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22:00
@nabijaczleweli Other way around. 'pass-by-pointer' is the programmer lingo 'fix' to 'pass-by-value in a settings with references in the Hoare sense and with side-effects', which is quite a mouthful.
Well, assuming by non-programmer you meant the theory people. If you didn’t, then I’m not sure what you meant.
@LucDanton By non-programmer I meant people, that have no (or little) idea about how things work (newly-born programmers)
@LucDanton Too much theory lingo for me. I can't comprehend that sentence
I think those would by confused by any use of 'pass', 'pointer', 'reference', or 'by'.
@nabijaczleweli Because one of the Java mantras is "no pointers". Pointers are the evil spawn of satan, and admitting that Java has or uses pointers is simply unacceptable (so don't you dare mention NullPointerException).
@LucDanton Newly-born, that is not 0yo, but people, that just recently began programming
@rightfold Exactly what Logo did.
22:06
Lol C+=
@JerryCoffin (and non-primitives are totally not pointers, not even a little bit)
@nabijaczleweli Double Plus un-Pointers, as a matter of fact!
@JerryCoffin Eh?
@nabijaczleweli Sir Tony Hoare invented the reference (same as a pointer), in fact calling the null reference his billion-dollar mistake (adjusted for inflation). Java is call-by-value (using compiler/language theory terminology). Java also has side-effects. 'Beware that Java is pass-by-pointer' puts those three things together.
2
thanks a lot! it would be very useful... — yufeng 6 hours ago
Yay for language barriers, I suppose
> (adjusted for inflation)
kek
22:08
@rightfold That's actually beautiful
@nabijaczleweli A subtle accusation that they're using Newspeak.
@JerryCoffin Oh, I get it now. Thanks
@Puppy: No, it isn't. Why would you construct an object unnecessarily when the caller already knows the value? — Benjamin Lindley 1 min ago
lol
@LucDanton Fun fact: If you adjust for inflation, the billion-dollar mistake of the null-reference probably causes an integer overflow ;)
@milleniumbug lol, even structs are pointers in his opinion. This guy is hilarious!
@JerryCoffin but... everything in Java is a pointer... am I missing something?
22:21
yes, a brain
@fredoverflow Everything is a pointer, if you're ASM enough :P
register
@caps Yes--the doublethink of Java's newspeak.
@JerryCoffin smh
So my cat was freaking out over some black string stuff :\
22:25
@caps "smh"?
@JerryCoffin So they know one of the foundations of their language is terrible, they just refuse to admit that it can be found anywhere in the language, let alone as a core part of it.
@JerryCoffin "shaking my head"
@rightfold now all we need is a go prefix.
@caps No--they know the foundation of the language is necessary, but since much of their marketing propaganda has been based on the notion that pointers are horrible, admitting that they're used (not to mentioned necessary) is simply unacceptable.
@fredoverflow I think that's "I wrote in x86 asm for a week, I know what I'm talking about"
22:32
@thecoshman Physicists have been freaking out over superstrings for decades now (and they must be black, since they're much too small to have a color).
@thecoshman yup. epic. Can I haz VHS tape now?
The vinyl Haskell library for records makes googling a special hell.
lol
@LucDanton Hey. They were first
Oh. Actually. There doesn't seem to be a record label called Haskell. Mmm. What did it remind of then?
dehaske.com Haske Verlag
Ugh shared_from_this deep down in call chain invoked from a constructor strikes again :F
22:42
> deep down in call chain invoked from a constructor
that doesn't make much sense to me.
@sehe have you broken every bone in an attempt to make it over fountain?
A constructor calls something, that something calls something, and 30 stack frames deeper I get a bad_weak_ptr from a shared_from_this call.
I hate these things.
inb4 then you should write Haskell
The chain will have started from the ctor. And you shouldn't be calling into procedural code from the ctor probably. Especially around brittle constructions like shared_from_this
captainhindsight.mp4
I find it not hard to avoid this pitfall. I'm really baffled by the fact that this could be "hidden deep down a call chain"
22:44
I thought I avoided it. :P
That's the entire point. :P
Trying very hard to imagine what /kind/ of "benign member function thing" could be called without me noticing "hmmm. maybe not from the constructor"
@Griwes If you have a strong case, you can show me the code
Nah, I'll deal with it... but probably later this week.
