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19:00
@Andrey What can I say, breakups are always terrible.
or likely not that weird
@Puppy I guess you can. With push_back and pop_back, right?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ std::vector has back(), pop_back() and push_back(). What more do you need?
Easy enough
indeed
19:00
@Rapptz Because stacks are computer science.
@LucDanton With moves, you can do the much simpler return by value.
@Puppy not just moves, no—say it out loud!
@Rapptz no realloc guarantees or something
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ std::stack is just a wrapper around some other container (deque by default, but vector works fine too).
Where are you guys getting these guarantees
std::stack is a container adapter, it's just a wrapper.
19:01
@JerryCoffin Yup, just noticed
@LucDanton With nothrow moves, which IYAM are the only moves that should exist.
No implicit assumptions allowed!
user3790646
@fredoverflow thank you.
I thought moves were guaranteed to be nothrow
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Only non-throwing moves are guaranteed not to throw.
19:02
nope
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Unfortunately, they're not (even though that's the case much more often than not).
in many, but not all, stdlib contexts, throwing from a move is UB.
Otherwise you had that issue of "given a thrown exception, what's the state of the moved from and moved into objects"
more problematically, you can't do anything to try to restore the state.
since the move can throw.
having a throwing move takes exception safety out the window
using cool_id = int; is a type-alias-declaration according to Clang.
template<typename T> using ptr = T*; is an unexposed-declaration :v
So RIP me I guess
19:05
a what
@JerryCoffin Right, I recall now the transaction-like copy locally/operate/swap back dealios of the pre-C++11 times.
basically their "error: this is not supported" case.
Luckily the grammar for it is easy.
So time for tokens
unless there's array references involved :v
19:07
I mean the LHS.
I guess the reasoning is that top & pop are the minimal components with which you can reimplement a single pop_out, even one with strong guarantees, whereas you can’t the other way around.
@Puppy libclang doesn't expose that (unfortunately for me)
> Guy: Because WinAPI reads the bitmap into a "closed format", that you cannot directly access
> Bartek: You're wrong in that you can't access the raw image data
> Guy: I NEVER said you CANNOT access it, I just said it is was a bit complicated
oh libclang
19:07
guys. hold me or I'll choke this guy
well nobody cares about that ;p
@BartekBanachewicz :v
sure feels like it
> You never really read what I write.
for fucks sake
@LucDanton Even with C++11 it has advantages. For example, consider a pop for multithreading, where you want to be able to specify a timeout. If you pass a reference and return a bool to indicate success/failure, it's pretty trivial. The current interface is basically a nightmare by comparison.
19:09
@BartekBanachewicz really reading includes reading between the lines! :p
where do I file a bug report for libclang
man I hope I don't have to make a shitzilla account
#llvm
@BartekBanachewicz I prefer to have a girl hold me instead.
@melak47 no seriously this is the "4 answers for one Q guy"
> Also the other answers I have written have only gotten positive votes, (so far)
lol IRC?
19:10
@JerryCoffin It's a nightmare because it doesn't expose the operation as atomic. An optional<T> return would be fine.
MAYBE BECAUSE YOU DELETED THE DOWNVOTED ONES YOU DIPSHIT
grgargajhrgahjsgrajhs
@JerryCoffin I don’t really follow, since none of the interfaces take a timeout.
I think the only thing left is writing my own answer
@Puppy Yeah, that would work too.
@LucDanton Well, no--but consider something that adds another parameter for a timeout or (if you must) a separate function to set a timeout (but otherwise remains approximately as currently designed).
@BartekBanachewicz haha
19:13
@JerryCoffin You’re kinda asking me to consider a strawman. I don’t really disagree that other circumstances can lead to other forms of interface being more appropriate, yes.
@LucDanton Fair enough. Point is, however, that the interface is somewhat cleaner without timeouts getting involved, and much cleaner when they are.
@LucDanton Not exactly.
user1804599
I wish std::random_device were a global.
I think that what he is saying is that one interface lends itself much more readily to this kind of flexibility.
So flexible that a timeout arg comes out from nowhere :Þ
19:15
@elyse why
user1804599
Because why'd you ever want multiple instances?
explicit random_device(const std::string& token = /*implementation-defined*/ ); to use different generators
user1804599
Oh, I see.
user1804599
Didn't know about that.
this should be solved different though I think
19:17
can I drink carrot juice if I have stomach problems?
@elyse That's what people said about screens and printers.
(the "passing implementation defined token")
user1804599
@milleniumbug ask your doctor.
user1804599
IANAD
it's just fucking dumb to corral shit into being a singleton just because you don't see the need right now for more than one
19:18
@BartekBanachewicz you can, but I don't know what it's gonna do :/
@elyse wrong person
@BartekBanachewicz I see you are making new friends :3
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ I mean he sounds like a nice guy but he's one of those homegrown "low-level" hacking gamedev programmers
and I can't take those people giving out their terrible advice on main
@BartekBanachewicz Perhaps a link, so we can provide reinforcements? :-)
0
A: How to get the set of sprites from bmp image C++ Texture

