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00:01
@kfmfe04 Hmm. Really, I need to use a look behind
C++11's u8string doesn't obviate the need for something like utf8-cpp does it
Also, I'm not C++ing
what do yo mean?
Google Search
The app is currently unreachable.
> The only regex engines that allow you to use a full regular expression inside lookbehind, including infinite repetition, are the JGsoft engine and the .NET framework RegEx classes.
:O PowerGrep is £100 for the single user licence
00:17
Wait, C++11 doesn't have u8string then?
If you want Unicode support, don't count on C++ standard.
@KianMayne What do you need lookbehind for?
@CatPlusPlus I basically want to change a load of instances of name="appointment[\w*" to name="appointment[\w*]"
So what's the problem?
00:21
Why not match name="appointment[\w*
@SethCarnegie But then how to I edit the original string?
:%s/\(name="appointment\[\w*\)"/\1]"/
Can someone guide me through making a .so for a library?
@CatPlusPlus What is the %?
'Entire file' range.
00:26
OK :)
@NoviceCoding What toolchain?
yeah I think I asked in the wrong place... its in regards to this ta-lib.org/hdr_dw.html but its C not C++ (I think)
Im just trying to get an .so that I can use in python
@LucDanton ^
Ah well I'm not familiar with that.
thanks anyway
@NoviceCoding iirc that library comes with its own makefiles - you should be able to tweak the build to create a dynamic lib
00:36
It does, the instructions here (2.3.2) ta-lib.org/d_api/d_api.html say how to compile it, I guess I can look into the makefiles see if I can find anything relevent
@NoviceCoding - I just checked my own build
./src/.libs/libta_lib.so.0.0.0: ELF 64-bit LSB shared object, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, not stripped
thing is I've never done this before so I dont really know what .a,.o,.c,.h, etc files are lol
what kind of programming experience do you have?
php (main)/ python (not main)
k - scripting languages - but maybe that lib has python wrappers by now (it's been around for so long)
00:39
they do, its in swig, cant figure that out either (very little google results, what does exists is issues people have with it)
documentation is kinda crappy for a fairly popular language...
so do you remember how you got it to .so as appose to .a?
you mean documentation for ta-lib? I think it was written/supported by one guy - besides, for most of api, you don't really need documentation
I read that 'fPIC' flag should be used to make it "movable"
are you building on a *nix machine or Windows?
Mac lion so nix
try a standard build first, maybe it will produce what you need...
I don't think I did anything special to get the .so because I actually prefer .a
00:43
all I did was download it, configure, make, make install, got .a's
is that what you mean by a "standard build"?
did you check in the src/.libs directory?
yes, by standard, I mean ./configure && make
the ones in .lib: libta_lib.0.0.0.dylib libta_lib.0.dylib libta_lib.a libta_lib.dylib libta_lib.‌​la libta_lib.lai
same as the ones in /usr/local/lib
ill try again
.dylib is OSX's .so, I believe
do an ls -ltr on that directory - two of them should be big - the .a and the .dylib
oh really? it is it seems
.a is 2.8 mb, the 0.0.0.dylib is 1mb
yup - .dylib is what you want, if you want the .so
.dylib = dynamic library
.a = static library
00:50
thank seems like it worked, just gotta figure this out now:
OSError: dlopen(libta_lib.dylib, 6): no suitable image found. Did find:
libta_lib.dylib: mach-o, but wrong architecture
/usr/local/lib/libta_lib.dylib: mach-o, but wrong architecture
ouch
give me a minute - I'll try building it on my box
ill try it again on mine
thanks for this btw
@NoviceCoding mine says:
libta_lib.0.0.0.dylib: Mach-O 64-bit dynamically linked shared library x86_64
when I type file libta_lib.0.0.0.dylib
wait how can I test it outside of ctypes?
might be a ctypes issue
00:54
@NoviceCoding what do you mean ctypes? from a language besides C?
I am using the .so to port into python via ctypes
kinda like a language bridge
ah - it's glue - I don't have experience in python so you will have to ask someone else
how did you check it?
most likely, it will require a lot of python coding and/or compiling a C API that python likes
I wanna make sure the compile is fine first
00:56
does your file libta_lib.0.0.0.dylib say

