@EtiennedeMartel The only reason the lounge is not distracting is that, once I hit the lounge, there's nothing left it could distract me from. (I.e., in order to be distracting, it should leave room for something else to do to distract me from. The lounge doesn't really leave room for anything else, though.)
Anyways, since Boost.MultiArray wouldn't compile with VS and since I had no way to check why or how to solve it, I started to develop on my Debian vbox with Clang, and am now learning about makefiles.
On that point, anybody got some links to good make/makefile or Cmake tutorials/papers?
@Xeo I have yet to see a good cross-platform build system. Makefiles, however, aren't even close. Rather, they are on the opposite ("bad") end of the spectrum of possible build systems. CMake I have had to deal with briefly a few years ago. It's off the scale, far beyond makefiles.
@Xeo I have yet to see a good build system. Makefiles, however, aren't even close. Rather, they are on the opposite ("bad") end of the spectrum of possible build systems. CMake I have had to deal with briefly a few years ago. It's off the scale, far beyond makefiles.
@Maxpm I really, honestly, don't know. All the ones I have seen have surprising notches, glitches, and peculiarities, as soon as you deviate from the standard sample, driving you up the wall, and requiring hours or even days of trial-and-error for what should be simple tasks. What I know is that this should not be the state of the art.
15 years ago, I was using Borland C++ 5 (not C++ Builder, mind you), and I thought it's project management was extraordinarily good. But I really don't know what I would think about it today.
@sbi I don't even know what compiler I learned C++ on. It was some borland compiler or other that came with a book someone gave me. I used notepad for the first year, then I went to college. MSVC8 (2003) nearly made me cry with joy
@MooingDuck If it was about ten years ago, then BCC5.5 was a popular free compiler then. From today's POV it's support of templates was pathetic, though. (Notable was the "smiley bug".)
@MooingDuck VC7 was VS.NET. It wasn't any better than VC6, except it supported .NET. VS2003, aka VC7.1 was a gigantic leap forward in standard conformance.
At my first job in 2005 a project was started to create a makefile buildsystem that would replace the current Visual Studio and CodeWarrior project files. Seemed backwards back then, but it was a good move I think.
@Xeo If you have big projects, it totally sucks. When I build the solution I'm currently working on, there's several dozen C# projects. Only about 10% of them take longer than one sec to compile. Yet, when I compile for the first time, it takes several minutes, because the build system freezes the IDE for 20secs at a time between projects, doing god knows what.
@sbi Ah, yeah, the IDE itself has gotten damn slow with VS10. Sometimes totally unresponsive. However, I thought we were talking about the build system itself, though that may also be part of the problem
@Xeo Well, we do have a rather complicated build, with lots of stuff (like COM registration) plugged into the thing. Getting this to work across different Windows versions was a nightmare that took months to smooth out.
@sbi My company's project is current at 404 projects. Opening and closing visual studio takes 3-5 minutes. WHY DOES CLOSING (with no changes) TAKE 5 MINUTES?
@Xeo About four or five years ago I was at a company where they were looking for a cross-platform build system. After a good look at many of them, including Boos.Build, they decided for CMake. After a few weeks of twiddling it to fit the requirements, everybody involved loathed CMake ("an macro expansion tool on steroids"). But nobody, ever, contemplated checking out Boost.Build for a second time. (I wasn't closely involved in this.)
@Maxpm I think XCode builds a GUI on gdb. I remember in that one company the Mac guys coming to us and ask us to have a look at it in VS, if they needed to debug something nasty, because gdb was seriously limited when it came to templates and stuff.
I just figured I can kill off automatic currying to solve the issues between make_overload and the lazy-eval EDSL. Now looking for a nice syntax for it: make_overload(constrain(++arg1), constrain(arg1 + std::string { "foo" }))?
@MooingDuck Yikes. The only time I saw this was in a company where they checked in all the projects under the library the projects were based on, including all the resources, some of which were GB-sized videos. 20GB of a working copy. It took ages for SVN to check this out.
@MooingDuck The biggest project I have worked on had about that many .h files. Plus almost 2000 .cpp files. That was about 150kB of source code. It took an hour to build on a single core machine half a decade ago.
@robjb The first one is an array of char pointers. The second is a pointer to a char pointer. The first one implicitly decays to the second one. In any case, use std::vector<std::string>.
@EtiennedeMartel I might have laughed at that six weeks ago, but today I didn't even close my jacket when I came from work, because it was +3°C, which is about 10-15° warmer than what we had for the last few weeks. Now I can imagine that people consider -5° almost tropical. :)
@StackedCrooked Actually not. Mark Twain is known for a rather scalding review of German. The one positive thing he saw in it was that, once you know how to pronounce the letters (which is much more regular in German than in English), matching heard and written German or writing down what you hear is much easier than in English.
@sbi Yeah kind of. There is "de" which is equivalent to either "der" or "die" and "het" which is equivalent to "das". It's just as useless as the French noun gender.
@sbi Oh, and yes, nouns are either male of female. I almost forgot. It's rarely relevant in practice.
@sbi When referring to a broken chair we have to either say "He is broken" or "She is broken". I have no clue which one is correct, so I say "This chair is broken", just like all Flemish and Dutch people do.
@StackedCrooked Oh, It's very relevant in German. (It's one of the things Scott keeps nagging me about. "Why is this word female? And that male? That makes no sense!")
@StackedCrooked One of Scott's pet peeves was when he learned that the German word for "clitoris" (we use the Latin word, too, but there also is a German word) is male. He almost cracked over it. :) Of course, there's a linguistic explanation, but that doesn't change the fact that it's funny to foreigner.