:D
a month later
Or later this month. :P
Busy times, the end of the semester
22:47
@Griwes shared_from_this seems pretty awful really.
I mean, I guess I don't see why anybody would ever use it in a sensible ownership situation
I thought it was called enable_shared_from_this
@Jefffrey The function is shared_from_this()
Oh, right.
enable_shared_from_this is a mixin that enables (sic!) shared_from_this
23:01
@Puppy asynch sessions (that can e.g. auto-nomically engage in more asynch IO or drop). It comes in handy
I don't know any other sane use case, though
I think that's a repost, but can't find it at a moment, so I'll let it slide.
Ell
Ell
@Jefffrey what the hell
story? :P
> Ubuntu causes girl to drop out of college
how the hell :L
@milleniumbug It's not about the video itself, it's about the guy that mocks it
Ah, it's a video response.
Nevermind then
@Jefffrey The part on 3:17 made me cringe
aaaaaaaaa
put it in correctly
23:14
Yeah, that one is gold
@Jefffrey Ubuntu is crap, at least for a development environment :-P ...
@πάνταῥεῖ u w0t m8
Good evening (night) everyone
@Blob ????
@πάνταῥεῖ I wish to express my disagreement with your statement.
23:22
I love this guy's sense of humor
@Blob I've been trying ubuntu for cross development, and it didn't work out that well. Suse linux works much better for me ;-)
@πάνταῥεῖ I don't care about cross development. I only care if it works on my machine.
^Well, well ....
@πάνταῥεῖ yup
@πάνταῥεῖ ubuntu is plenty fine for development here. What's your beef?
@sehe Just found it being clumsy with toolchain installations, and I especially don't like the UI.
23:26
it's docker containers all the way down.
"X is bad for dev" / "I dont like the UI"
Yeah. That's silly especially since Ubuntu has many flavors, UI-wise.
@sehe ^Sure that's not justified in general ...
Anyway, got rid of that silly ownership problem, and did that while I was supposed to be sleeping for an hour already. Yay for going to sleep waaaay too late.
Well, I don't like "the UI" either (assuming you mean Unity). That's as simple as apt-get install gnome-desktop or whatever it was
23:27
Or kubuntu-desktop. Or anything really.
Ew. Kubuntu never again.
Ell
Ell
How much would you pay for a pair of trainers?
That was before I got wise. And old
Though I'm not sure if kubuntu-desktop is still the name of that package after the switch to KDE5.
@Griwes That made everything worse!
23:28
@Ell are they cute? And do they do additional services?
@πάνταῥεῖ lol
I really don't understand all this hate for KDE. It's a pretty damn usable thing.
Ell
Ell
@sehe heh
Anyway, I guess I really should sleep now.
G'night.
Holly wood
The wood of Holly
@Ell I was told that ~130€ for a pair of shoes for running was to be expected. I shelled ~125€.
23:29
@Griwes KDE with Suse works pretty well, under Ubuntu, no!
Ell
Ell
@LucDanton Oh lordy
@Jefffrey fa-lalala-la, fala la-la
@sehe UH
Ell
Ell
I was hoping to spend about £25 :P
@Ell Well if you have tiny feet maybe…
23:30
@LucDanton oh. These kind of trainers
@Ell that's roughly what I normally pay at discount shops here in 'murica
That was obvious because we're always running in the lounge.
Lounge<running> gag
@TBohne for (decent) running shoes?
Ell
Ell
I don't need running shoes in particular
I pay ~€25-30 for my shoes.
Ell
Ell
just general... sports shoes?
23:32
@sehe This song is in my head nao
I like the question mark
It's so nice to be happy, shalala
@sehe I'm cheap, so probably not "decent"
@Ell Don't be cheap on shoes.
Shoes are fo life brah
My shoes are definitely not decent. And I only buy new ones when they fall apart
Ell
Ell
23:33
I don't consider £25 cheap is all
It is cheap. And I consider more not very well-spent, yes
Only with cloths I make a point to not buy the cheapest.
Thing is, I don't care a second about having cloths or what they look like. But with all the publicity about exploitation in "low-wage" countries, I cannot ignore that. So I feel bad if I buy the cheapest thing I can find.
(really need trousers now. My last pair of jeans showed a largish hole on the knee last week. I think I wore it work without noticing)
Will do this tomorrow, because I'm currently recycling a pair that should have been in the laundry
And with that. Time to sleep.
Night all
Ell
Ell
In the words of the flight of the conchords:
> They're turning kids into slaves
Just to make cheaper sneakers
But what's the real cost?
'Cause the sneakers don't seem that much cheaper
@sehe Night :)
That's such a nice meta question about friendliness and "moral" and stuff:
-16
Q: Down-vote or give advice in comments?