libta_lib.0.0.0.dylib: Mach-O 64-bit dynamically linked shared library x86_64
libta_lib.0.0.0.dylib: Mach-O 64-bit dynamically linked shared library x86_64
yup
you should be ok
I've compiled and run that lib against a statically linked C program without problems
thanks alot for the help!
np - gl
@Xeo are you doing tests on clang?
Xeo
Xeo
Hm?
01:00
haha - nm - that was a link!
gawd I love git's tags - now I can mark exactly where certain tests have passed...
user406009
01:20
Just wondering, what unit testing frameworks are you guys using for c++?
Xeo
Xeo
Great... I can't compile libc++ anymore. -.-
googletest for me
01:35
@kfmfe04 got it working, question: anyway I could list the function names within the .dylib file?
not sure what the structuring would be like, I just want to call TA_SMA
@NoviceCoding gj - you can try running ldd on the .dylib
but the best way is to look at the documentation for TA_SMA
it's not very good on the website, but it's enough for you to tell what args to pass it
the hard part is actually getting used to his conventions
2
Q: ctypes - Beginner

spentakI have the task of "wrapping" a c library into a python class. The docs are incredibly vague on this matter. It seems they expect only advanced python users would implement ctypes. Well i'm a beginner in python and need help. Some step by step help would be wonderful. So I have my c library....

didnt hit enter my bad
@NoviceCoding looks straight-forward, but the example doesn't show any parameter passing or passing of function results
I wanted to ask: are the functions that direct or are they built into a class?
they are direct C calls - no classes
user406009
01:42
Well you can emulate classes in C pretty easily.
@EthanSteinberg true - but he's going in the other direction C -> Python
or actually, Python -> C
whoa looks like we have something brb. :)
@kfmfe04 sorry for this many questions but can you tell me the difference between the similar ones listed here pastebin.com/LhdEV5UB?
@NoviceCoding those are arguments to the function
for example,
TA_ATR is the function
I forget what FramePP and FramePPLB are, but the rest are definitely arguments to the function
you need to read the documentation to get any further
it's a bit tricky because he abstracts the parameters to e function inside Inputs
01:50
yeah I noticed that. seems like when you call the function the output is a variable of the function as well
if thats what your talking about
actually, the output will be an entire vector of doubles or floats (I forget)
sometimes, it's multiple vectors
02:15
I hate triple bugs.
@kfmfe04 last thing: TA_MA( int startIdx,
int endIdx,
const double inReal[],
int optInTimePeriod,
TA_MAType optInMAType,
int *outBegIdx,
int *outNbElement,
double outReal[] );
why is outReal a function paramter? when its the output
thats what I was talking about earlier
@NoviceCoding iirc, the actual return value is reserved for some kind of status (whether the function call was ok or not), so the double outReal[] is effectively a C trick for returning another value besides the status
so I dont have to pass anything into it?
I don't mean to hijack the conversation, but does anyone know off the top of their head if std::string's length() method spits out a stored integer (i.e. O(1)) or does it walk through and count it (i.e. O(n)). I couldn't find it anywhere in the documentation or on SO.
@advs89 Pretty much every reference will tell you that it's O(1), which is in fact the case for all standard containers.
02:28
@NoviceCoding iirc, you have to preallocate outReal, but you should check the documentation... ...all the arguments you see there must be passed in from Python or your glue code
@Kerrek SB: thanks. That's what I was thinking, but it's been awhile since I've done anything in C++ and I wasn't sure.
I knew strlen with c-strings is O(n), and just wanted to be sure that using an std string would remedy that
@kfmfe04 you're talking about this: tadoc.org right?
if it's C, then no surprise that it's ugly, obfuscated code
@NoviceCoding that's for lookups of the functions, there's another doc describing coding conventions
02:34
yes, that's it
is there a way to get g++ -E only expand non-system includes ?
this is making me unhappy: valgrind appears to be telling me that 4.6.1 is not ready to handle std::map< std::string, std::unique_ptr< T >> - need to verify
my mini-test program passes, but I get lost blocks during a longer run
user406009
03:14
http://goldns.ru/cppmap-2012.png is sorta funny.
Especially the imagery of the c++ standard invading boost and taking over.
hehehe - pure virtual river
ruins of std::auto_ptr
user406009
And the concepts shipwreck.
ya - I just saw that - rofl
user406009
All it's missing is the looming deserted tower of modules.
user406009
I don't think that idea has gone anywhere.
03:20
wtf is std::rope? lol
any relation to std::thread?
Xeo
Xeo
@EthanSteinberg It has. There's a revision 6 of the modules proposal
"programmers eat each other here"
Xeo
Xeo
@kfmfe04 There is no std::rope, the SGI STL has rope though. It's basically a string class optimized for concatenating and splitting strings
@Xeo ic - interesting
I like splitting strings
@EthanSteinberg it's a nice poster - will prolly print it out later for fun
Xeo
Xeo
@EthanSteinberg Btw r6 of the proposal was sent out this january. :)
user406009
03:24
Yeah saw the date on the top. Looks really interesting.
Xeo
Xeo
Yep. I can see the problems with templates and instantiating and stuff though
cppmap-2012.png as my desktop on one monitor
03:53
very odd... ...all my leaks are inside std::map<> calling new, according to valgrind
usually this is due to missing virtual destructors, but I can't seem to find any
maybe it's time to take some Zzzz's
user406009
@Xeo, seeing your starred comment on the right, you do realize boost does have an immutable functional like container framework?
user406009
It's that boost::fusion thing.
Xeo
Xeo
@EthanSteinberg That's more like glueing templates and runtime, non?
user406009
Yeah but it does it in an immutable functional style way.
user406009
You want to mutate a list, you wrap that list in a function that alters the result as it is accessed.
04:06
oh, Absolutely!
woohoo - found my *ucking memory leak - gotta love valgrind
Xeo
Xeo
04:29
@EthanSteinberg Still, that can be very annoying. For example, manually iterating over a container. I think the iterators themselves would benefit much from being mutable. Further, you always have to specify the exact number of elements for every sequence
05:15
gnu make gurus in the room?
anyone knows of a way to run a command for each token in make? something like $(foreach X,$(XS),operate_on $(X)) where operate_on is a shell command taking one argument?
I know I can say $(foreach X,$(XS),operate_on $(X);) but that is not as easy to debug:
operate_on a; operate_on b; operate_on c
output for a
output for b
output for c
05:42
Is there a something like a make_vector function? E.g. std::vector<std::string> notes = make_vector("do", "re", "mi");
what's wrong with std::vector<std::string> notes = { "do", "re", "mi" } ?
In other news:
struct s {
    s(int& n) : n(n) { }
    void f() const { ++n }
private:
    int& n;
};

