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12:00
@DeadMG nein.
seems to be to be an instant violation of SRP and a Bad Thing™, but I'm having difficulty convincing some guy
Singletons are broken.
@daknøk Nobody whose opinion is important cares about Singletons
Globalization.
global variables are glorified singletons.
sbi
sbi
12:06
@CatPlusPlus That seems to imply there ever was a time when they weren't broken. That's not the case, however. There only was a time when most didn't know they are broken.
@sbi No, it doesn't. Broken As Designed.
We should start a petition against singletons.
@StackedCrooked Me::get_instance()->sign(petition::get_instance());
I'm still gonna use singletons but I want others to stop using them.
@KonradRudolph Clever :D
@StackedCrooked so, "there should be only one, and that's mine"?
12:10
I want to eat something but I feel sick
irritating conundrum
@jalf Exactly.
I claim the singleton.
@DeadMG As sickness curve goes up the desire-to-eat curve goes down. It's beautiful.
both of mine are pretty high right now
I mean abstractly speaking.
lol
I never experienced feeling sick and hungry at the same time.
Seems mutually exclusive.
12:17
hmmmm
I have a Steam friends request from Fluffybumhole
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Stomach problems very often are psycho-somatic problems. IOW:
If the life that you live upsets your stomach to the point where you cannot eat despite being hungry, you might want to reconsider the life that you live.
I am reconsidering it, it's just not being very effective :P
on the other hand, not eating for a while would certainly help me with my excessive weight
no amount of eating or not eating is going to change my metabolism
@ScottW Technically speaking if he stops eating for a long enough time he'll sure loose weight :)
I should go out to Scandinavia and hide out in a car with a sleeping bag
:P
whoosh
I've been considering to try Atkins. It's not the healthiest diet, but it is effective.
12:22
I'm too lazy for Atkins
also, I despise most non-processed meats, and even a majority of processed ones
makes Atkins kinda hard :P
hey Can I ask in the stackoverflow how do I get the source code of <iostream> in cpp?
@ZoZo123 the source code for <iostream> is largely the file "iostream" itself
@rubenvb where can i find it?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Even stopping to eat for only a short time will make you lose weight. The problem is that, to your body, with its of instincts learned in millions of years, this will signify a period where food is scarce, which will only prompt to replenish the reserves — or probably even increase them, just in case this will repeat.
@rubenvb where the file seats in the computer?
@rubenvb, @ScottW I can't understand where is it iostream?
sbi
sbi
12:33
@ZoZo123 Usually, there's a folder, or a set of folders, which the compiler searches when you #include <header>. There you will likely find a file named header. That's where the code is in.
@sbi Can I use that as an excuse for eating when I'm hungry :)
@sbi thanks but how can I know where the compiler searching? how can I see it under linux from shell?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked The thing to learn from this is that a short-period diet will only make your weight yo-yo. If you want to reduce weight, you need to permanently change your habits. Burn more calories (healthiest) or eat less of them (easier, but not as healthy).
I know that you know. Just joking around :)
Buy fruit, then eat fruit when you get the munchies. Then, no more munchies, plus you get fruit. Win-win.
sbi
sbi
12:36
@ZoZo123 Uh, I'm about the opposite of a Unix expert. Hasn't every Unix system some folder named include?
@sbi no, it has half a dozen
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked I know that you know that I know.
@jalf Well, step in then, please. I really don't know.
@sbi well, I have no clue which of them iostream is in :)
are we talking about the gcc toolchain?
@ScottW It can't not work, you always get fruit.
sbi
sbi
@jalf I dunno. @ZoZo123?
12:38
According to some online calculator I will loose weight if I eat 1900 calories per day. If I keep doing that I'll keep loosing weight until a certain point and then stabilize.
try gcc -v -x c++ /dev/null -fsyntax-only
which I just copied from clang.llvm.org/get_started.html
@sbi yes?
@jalf what did you googled? :)
sbi
sbi
1 min ago, by jalf
are we talking about the gcc toolchain?
@sbi I started taking a longer way home. It's now a brisk 67 min walk.
@ZoZo123 nothing. I just knew it was there because I'd tried to build clang manually a while ago :)
sbi
sbi
12:41
I'm pavloving again. Sorry, @Stacked!
@ScottW I like to walk and it's a convenient system for me.
@sbi Your stomach is producing acid?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked No. My head produces associations all by itself, prompted by seemingly random phrases it had been trained to when I was young.