ashubuntuThe newcomers of this forum certainly do not want to be discouraged by downvotes cast against the early questions/answers in their childhood period. Even with the very elegant, well designed, helpful and descriptive tour provided by the forum guys, silly mistakes are most likely to be made by the...

> I heard about women in gaming, but what about gaming IN women?! Amirite guys? Hyooooo check out those titties, bout to level them bad boys up if you catch my drift.
LEVEL COMPLETED.
Hey. Tomorrow I have my C++ exam wish me luck :)

But, I have one doubt can i am reading more about this magic pointer
obj & obj::ref(){ *this; }

Is this an example of reference pointer?
Edit: reference-to-pointer
23:49
That's an example of undefined behaviour
Any Real time applications for reference-to-pointer which i can write as an example in exam?
2
I think
@androidplusios.design did you mean real world?
I'm assuming there's supposed to be a return statement?
yup real world @Borgleader
Ell
Ell
23:50
@Jefffrey no undefined behavior
Yaa there should be a return editing
Ell
Ell
Where is the undefined behaviour?
Let me fire up my standard super delux one sec
And it's not a static member function?
No this can't be used in static member function because
23:51
@androidplusios.design Nope, it's not a reference to a pointer, but dereferences this to return a reference to the instance.
Because I'd assume the compiler would flip its shit if you tried that with a static member function.
Good luck with the exam.
this itself is an address of the object that we create
Ell
Ell
@androidplusios.design look at the return type
And tell me what it is
@Ell return *this; ::::EDIT
@πάνταῥεῖ thanks
23:52
Yeah that just returns the object by reference.
Ell
Ell
The return type
Please give me some real world example so i can start preparing for exam. It's just 4 hours left for my exam :(
@androidplusios.design For whatever ;-) ...
As @πάνταῥεῖ said.
@Ell Can't find it right now. It's about not returning something when the return type is not void.
Ell
Ell
23:55
@Jefffrey oh I'm an idiot
Check this:
http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/as_operator
Ell
Ell
IRTA "return *this;"
As an example can i write in exam: It be used in some kind of server side script(possibly cgi) so it can return the information about user that has been created. He have very theory based exam :(
Yeah, we all did at first.
Ell
Ell
You are right Jefffrey, I apologise
23:56
10 marks to exams to explain this pointer....fuck you the hell sets up this paper. I would kill him
@androidplusios.design return *this used for chaining. func(a+=b). The operator+= returns a reference to a, so that func(a) is called after the a+=b
Realistically, it's almost never actually used though
@TBohne thanks :)
@androidplusios.design also, it's a reference to the object, not a reference to a pointer.
yup that is the correct @TBohne
bye

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