> Iterators can also have singular values that are not associated with any sequence. [ *Example*: After the declaration of an uninitialized pointer x (as with int* x;), x must always be assumed to have a singular value of a pointer. — *end example* ]
@Columbo Hmm, if that value is discarded, why should any decent compiler implementation actually try to do the dereferencing (side effects guaranteed perhaps). I well accept that it's UB anyway.
@MartinJames You can, of course, dereference a pointer that's been initialized with 0. The result is undefined behavior though. If it does something useful on your particular system, that's fine--but you can't count on it being portable.
@πάνταῥεῖ I don't see how nullptr affects any of this. Its intent is about type-safety (you can't accidentally assign it to an int, for example).
@milleniumbug Doesn't necessarily, but in this case he's pretty clearly depending on being able to force a specific address into a pointer, which you'd usually do by converting from some integer.
@Columbo There are (a few) circumstances under which it's allowed, but the things he's (apparently) trying to do--read or write that location, will give UB.
@JerryCoffin The evaluation of the indirection takes place. It makes no sense whatsoever for an evaluation withintypeid to have defined behavior, and an evaluation on its own within no further context to be undefined. It just doesn't.
@πάνταῥεῖ Initializing a pointer from nullptr is guaranteed to give a null pointer, just initializing a pointer from an integer constant with the value 0 does.
@Columbo And yet we still have §5.3.1/1 saying: "the expression to which it is applied shall be a pointer to an object type, or a pointer to a function type...", and since that's clearly being violated, the only part that's open to any real question is whether it's UB, or requires a diagnostic (and I don't think a diagnostic is required).
@Columbo You can argue that it's nonsensical all you want--but it's clearly normative, and you keep trying to argue in favor of the idea that you can violate it and still get defined behavior just because you don't like it. The fact that the defect report was filed 15+ years ago, and the standard remains the same gives a pretty solid indication of how urgently the committee is making changes to the standard based on that DR (i.e., pretty much ignoring it completely).
This doesn't return a distribution! It returns a single value from a distribution (that is subsequently forgotten, so subsequent calls don't even have the distribution) — sehe9 mins ago
In calculus, and more generally in mathematical analysis, integration by parts is a theorem that relates the integral of a product of functions to the integral of their derivative and antiderivative. It is frequently used to transform the antiderivative of a product of functions into an antiderivative for which a solution can be more easily found. The rule can be derived in one line simply by integrating the product rule of differentiation.
If u = u(x) and du = u′(x) dx, while v = v(x) and dv = v′(x) dx, then integration by parts states that:
or more compactly:
More general formulations o...
@JerryCoffin Okay, I don't agree with one part of your argumentation. 'pointer to an object type' definitely talks about the type - because if it did not, the standard would not specify whether dereferencing a void pointer is even valid. void* could point to an int object in memory. The second part of that sentence does indicate that the pointee must be a valid object (or function), though, so the result is not affected, I guess.
@Columbo There's separate language talking about dereferencing a pointer to an incomplete type (which void is), and it specifically says that only incomplete types other than void can be dereferenced, and then in ways that don't do an rvalue conversion on the result (mostly to initialize a reference).
@AlexM. Mhhhm, mumble, grumble, without cheeze it sounds a bit boring and too low fat (cholesterine) for my actual needs. Well, you could pimp it at home ;-) ...
@JerryCoffin Alrighty, I still am 99% sure the type is meant by "pointer to an object type", i.e. "pointer to (an object type)". Should we ask on std-discussion, perhaps?
@milleniumbug while you're awake... I gave the typedef int assert_message[(expr) ? 1 : -1] a try. unfortunately, it stops mentioning the name of the typedef as soon as the "static assert" is in a template function. and it doesn't mention the macro at all :/
static_assert.cpp: In function ‘void test(T) [with T = double]’:
static_assert.cpp:22: instantiated from here
static_assert.cpp:16: error: creating array with negative size (‘-0x00000000000000001’)
@melak47 This is an oft-used trick in pre-c++11 compilers to induce compilation errors. Find the immediate triggering context for the actual assert message
@sehe already tried. what I don't like about their approach is that the error "message" appears after the scope of the error. which gets huge with templates.
@milleniumbug as long as either the context is simple (no templates) or the assert condition is simple (false instead of some traits) the name is in the error message :/
> The large calorie, kilogram calorie, dietary calorie, nutritionist's calorie, nutritional calorie, Calorie (capital C)[2] or food calorie (symbol: Cal) is approximately the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one kilogram of water by one degree Celsius. The large calorie is thus equal to 1000 small calories or one kilocalorie (symbol: kcal).
@milleniumbug What Boost does, I believe, is make the immediately triggering context very obvious and including ****************static assertion failed****************
this seems to work well enough on this particular gcc version though. I have to predefine all the errors, sort of like compile time exceptions :p but I can live with that
//output on g++ 4.1.2
static_assert.cpp: In function ‘void test(T) [with T = double]’:
static_assert.cpp:29: instantiated from here
static_assert.cpp:23: error: no matching function for call to ‘expected_int_type::assertion_failed(int)’
@buttifulbuttefly Specifically, I cannot remember the last time validity of nullptr deref (sic: indirection through nullptr of course) was discussed. The last time a similar thing popped up was very briefly, I think, when Puppy dismissed dereferencing end() iterators? And that was a ~4 post exchange.
@buttifulbuttefly Yeah, yeah. Deleted that question now. I just wanted to give it a better anchor, as at what it was discussed before. A duplicate anyway was convincing.