Ah, I see it now.
@sbi "all by itself" -> Celine Dion? (Sorry for putting this song in your head now :D )
sbi
sbi
@ScottW Of course, a logical song would be appreciated by programmers! :)
@StackedCrooked My brain has never knowingly heard Celine Dion, let alone been trained to respond to it. And, frankly, I'd like to keep it that way.
^ This guy also wrote his own OS.
12:50
Second comment:
> I want some of what he was on when he programmed this.
:P
sbi
sbi
@ScottW The misspelling didn't bode well (two! typos! in! one! word! hell! am! I! creative!), and listening into the first track confirmed my cacophonic expectations.
algorithm => algorhithm => algorhythm
@ScottW Sigh. I know that this was a pun. I didn't like it, though. I thought this was obvious.
@ScottW Uh, you know... I was the one who had to link to Wikipedia here, because the guys in the room didn't know what a "homophone" is. Sheepish grin.
13:56
@sbi That's an iPhone, duh!
Xeo
Xeo
@Xaade lol'd
14
Q: Strange C/C++ syntax

enobayramI've just come across this strange C/C++ syntax: #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("%s", ({ static char b__[129]; b__[0] = 55; b__[1] = 55; b__[2] = 0; b__; }) ); } This compiles and runs fine using both gcc and g++ (4....

/burn GCC
Seriously. I have yet to find a real reason why so much of the market prefers iPhone???
Xeo
Xeo
And I could swear that question is a dupe...
Smoother transitions, and dumbed down interface I suppose. Flashy and dumb.... yeah... now I know why.
@Xeo Why does GCC have millions of useless language extensions?
And in that specific case, C isn't Ruby.
sbi
sbi
14:02
@Xaade That'd make you a homophobe.
@sbi Oh yes, I love this one. I'm afraid, scared, fearful even.
I look around every corner to make sure I won't get raped...
sbi
sbi
@Xaade See, I knew it! :)
Let's see what else I don't agree with. Apparently I'm a molestophobe, a murderphobe, a lyaphobe, a stealophobe.
Xeo
Xeo
Found the duplicate, please close vote
I'm also afraid that climatology scientists are going to steal into my room and paint pictures of rising sea levels on my walls.
14:09
int&& T = int(); // that converts the right hand expression in to lvalue some what , right?
Xeo
Xeo
No, it binds the rvalue ref to the temporary and extends its lifetime
That's a rvalue reference
but T is lvalue now
They need to use something other than l/r value naming convention.... it's just serving to confuse people.
3
Expressions are l/rvalues, not variables
@MrAnubis It doesn't make sense to say that an expression is 'converted'. Values can get converted, expressions can't (in this context).
@sbi hold on, have to load up the phone....
@sbi lol
@LucDanton not converted but "becomes" would be fine? since T itself is lvalue now
I'm so confused :(
int() remains the same expressions before and after that statement. C++ code doesn't operate on expressions.
int() doesn't 'become'.
14:13
@sbi yeah, sorry about the filter.....
I'd venture that it started out fake, but enough people agreed with it to have the name stick
@MrAnubis What do you mean, 'now'. There was no T before. (And as pointed out, you're here speaking of T as a variable. It doesn't make sense to speak of lvalues/rvalues together with variables, it's for expressions only.)
sbi
sbi
@Xaade I have no idea what filter you are talking about.
@LucDanton int&& T = int() ; // T is bound to some object , right? , now since the object can be referenced later after the end of expression , it's value is l value , isn't it?
@MrAnubis lvalue means has identity
that's it
should be called ivalue.
lvalue=ivalue, rvalue = avalue (identity vs. anonymous)
Considering whether something is an lvalue or rvalue only makes sense when that something is an expression. Values are not expressions.
The rest is correct however.
So you have T, the variable, that is indeed referring to some object with a value.
Since however no expression is being considered, we can't discuss lvalues or rvalues just yet.
So, what expression do you want to consider?
It may be that you're curious about T, as an expression, not a variable?
14:19
@LucDanton yes
E.g. the expression T + 0 contains T as a subexpression. If it helps, we can add brackets: (T) + 0 which has (T) as a subexpression.
Note that decltype( T ) means 'the type of the variable T' whether decltype( (T) ) means 'the type of the expression (T)'.
@MrAnubis That expression is an lvalue.
More often than not, the name of a variable (that's an expression) is an lvalue.