Christian DyrnesliHere is some good info on the .bmp file: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/dd183391(v=vs.85).aspx If I remember correctly, I simply opened a file for reading and read sizeof(BITMAPFILEADER) bytes into a BITMAPFILEADER (on the heap), and then read sizeof(BITMAPINFOHEADER) ...

this is his fifth answer there:
0
A: How to get the set of sprites from bmp image C++ Texture

Christian DyrnesliIs the shared stuff very important? because if not then the rest is just normal Window GDI code, and if it will make me popular, I can help you with that.

I've moved the hugeass discussion to chat at least
> we don't really disagree
19:23
I always do manual memory management, I detest managed code. FOr example in java SOMETHING generates a shit load of overhead, and a good bet would be the garbage collector and that maybe all sorts of JVM "mommy" checking. I actually learned ANSI C first, where you need to use malloc(size) as the new operator is a C++ addition, and the pointer you got was a void* so you had to cast it, functionality for allocating (heap) memory should be an integral part of the language and not implemented as standard libaries. — Christian Dyrnesli 1 hour ago
lol
room topic changed to Lounge<C+plus>: No JVM "mommy" checking! [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++-faq]
@JerryCoffin I have to humbly admit I got so annoyed at the Lounge I forgot how helpful the teamwork is on SO :)
> For modern computer using smart pointers should not matter, no. But I actually prefer coding dirty low level, I like having to express myself so that stupid hardware can understand, so my objection to smart pointer is not entirely rational.
At least he admits it
19:25
@Rapptz lol
@Rapptz lol, what?! Is that real?
no
it's a good fake though
> But you just gave me an idea, I write my own smart pointer, that is both safe and satisfy my need for super primitive data.
right
#gamedev
...just like std::unique_ptr
19:28
except shitty.
Wow talk about paragraphs of shit.
@Rapptz /r/funny eh?
"JVM mommy checking" was good tho
r/unexpected
I'm not subscribed to r/funny.
19:29
> I know C/C++, Java, Pascal and various "toy languages". I vastly prefer C/C++ because it is the most low level high-level language I know of and also because most other modern languages use managed code, which I don't like.
> C/C++
C:\C++ on windows
7
> it is the most low level high-level language I know of
Well, I see what he means there
19:32
I downvoted you for recommending manual memory management. — Puppy 1 min ago
aww
cpx
cpx
@fredoverflow Interesting but how does it run the program without generating the executable code?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ he didn't say various other toy languages :)
@cpx My AST nodes have execute methods. If you speak DP, it's basically the Interpreter Pattern.
@melak47 As always, reading comprehension fails me
user1804599
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ lol
19:34
> if it will make me popular, I can help you with that.
asking for help in IRC is weird
it's like coming in here with a question
ahhhh
I'm not used to this
my boss is gonna ream me out tomorrow
@Rapptz Not really; they explicitly advertise the IRC channel as being for help.
user3790646
* le going to create fake facebook profile > * >>>> * le clicks on my ex girlfriend's profile * >>>> * stares at the profile for ten minutes reading and seeing what she posts *
user3790646
19:35
> * le closes facebook without sending message *
@Puppy still feels weird tbh
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz lol
how did I not think of this sooner, C: would be an awesome programming language! files called foo.c: look like a happy face, are probably illegal and are gonna break all IDE's error message parsers!
@Andrey le please stop using "le" style
le thanks
user1804599
le F# leurnêr
Ell
Ell
19:36
I'm attempting generic programming in c and it's just terrible.
user1804599
lol
user1804599
use C++ noob
even with C11?
@Ell What outcome were you expecting?
user3790646
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Okay *
Ell
Ell
19:37
I can only use C99
user1804599
@melak47 C11's _Generic is a stupid name for overloading.
@Ell Just use void* and memcpy everywhere, and you should be fine!
Ell
Ell
@fredoverflow that's what I'm doing
but I have a vector of pointers
Why is that star worthy? :P
C has vectors?
Ell
Ell
I wrote my own vector
user1804599
19:38
@fredoverflow Well, LLVM has vectors, and C compiles to LLVM!
lots of hookers?
#define cbrt(x) _Generic((x), long double: cbrtl, \
                              default: cbrt, \
                              float: cbrtf)(x)