void g()
{
    int x = 4;
    s(x)       // s_obj.n == 4
        .f();  // s_obj.n == 5
}
why is this?
user406009
Oops, saw the const there.
breaking news: reference members are not part of the object.
05:57
I think, "referenced objects" are not part of the objects... but reference itself - is..
user406009
Well references as class members usually does not work that well anyways.
user406009
But that is still a large wtf.
my parent's tricked me. :(
you are not changing reference in f(), you are changing object it references. n does not change, x does change through n... x is not part of s, so compiler does not see anything wrong...
they said they were going to Dubai on a 'business trip'. Turns out they are in some holiday resort for the weekend. :(
4
 
3 hours later…
Als
Als
09:26
hello @awoodland
@Als hi
Als
Als
You were asking something about Hindi, the other day, Any problems?
@Als there was an interesting comment on a post where it seemed likely it was an insult, but I couldn't find a translation for it
hang on
Xeo
Xeo
@wilhelmtell breaking news: the C++FQA is hate-speech. :)
so this might be a dumb question but im in the middle of doing homework and it wants me to make a prototype of istream& readNumber(istream&); does that look right? You wouldn't be able to do that would you?
Als
Als
09:32
@HowdyMcGee: Where is your type?
@Als "tari to hu joi laish" was the comment - I was curious what it meant, the context implied it probably wasn't friendly...
yeah that's what I mean, it didn't look right. I would assume it would be void but in my homework it says make a prototype of that
Als
Als
@awoodland: That is not Hindi
i guess i'll just make it void and see how it runs that way
Als
Als
@awoodland: Or I guess the one who made the comment couldnt write it properly. but as far as I can tell I can't make sense of it, if that is Hindi
@HowdyMcGee: I don't exactly know/understand what you are trying to do.
09:34
@Als It was a comment in the middle of stackoverflow.com/questions/9037635/…
@Als yeah me neither, nvm
Als
Als
@awoodland: Can't make any sense of it :) some lunatic, hate it
@awoodland: Any ideas why this does not compile? ideone.com/aUq8M
@Als custom_deleter needs to take a pointer
i.e. int custom_deleter(int *) for shared_ptr<int>
Als
Als
@awoodland: Oh yes! Darn, I missed it and I was looking hard at the error hard and it was just maningless! too many arguments totally unrelevant
@Als it did say "too many arguments to function", but unless you knew that was what it's doing it doesn't make much sense
Als
Als
09:49
@awoodland: Shouldn't it say too less arguments to the function
it's only seeing the problem when it tries to call your custom_deleter() as custom_deleter(pointer)
Als
Als
I was wondering if it is somewhat different in C++0x, i just got one installed and so was checking.
@awoodland: Yes, templates....
and then it's trying to put 1 thing into the space available for 0 things so the "too many arguments" is quite accurate :)
I bet clang has a better error
Als
Als
@awoodland: Perhaps, clang has better, I don't have one to check, but gcc is like the worst as it seems, to make anything out of an template error, you might end up tracing how all those templates actually work!
which is inconvenient from an end user perspective.
10:32
@KerrekSB Did you ever get Boost.TR1 to work?
1
A: Errors with unordered_map in C++?

