@FilipRoséen-refp What!?
@Columbo the other one? no, it's simpler than the first one, though more quirky to use
That's ludicrous.
10:04
@Columbo I had this discussion in ##c++ not long ago
anyhow, time to eat breakfast with the girl - stay dope, and stay tuned.
@FilipRoséen-refp Is it the same as the one proposed by potatoswatter on an SO answer, the global counting one?
@FilipRoséen-refp Peace
@FilipRoséen-refp What server is that
10:19
@Columbo no, far from it
@Columbo freenode
ploff
@deW1 whenever I can :)
(I didn't misspeak, did I? o.O)
2 death sentences on the front page of cnn
Kill evil people does not kill evil
It's not about killing, AFAIK
Many states don't even execute the sentences.
plasma 5 is amazing
I love it
cnn.com is unbearable with the ads
10:28
I use adblock
I'm p. sure that doesn't help at all for the ad placement prior to video reports
It's not like there's ads on the front page
lol I browse their front page, I don't actually read the news in detail :p
Let's get the answer score to +418 for good measure — sehe just now
user1804599
aaaa Scala y u no flatCollect
Security researcher used “default IDs and passwords” to gain control of plane via entertainment system. http://wrd.cm/1Hju5zF HT @gcluley
GOD. People will NEVER learn
Ell
Ell
Jesus
Security and Humans don't mix well.
Humans are insecure.
On too many levels
The business level should be the first to take the bullet.
violate mod
can have so many interpretations
10:43
> Everyone who has used Clojure for more than 5 minutes realizes that it's the best thing since puppies and double rainbows.
lol
Gosh that first paragraph.
user1804599
@fredoverflow unless they've used Scala.
user1804599
I implemented primary constructors!
I felt like kimchi after my 30km bushwalk, I had a whole tub of it. Now I have an upset tummy again.
Ell
Ell
How long did it take to walk 30km?
user1804599
10:50
Six hours.
30km of walking: Your magic level is not high enough.
teleports
In other news....there goes 45 minutes of my darn android-ridden life
> offers a C-like type system
Ell
Ell
@chmod711telkitty what shoes do you wear?
How do you not get blisters?
I wear hiking boots with 2 pairs of socks
11:12
question: what should I pass to unordered_set::emplace_hint ?
right now I'm having a blackout
probably the same as here
> Meanwhile Apple made a slightly thinner phone and charged you 700$+
@sehe not commercially viable for everyday users
wut. Are you talking to someone?
You don't even take the effort to articulate a point. Blurting out popular fragments like that turns me off.
Also I'm still watching it so I'll be with you later.
lol? did you not read the price tag & compare that with your electricity bill?
I didn't see a price tag. Yet.
Oh. You mean 700$. Yeah, if the iPhone generated my energy
user1804599
11:21
This is so nice.
inb4 scala or perl
user1804599
Refactoring is fun.
The end of rightfold productivity
my parents has solar panel on their roof, I have solar hot water on mine
user1804599
11:26
My parents spent $2400 up front on the solar system, they sell back the electricity generated to energy Australia, they made nearly $4000 dollars so far.
possibly will make $2000 more in the next 2 years
@chmod711telkitty yeah, the electricity companies here limit significantly what you can net meter
@chmod711telkitty hah. that's not bad
@Mgetz they buy peak rate electricity @ $0.46 per kW, they sell at $0.60 per kW. Special incentive by the Australian government back then.
Off peak at $0.09 per KW
@sehe the sell price only lasts until 2017
Also purchase price was subsided too, by the government
Net metering is a service to an electric consumer under which electric energy generated by that electric consumer from an eligible on-site generating facility and delivered to the local distribution facilities may be used to offset electric energy provided by the electric utility to the electric consumer during the applicable billing period. Net metering policies can vary significantly by country and by state or province: if net metering is available, if and how long you can keep your banked credits, and how much the credits are worth (retail/wholesale). Most net metering laws involve monthly roll...
here it depends on state an utility
they are jackasses about it
Solar is all subsidies.
11:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes so is oil
user1804599
Manufacturer pays politicians.
user1804599
I'm a proponent of building nuclear plants all over the Sahara.
11:55
No water.
I'm in the Czech Republic now :D
Děčin.
@sehe Speaking of apple, I had a dream about it 2 days ago. I dreamed about there was an upgrade or some kind of recall on the iphone. So I went to a smallish apple store. The assistant plug my phone into a Mac, you could see the history of the phone (browsing history, usage, photos taken) in directory format, you can zoom in & Zoom out to a particular period with thumbnail icons indicates the action taken.
realistic dreams are fun
I wonder people dream because the brain is getting bored from too much sleep?
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Isn't that were @AlexM. is?
@ThePhD he's in Romania
user3010322
Oh, right.
12:40
Robot brought the sun to CR
Last time we had such a sunny day was approximately never
It's a really lovely day.
Can't wait to cycle through these fields.
Note to self: get sunscreen this time.
How will you find your way back? GPS on phone + offline maps?
Yeah. Same as last year.
I also have a dead tree copy of the route with maps.
Not the one I used for the envelope.
12:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why are you travelling like a nutter
Because it's awesome!
I wish I could do the same
user1804599