T is an lvalue that can bind an rvalue to a reference.
T has identity.... which is T.
Now to check whether you can distinguish T, the variable, and T, the expression, can you tell what is decltype( T ) and what is decltype( (T) )?
I mean what type is it literally, not what they mean.
I.e. int is going to be involved for sure.
You are making it too complicated
@LucDanton decltype(T) = int&& , decltype ((T)) =int
14:23
No on both accounts. Want another go?
The point is to determine whether the value of an expression is temporary and/or whether it can be moved.
That's all they cared about.
The whole naming system, and concern about the status of an expression is such a confusing waste of time.
Does it have an identity, can it be moved.
First one is correct. AFAIK decltype(name_of_a_variable) is always straightforward, you just have to peek at the variable definition to know the answer.
Second one is not correct.
@LucDanton hmm but (T) expression has type int isn't it?
Well, it's not quite int.
Perhaps ++T would work as a hint?
Or what if we were not dealing with int, but a class type foo? Does that help? foo&& T = foo();
foo&
14:27
Then we could do T.member() (assuming that member is, well, a member of foo).
aah
since the expression is lvalue , it type is int& , right?
It is indeed int&.
I was getting tired
You see.
He's making it difficult.
Did all that help?
Remember what I said, since the expression (T) has an identity, it returns an lvalue, since it's a reference, lvalue reference.
Once you bind an rvalue reference to an identity, it has an identity to keep track of it.
14:29
yes , thanks so much @LucDanton @Xaade
Otherwise, the compiler will throw it away once it loses scope.
The point is, say you know a result is a temporary, but you want to keep it around. Bind it to an rvalue reference. The alternative, is to move it into an lvalue.
They're trying to get the benefits of pointers without the drawbacks.
That made more sense :)
Well, he was trying to get a type off of T, but it's more helpful if you think in terms of what a T will actually return. Like:
int&& T = int();
int& u = (T);
What's really cool is perfect forwarding.
@Xaade and int z = u // will result in lvalue to rvalue from expression u, right ?
@MrAnubis no
u has identity.
u is lvalue.
14:36
yes , I got that
but something is mentioned in standard called lvalue to rvalue conversion
so was applying that law also
:)
I'm trying to learn this thing for long time I must say :(
Lvalue to rvalue conversion means (very roughly) that wherever an rvalue may appear, so can an lvalue.
@Xaade Did you loose some rep? you used to be at 20k +
I've also seen another take on it (from sbi maybe?), where one can consider the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion to be the process of 'reading' an lvalue.
@MrAnubis uh... no I never had that.
@LucDanton T(someOtherT);
move someOtherT into T and now you have an rvalue!
Where the notion of an lvalue is strongly tied to identity, and rvalue to, well, value.
14:42
@LucDanton thanks , I need some time to think these things in alone , I appreciate everyone's help :)
Good luck
Those Standard guys really struggle to explain things
There was some chart that cleared it up for me.
@MrAnubis If it helps, there are three levels of abstraction going on: the 'source' (where variables and expressions appear), the type system (with its types), and values. Notice that the first two are strictly 'compile-time', in a sense. A variable doesn't 'become' anything else when the program runs, and neither will a type.
@LucDanton lvalues decay to rvalues so they can be used.
Hey, this guy I'm reading right now, explains the difference by looking at what can accept assignment.
like (m+1)=n fails, because m+1 is an rvalue.
which makes sense, because a member variable of a class is an lvalue.
Like, SomeClass t(); t.member = 5;
even though t.member isn't an identity itself, it returns a lvalue from an identity (member under SomeClass).
So, SomeClass() is an rvalue, but SomeClass().member is an lvalue.... a temporary lvalue. A glvalue (xvalue) which can be moved from.
15:09
afternoon gents
what's up?
ah I see
Yo
I come up with RAII for C#
You still have to write .Dispose() for your classes though
And you have to use a lambda at the top of your method.
But it works like RAII.
C# doesn't have RAII? I know destructors aren't deterministic, but they still do resource management, no?
@Pubby semi. they're good for cleaning up when you don't dispose or whatever, but there's a pretty hefty performance cost to them
the closest c# has to RAII is IDisposable and using
user406009
@Pubby As with Java and Python, C# has a scope based resource management thing. Declare a variable in a certain way and it will be cleaned up once it falls out of the scope.
user784668
@EthanSteinberg Java? It's a new feature of version 7?
user406009
15:18
Never really noticed it was new, but docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/…
sbi
sbi
@EthanSteinberg I have never heard about a language called "Python C#" before!
user406009
Too tired for punctuation this morning.