PotatoswatterGCC and MSVC define the TR1 extensions in different ways, because the TR1 standard is vague about how it should be supplied to the user. It simply specifies that there should be some compiler option to activate TR1. Unlike MSVC, GCC puts the headers in a TR1 subdirectory. There are two ways to a...

10:57
1
Q: overloading operator<< for arrays

FredOverflowToday I thought it would be a nice idea to overload operator<< for C style arrays: template<typename T, size_t N> std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, T(&a)[N]) { os << '{' << a[0]; for (size_t i = 1; i < N; ++i) { os <<...

@KianMayne 127.0.0.1 sweet 127.0.0.1
If there was space for a 6th tag, it should be .
Nooooo, @Potatoswatter smashed my dreams with his answer :(
1
A: overloading operator<< for arrays

PotatoswatterUnfortunately, this is fundamentally illegal. Operators can only be overloaded for user-defined types. §13.5/6: An operator function shall either be a non-static member function or be a non-member function and have at least one parameter whose type is a class, a reference to a class, an enume...

Sorry. The good news is, I knew the answer offhand and it only took me a minute :)
Oh, Mat's comment gives me new hope :)
Woops, but sorry, still not OK.
11:08
@Potatoswatter the dots on your "please wait..." aren't animated. How will I know you've not frozen?
Hmm, no, since you're not inserting it into std::. Since your overload is not in an associated namespace, it really shouldn't affect printing a string. Hmmmmmm.
@Potatoswatter I wondered if it fell foul of some std:: rule somehow, but couldn't see anything it obviously broke
@awoodland No guarantee of that. Funny that you mention it, because my connection is so bad that I didn't know if that comment even posted.
@Potatoswatter String literals have no names. Why do you think namespaces matter?
@FredOverflow std::ostream is in std::
By the way, what compiler and version are you using?
11:14
g++ 4.6.1
hi, can somebody give a help here? [stackoverflow.com/questions/9051524/…
i cant realize what da fuq is with this font))
@FredOverflow What's happening is that overload resolution finds both your overload (because it's in scope at the call site) and the member function. So overload resolution fails. But the error you're getting indeed makes no sense.
@FredOverflow Haha
0
Q: getchar_unlocked( ) VS scanf() VS cin

AryaWhat is the differnce among these three input functions in programming language. Do they input in different ways from each other? 1.getchar_unlocked() #define getcx getchar_unlocked inline void inp( int &n ) { n=0; int ch=getcx();int sign=1; while( ch < '0' || ch > '...

is this a dumb question?
11:30
@FredOverflow: Sorry for the alarm, you're good to go :)
@Potatoswatter What do you mean, good to go? No UB after all?
Why does VBA suck so much?
You can't do TextBox.Text.Length?!
@FredOverflow Yeah, no UB, nothing illegal, no compiler bug.
11:47
@KianMayne What is VBA? Variable Bength Arrays?
@FredOverflow Haha Visual Basic for Applications (basically as bad as VB6 was)
I don't think we have ever discussed VBA here. At least not on a regular basis. Probably because nobody is defending it :)
@FredOverflow It's a scar on the face of programming. It has a hand in the fact Office STILL uses COM stuff and that's introduced variant types in .Net
@Potatoswatter awesome :)
-2
Q: What is O(...) and how do I calculate it?

user828584I've seen some questions here and on SO talking about the most efficient way to find or sort this or that. The questions usually talk about the efficiency of a certain algorithms in terms of O(...). As a wannabe-programmer, I would like to start learning how to program algorithmically. So, what...

I think we should reopen and vote to close as duplicate of:
556
Q: Plain English explanation of Big O

Arec BarrwinWhat is a plain English explanation of Big O? With as little formal definition as possible and simple mathematics.