I need a new project.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Same here. Effectively, those who can install solar panels are paid by those who cannot. If you have no south-facing aspect, you're stuft and have to pay, (indirectly, through taxes/susidy), those who have and can either afford to install solar panels themselves, or have been conned into renting their space to companies that rip them off.
Hey :)
..plus the ripoff companies lie, telling prospective marks that their solar panels will work well on sunless days and if pointed north.
13:00
I have a question for you guys. I'm a university student and I've had courses in C, C# and computer architecture (assembly e.g.), but not C++. I've looked into C++ and I can see the similarities between C and C++ and also some differences between the object orientated design between C++ and C#. I'd love to try and learn more about C++, but
all the tutorials or what not that are available on the internet aren't really focusing on anything Object Orientated and are in general very basic (beginners level). So do you guys know any place where there are given advanced issues to solve?
@Paludan Can you solve the piss-poor Man U defensive lineup?
@Columbo because I like traveling. You folks are the ones that "travel" like nutters. You do slow teleportation and then spend tens more time in the same place and call that "travel".
@MartinJames the what?
I'm sorry but I don't watch Football
I'm a rugby man :P
@Paludan CppQuiz
Thanks @Nooble
13:03
@Paludan No problem.
We've learned C# and next year it's Java.. which kind of sucks :/ The level of abstraction on .Net languages and Java makes me wonder if programming has anything to do with knowing computers
@Columbo Woah.
@Paludan What terrible University teaches C, C#, C++ and Java? What about dynamically typed languages? What about functional programming?
@Paludan What do you mean, knowing computers? Assembly language?
13:07
@fredoverflow Elaborate please? C was more because of the historical part of programming I guess, but we were taught how to code in C. C# was because of an object orientated course.
Freddy! I assume you are right in the middle of torturing your students, finals are in the next month or two right?
@Paludan All of these lanuages are statically-typed curly-braced imperative languages with a statement/expression dichotomy.
You don't broaden your horizon very much by learning 4 curly-braced languages.
@chmod711telkitty The semester is pretty much at half-time now. So yes, about 2 months until exam time.
@fredoverflow About the knowing computers part, what I meant was that when coding in C#, things are taken care of behind the scenes. Allocation and deallocation of memory, static calls and or sorting operations. Linq, I mean it's simply "commands" or what you can call them, but the user has no idea how it works, only that it does.
@fredoverflow What do you think would broaden the horizon?
Well, then you probably want to learn C in depth. And then realize that writing large systems in C sucks major balls.
I dunno, anything else really. How about Haskell, Python or Clojure?
Python perhaps, but for what reason? I'd need an objective
Like a goal
13:10
I would say some kind of machine language
@Paludan that's true of C++ as well.
To use python for a specific thing
You don't need to know C++ to get how Linq works. It probably doesn't help at all.
and shell scripting
@R.MartinhoFernandes Isn't Linq a C# thingie?
13:11
Ofc not @R.MartinhoFernandes but I'd like to learn C++ to use for game development.
Yeah @fredoverflow
It's not like all games are written in C++.
I would guess that most games are written in Flash or HTML5 or JavaScript or whatnot these days.
If you want to learn C++ to write games, you need a team of 10 people.
nope @fredoverflow but I read that using C++ you can communicate with the hardware better. But I'd love to try out OpenGL at some point, but I need to know how to wield C++ first.
You can't write a C++ game by yourself and get it anywhere near done.
You can use OpenGL from pretty much any language you want.
@fredoverflow perhaps using unreal engine? A lot of major games have used that game engine.
What's the most sophisticated game you have written yet?
13:13
You can communicate with the hardware in C# just fine.
Also study a bit javascripts? In case you don't do well in computer science & need a job
Anyway, see here codeblog.jonskeet.uk/category/edulinq if you want to learn how Linq works. It requires only C# knowledge.
You don't need C++ for OpenGL either.
@fredoverflow Haha that is yet to done. @chmod711telkitty so far Computer Science is going just fine so I'm not too worried.
If you have never programmed a game, you really should not be thinking about Unreal Engine.
@R.MartinhoFernandes about Linq, it was just an example, I'm not interested in Linq at the moment
13:15
Even writing Naughts and Crosses in text-based form is going to be a challenge at this point.
Don't get ahead of yourself.
If you want to learn C++ go ahead and learn it: grab a book. If you want to make a game, well, make one.
@fredoverflow Of course I'm not thinking about jumping right into the pool, I need to learn how to swim first.
Learning C++ while making the game is likely to lead to failure on both counts.
10
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hence the reason to why I want to learn C++ first
Do one at a time.
13:15
Indeed
Warning: learning C++ will be very boring for the first couple of weeks or even months.
You'll be spending a lot of time on the console.
user3010322
...
user3010322
Wait a second.
user3010322
strcpy copies the values into its destination argument... and then makes a COPY of that....??
4270
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...