wow, ugh
user1804599
Right, _Generic is a static type switch.
@Ell Why are you using C, anyway?
Internet is broken at home.
Ell
Ell
19:40
@fredoverflow I have to for university assignments
Do you have to parse HTML with regex in C?
Ell
Ell
No, thankfully
hmm
secretly program in C++, then compile to LLVM IR and decompile to C.
@JerryCoffin <3
that’s crazy
go Haskell -> C instead
19:41
so crazy it might just work!
Now go teach SFML guys to use std::shared_ptr too, please.
@fredoverflow C is a vector (that spreads the disease of bad coding practices).
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Soon™
lol sfml
reminds me of high school
@JerryCoffin oh, so that’s what pointers are then
19:43
How difficult is the patch process for LLVM?
I wish there was a boost multimedia library
what do you mean, patch process?
Somehow this inkdoc project is making me send PRs to every project ever.
It would be so well and carefully crafted I would probably cry tears of joy for weeks
PRs
user1804599
19:44
Oh hey, another school shooting. #gousa
Hm I don't have SVN
ah well
the hardest part is convincing the maintainers to accept it.
I think you can make a PR in Git.
does LLVM use svn?
lel
I wonder if they're strict with the libclang patches
I'm pretty sure the annoyances I experience are easily fixed because the C++ API does expose it.
@BartekBanachewicz Not... exactly.
19:46
@Rapptz AFAICT that’s how software dev goes
they're ex-SVN users migrating to git.
as for the details of that migration, not really sure
no breaking changes! (pls don't fix the bugs we rely on)
cpx
cpx
I want to program something based on mathematics probably I'd try a game!
19:48
@cpx uh
@cpx How about "Guess The Number"?
well I'll try finding info on their patch process
user1804599
@fredoverflow I'm in the tenth year and I can confirm.
user1804599
Although I'd make the class public and give it a private constructor.
19:49
oh god
mailing lists
:(
submit patch to mailing lists, if nobody complains make pr, if nobody accepts bitch in IRC
cpx
cpx
@fredoverflow Guess the random number returned by rand() function?
why do people still use these :<
@cpx I'm pretty sure that's what he meant
@cpx Yes. User enters a number, and computer answers "too low" or "too high" in a loop, until the number is correct.
And then you count the number of tries, and then you keep a highscore, and then you keep a top 10, and then you store the top 10 in a MongoDB database.
7
19:53
lol didn't expect that
user1804599
@fredoverflow I wrote that in COBOL once.
Firebase would do as well.
> So three logicians walk into a bar. The bartender says "Do all of you want a beer?".
The first one says "I don't know", the second "I don't know", the third one "Yes!"
8
Ah, short circuit logic :)
user1804599
19:54
@JohanLarsson :D
@JohanLarsson hehehe
user1804599
Logic jokes are always funny.
user1804599
Because linguistics are bad at logic.
to nerds like you :P
Ell
Ell
@JohanLarsson I don't get it :(
Oh wait
I get it now :D
19:56
nvm then
user1804599
I love the tooltip of this strip:
user1804599
why is rust "expression based"? Other things like passing references must be explicit, but for return values? yeah whatever we'll just take the last expression in this block/expression/thing
@melak47 That's not so uncommon, Scala does the same thing.
Ell
Ell
as does ruby
19:56
so does haskell
cpx
cpx
@fredoverflow Yes, I could try it. I think the interesting part is too low and too high.
user1804599
@melak47 allows easier composition
As does haskell and OCaml
user1804599
you can arbitrarily nest expressions
user1804599
can't do that with statements
19:57
@cpx I think this complicated problem can be solved with the < and > operators.
user1804599
f({
    g();
    h()
})
user1804599
works
@melak47 If you are in the habit of ending every block with an expression and not a statement, then presumably it’s purposeful.
Oh come on buys, don't be mean to the newbie
hey don't star it now I look like an annoying dick who laughs at newbies instead of helping them
19:58
If you're a room owner, you can cancel the stars.
@elyse that's so much clearer than f(||{ g(); return h(); })! or is it
Guys: agar.io
user1804599
@melak47 different thing
user1804599
and also not the point
Wait, why don't we try party mode?
cpx
cpx
19:59
Some graphics would be nice. I might turn it into an Android app (while I am learning) so that it can be played on phone.
user1804599
there is no reason to complicate the language by introducing statements when you already have expressions
lol does that still exist
user1804599
why should there be two ways to write conditionals?

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