@FredOverflow that's a cross-site dupe though so we can't do that can we?
11:56
@awoodland Damn, you're right, doesn't work :(
(and I don't have voting powers on programmres so I can't help there either)
> The duplicate question must exist on Programmers
it doesn't even work for facebook.stackoverflow.com on stackoverflow.com which is a tad silly
So we should vote to move to SO and then close as duplicate :)
@FredOverflow or just edit in the possible duplicate link manually
I think that'd be pretty reasonable for this - there's no denying the dupeness and it's the simplest way of getting the desired result without having to play ping-pong with the Q
12:00
Woo I'm in the Wunderkit beta :D
@awoodland Good idea, although it feels like cheating to me ;)
-2
Q: What is O(...) and how do I calculate it?

user828584 Possible Duplicate: Plain English explanation of Big O I've seen some questions here and on SO talking about the most efficient way to find or sort this or that. The questions usually talk about the efficiency of a certain algorithms in terms of O(...). As a wannabe-programmer, I would...

@FredOverflow I think that is currently the state of the art in cross-site dupes and I don't see how anyone could possibly complain about something that clearly makes the site a better place
I think O(…) is a class of algorithms. O(…) = O(tl;dr)
@Potatoswatter wut?
@Potatoswatter it's clearly va_args for O
although it's not legal because there's no start
12:06
@FredOverflow The class of algorithms I don't have time to understand, much less analyze.
Oh, because of the literal ... in the question, got it.
@Potatoswatter Try editing the question and see if you find the joke I hid ;)
Damn it. People do in fact get mercury poisoning by eating fish daily. I need to change my diet.
All fish, or just fish from a specific region?
@FredOverflow Well, so far I just have anecdotes about Hollywood actors who ate sushi every day.
Tuna sashimi is maybe the most mercury for your dollar.
@Potatoswatter to be fair holywood actors thing the world was made by aliens
12:11
Sushi is raw fish, I'm surprised they didn't get any other poisonings ;)
@awoodland Yeah, but when they get sick and go to a real doctor, it tends to be a competent one.
Also, belief in aliens can be caused by mercury poisoning.
isn't sushi technically the rice anyway?
@Potatoswatter Maybe the aliens put the mercury in their fish?
@awoodland There was an intense discussion here recently about that. I think we agreed that the word refers to dishes made with a particular kind of rice.
If you're a Hollywood star, getting sushi implies probably eating some raw tuna too.
But yes, the lame kind of sushi which is only eggs, cucumber, and spam should only present the risk of high cholesterol.
@FredOverflow My infallible Wikiresearch seems to indicate that Chinese PVC factories are to blame, in that they dump mercury directly into the Sea of Japan. May be a kind of revenge, but it must kill a lot of Chinese too.
biological fish warfare
12:32
24 mins ago, by Potatoswatter
Damn it. People do in fact get mercury poisoning by eating fish daily. I need to change my diet.
@Potatoswatter you eat fish daily?
@IntermediateHacker Yes, canned tuna. Well, not every day actually, but always in 15-oz servings which is quite a bit.
meh, why would a defined C function not show it's definition when you debug into it?
it only shows the declaration, even though I have the source definition
12:49
Can I have private member functions in an aggregate?
The C++ programming language allows programmers to separate program-specific datatypes through the use of classes. Classes define types of data structures and the functions that operate on those data structures. Instances of these datatypes are known as objects and can contain member variables, constants, member functions, and overloaded operators defined by the programmer. Syntactically, classes are extensions of the C struct, which cannot contain functions or overloaded operators. Differences between struct and classes in C++ In C++, a structure is a class defined with the struct keywo...
@FredOverflow Yes. The restriction only applies to non-static data members.
13:10
@Potatoswatter Good. I was looking at an old boost::array clone of mine and it had a private helper method.
@ddacot You might try programmers.se
This is not really a programming question. Also check ClearType settings.
@Potatoswatter I made a macro like #include TR1INCLUDE(memory) that gets the right inclusion depending on some global macro value.
@ddacot From googling a bit, it seems quite hard to change the font.
13:14
@CatPlusPlus whatever, it has something in common...
#define QUOTE(arg) <arg>

#ifdef HAVE_TR1_SUBDIR
#  define TR1IFY(arg) tr1/arg
#else
#  define TR1IFY(arg) arg
#endif