13:16
What?
You seem confused.
strcpy makes exactly 1 copy.
while (*dst++ = *src++);
That's all it does.
user3010322
So what's the destination argument for?
user3010322
And why is it modified, if there's a copy being made?
A buffer where you want the copy to be placed.
@ThePhD returns the pointer.
@Paludan Take a book from there. Don't expect your knowledge of C to enable you to skip whole chapters.
@fredoverflow I know basics of C++, but I know more advanced programming when it comes to C#. Is it a big difference? I know that you have to personally control memory allocation and use pointer arithmetic
13:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does it point to the beginning or the end? I always forget.
@fredoverflow Well...
I'm sure it's possible.
@Paludan You should never personally control memory in C++. If your book suggests using new and/or delete, burn it.
My keyboard is being weird.
@fredoverflow noted, does C++ have a garbage collector then?
13:19
@Paludan No, it has RAII.
user3010322
@Paludan You actually never have to manually control memory ever unless you explicitly ask for that pain.
although you could theoretically use one
wtf, why is strcpy char *strcpy( char *dest, const char *src ); not char *strcpy( const char *src, char *dest); ?
user3010322
Which you never, ever should.
This is why you should get a decent book and not skip the introduction.
13:19
@Paludan Destructors?
@fredoverflow @ThePhD Ah nice.
user3010322
Get a C++11 book. All C++ compilers can recently handle C++11. You'll be able to get pretty far with just C++11, but if you're just starting you can even go as far as C++14.
At this point, you really don't know the basics of C++, as you thought at first. The basics of C++ are not C. Rather the opposite.
@chmod711telkitty The parameter order mimics the operand order of assignment.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I read a book about C++ called Jumping into C++, but it was very imperative.
13:21
It's sad.
Most C++ books are crap :(
That's why we compiled the list above :D
strcpy is retardely designed
3
The return value is useless
4
If it's not on that list, it's probably not recommended.
@Paludan Buy "A Tour of C++", it will give you an idea of how C++ looks like these days.
Does C++ compile fine on linux?
13:22
Yes
@fredoverflow cheers
@milleniumbug Is it the beginning of the destination?
@fredoverflow It returns the left argument. (which is actually a bit useful, but encourages O(n^2) code)
All the ones in the list are good and vouched for by top users in the C++ tag on SO.
@Paludan if you have the right compiler installed, then yes
13:24
@milleniumbug It would be super awesome if it returned a pointer the the NUL character, so you could pass that to strcat or whatnot.
@milleniumbug how so?
Praha!
strcat(strcpy(a, b), c);
Only 3 more hours. Czech trains are slow.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, wait. I think the "encouraging O(n^2)" was about strcat
13:26
Ah.
Asciiz strings do that.
But still, both functions could return something more useful, but they don't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes related Joel
then why not just char * strcpy (const char * source );?
@chmod711telkitty You copy it to... what? Or do you mean strdup?
13:34
dest = strcpy(src);
The Last Programming Language... why does Uncle Bob always talk about something completely unrelated at the beginning? Just for warmups?
@chmod711telkitty Yup, that's strdup (not in any C standard). It mallocs enough bytes to copy the null-terminated string.
@chmod711telkitty Because then you would have to have the copy on the heap, right? No very C-ish. We prefer to pass pointers to buffers (of hopefully large enough size) into functions instead.
Lecture 7... so yeah, exactly midterm.
If references don't exist in C...
and they don't right?
Like int&
correct
13:37
@Jefffrey They don't exist
C has pointers. References are C++.
@Borgleader I don't like these "Is it a movie or a video game?" video games.
Then, how do they explain that v[i], for some array v, is a reference to the actual location inside the array?
It's not a reference, it's an lvalue.
@fredoverflow i didnt think it had that many cutscenes
but youre not the first to bring it up, I think @EtiennedeMartel feels the same way you do about it
Java also manages to have array access, despite it not having references in the C++ sense.
13:39
Right.
*p is also just an lvalue.
In fact, v[i] is defined to be *((v) + (i)).
Right. I know I was going somewhere with this, but now I'm not sure anymore.
You need references for operator overloading, but C does not have that either.
So it manages without references just fine.
Like int& x = y;, x is an lvalue that aliases y.
int&& x = 1;, x is also an lvalue that references an rvalue.
prvalue probably.
Yes, 1 is a prvalue.
Should C++ put more value into PR? :)
13:44
@fredoverflow it's 'his thing'
He reckons it's a good way of getting people to 'wake up'
Yeah, I forgot the question I was going to make.
I was thinking about adopting this technique for personal warmup purposes...
@Jefffrey Just read the SO FAQ on move semantics, it probably covers your question ;)
@fredoverflow to be fair, it does work to get people thinking
Like, given int& func(), then the expression func() is an lvalue, no?
@thecoshman Oh, I didn't say it was nonsensical. I was just curious about his intent.
@Jefffrey Yet, it is an lvalue.
13:47
Yeah, that's what I don't understand, but I'll take a look at the SO FAQ.
23
Q: Real life examples of xvalues, glvalues, and prvalues?