#define TR1INCLUDE(arg) QUOTE(TR1IFY(arg))
Not really, no.
By the way, I thought Netbeans was a Java IDE?
@KerrekSB Yeah, I came to the same conclusion as you. But what about Boost?
@FredOverflow yea, but there is one for c++
13:15
@Potatoswatter What's the exact question?
@KerrekSB Eh, never mind. There was a link to a question after the message that notified you. It's not my question, I provided an answer and soon after found yours.
@FredOverflow i had put already the font in the font list, but it doesnt "applies" in the editor..
@Potatoswatter I saw the question, but I don't quite understand the problem with Boost
@ddacot Just install Visual Studio express and be done with it? ;)
Never mind, I'm not very clear-minded just now. I'd have to look at it again later.
13:18
@FredOverflow don't have so much memory space..
@FredOverflow netbeans suites pretty cool...
Okay, then how about Code::Blocks?
@KerrekSB Yeah… never mind. I guess I might care more if I had to make some TR1 code cross-compatible. It's unfortunate that both compilers are nonconformant… GCC because there's no proper switch to enable TR1, and MSVC because there's no proper way to disable it.
From en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syphilis: "Thus, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends a long-term, mutually monogamous relationship with an uninfected partner and the avoidance of substances such as alcohol and other drugs that increase risky sexual behavior."
netbeans > code::blocks ... i think.

I've read some articles...
@ddacot Aren't you scraping the bottom of the barrel?
@Potatoswatter i think no.
13:22
Yeah… according to the CDC, beer causes syphilis.
@ddacot Why not try Eclipse, Visual Studio, XCode? Whatever's most popular on your platform?
5 mins ago, by ddacot
@FredOverflow don't have so much memory space..
@Potatoswatter Eclipse, slows as hell. Visual Studio don have so much memory space. XCode - didn't try. Why not to solve the current problem with netbeans... , anyway , i wil take a look at XCode ..
@ddacot: What kind of machine are you using? Not to be snotty, but I'm not exactly wealthy, and memory is really cheap these days.
(Also, XCode only runs on Mac, so that's probably not an option if VS is.)
@Potatoswatter acer, windows xp sp3, my c:\ is full , if i could install vs on d:\ ))
@ddacot hard disk != memory in normal parlance
13:30
@ddacot What year was it made? How much RAM does it have, and how much can it hold?
@Potatoswatter da fuq, really matters?
@Potatoswatter Hm, I don't know... in GCC, the TR1 doesn't get in the way at least. It's just a library.
I thought that was relatively clean.
@KerrekSB The first solution from my answer should work though, with -isystem. The problem is that the TR1 libraries expect to be able to include the standard ones with the same names merely by omitting tr1/.
@ddacot You said you don't have enough memory, and that Java is slow, so this seems relevant.
@Potatoswatter memory space, not RAM ..
nevermind, i would like to solve the problem with netbeans
If memory serves, GCC furthermore has a special preprocessor feature like #include_next which solves exactly that problem — if the include would be circular, it searches other paths instead.
@ddacot Uh, there's only one thing I know of that can fill a modern hard drive, and it ain't header files.
13:43
@Potatoswatter Surely that's an implementation detail of the particular TR1 implementation?
@KerrekSB TR1 §1.3/4: "4 It is recommended either that additional declarations in standard headers be protected with a macro that is not defined by default, or else that all extended headers, including both new headers and parallel versions of standard headers with nonstandard declarations, be placed in a separate directory that is not part of the default search path."
This "recommendation" is necessary for portable code, and it's violated by GCC and MSVC.
@Potatoswatter Oh OK. I didn't know that that was specified. Cool.
Is there a bug report?
@KerrekSB Not that I know of, I was thinking of writing one.
Go ahead. That sounds worthwhile.
If you want to do it, refer to the preprocessor manual for that obscure feature.
13:48
@Potatoswatter I'm not too bothered, though...
Ooh, I actually remembered correctly, it is called #include_next!
Hmm, GCC is probably abiding by the letter of the law there, it's just that the "parallel headers" cease to work if the default search path is changed.
gotta love vbox - compiling on OSX and Ubuntu at the same time - modern-day CPUs are just amazing...
I used to buy cheap $400-500 boxes as linux compile servers for many years now - but with vbox, I don't feel the need to buy those boxes any more...
14:13
Trouble is, single-threaded compilation of heavily templated code is still slow!
@Potatoswatter true - that's one of the reasons why i use templates sparingly
Als
Als
14:33
oh hello @kfmfe04
@Als good evening
Als
Als
good evening :)
oh it's evening for you too, seems we are in the same timezone
@KerrekSB: Long time no see eh

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