M3taSpl0itI was wondering if anyone could tell or explain some real life examples of xvalues, glvalues, and prvalues?. I have read a similar question : What are rvalues, lvalues, xvalues, glvalues, and prvalues? but I did not understand what everyone meant. Can anyone explain in what cases these values a...

@fredoverflow Danke
Bitte schön
Wait, there's no such a thing as partial specialization of function templates?
template<typename T, typename S> func(T, S) {}
template<typename S> func<int>(int, S) {}
Isn't it a partial specialization?
14:04
No, you can't partially specialize function templates
Most of the time you can use overload to achieve the same effect
@Jefffrey correct
But why?
Probably because most of the time you can use overload to achieve the same effect
or you can write a function template that dispatches to a class template with a static call() member function, and partially specialize that class template
So it's a gratuitous asymmetry?
23
Q: Why function template cannot be partially specialized?

NawazI know the language specification forbids partial specialization of function template. I would like to know the rationale why it forbids it? Are they not useful? template<typename T, typename U> void f() {} //allowed! template<> void f<int, char>() {} //allowed! template<typename T

14:07
it's an asymmetry, not sure how gratuitous
C++ :c++
14:46
Feminism!
1
A: disabled exceptions and noexcept()

ColumboThe noexcept-specification on swap solely tells the user where she can use swap without encountering an exception. The implementation is practically always equivalent to auto tmp = std::move(a); a = std::move(b); b = std::move(tmp); Which moves the objects around if, and only if, overload reso...

-2
Q: Find Minimum change to form sub array of K length of equal element

jaswinderahujaexample : N=5, K=3 5 5 8 10 10 output : 2 explanation: 8+2,10,10 now all elements are same and of length K=3 recursion can solve this problem


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