@Pubby C# has destructors? Since when?
That I just put there, it uses dispose and using, but hides it.
sbi
sbi
15:20
@EthanSteinberg I guess this is just a very bad room for being lax. You're just feeding all of us pedants with ammunition. :-/
@FredOverflow The brief week I used C# (before I knew C++) I recall using dtors
All you have to do is call a static method, give it a lambda, then add your variables through the object instead of just themselves.
they're not destructors...they're finalizers. similar functionality, though; they clean up an object's resources before i's destroyed
I thought "final" was like C++ dtors
or C++ dtors should be called finalizers :S
@cHao similar except you can't rely on them to be run :)
15:21
@Pubby my link gives my example
user406009
Not really. Java finalizers might never be called. C++ dtors are reliable.
you can rely on them in 99.995% of all cases
you just can't rely on when they'll run. :)
@cHao or if they'll run
we discussed that yesterday :)
@ScottW reread as Dispose() is mostly helpful for native, valuable, or time-sensitive resources
the implementation generally tries to be friendly and run them, but it's not obliged to do so, and there are cases where it won't
user406009
15:22
Sorry, reliable is the wrong word. C++ destructors are determanistic.
or deterministic ;)
@jalf in c#, it's all but guaranteed they'll run. only app-killing events will prevent it, far as i've seen
@EthanSteinberg That sounds slightly neurotic :)
dammit. Everyone's talking about C# lack of determination, rather than my code.
C# has determination ;)
15:26
@cHao not in C# either :)
@jalf yes, in c#. :)
there may be other cases too, but when the app is exiting, finalizers are only given a set length of time to run in. If they take longer than that, the runtime kills them
so no, not in C#
as i said, app-killing events
I'm not talking about app-killing events. I'm talking about when the app exits cleanly and normally
Not a crash or anything
just when you return from main, for example
if I can't rely on finalizers to run when I do that, then I can't rely on finalizers
Can you terminate the application in C++ immediately without cleaning up the stack?
15:29
you can rely on them. the time period for finalizers to run is like 40 seconds. if they won't run in 40 seconds, you have way bigger problems.
user784668
@StackedCrooked Yes.
@cHao so I can't rely on them...
iirc there are stricter limits. Something like 40 seconds for all finalizers to run, but each individual finalizer has a tighter limit
anyway, point is that they are not guaranteed to be executed
@Fanael I see C++11 has quick_exit()
Show me where in the C# spec it says that they are guaranteed. :)
user784668
@StackedCrooked Screw the standard library, you can use the OS API. More "reliable" if you're trying to terminate without any cleanup whatsoever.
15:32
@jalf that's not a c# thing. it's a .net thing. and msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.object.finalize.aspx gives details
Speaking about resources…
0
Q: C++ STL list crashes with numbers over 1 000 000 000

kittyPLWhen I try to resize the list the program crashes... Look at that code, try to enter 1,000,000,000 (10^9)... On my windows 7 x64 doesnt work. #include <cstdlib> #include <iostream> #include <list> using namespace std; int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { list<long long&g...

@cHao Yep, so you can't rely on it. :)
not to, like, update a database or anything. but you can rely on it for what it's made for -- to clean up resources
if you're doing any more than that in a finalizer, you're abusing finalizers :P
hi
15:39
I put a HBITMAP into a QLabel using setPixmap and then later overwrite it with another HBITMAP, how do I ensure that the bitmap is deleted properly?
it seems to stay in memory when changing the picture
Using ~a garbage collector~ RAII.
(:
user784668
@daknøk, is there a site from which I can download more time?
@Fanael any site if you don't use Internet Explorer.
AAAGGGHHH THAT COMMA AGAIN
@ScottW,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Yeah
and square brackets
user784668
@daknøk...
If I rename a bunch of classes & their files from "Doodad" to "Gizmo", how do I inform Mercurial source code control about that?
15:50
@ScottW stop it
user784668
@daknøk Why?
@CheersandhthAlf Mercurial doesn't know how to handle renamed files?
@Fanael it's annoying :P
user784668
@CheersandhthAlf hg move --after?
@daknøk I don't know I'm utter newbie. I just installed it in order to place code at bitbucket so i could in turn place it on the lounge's wiki...
@Fanael thanks i'll try to look it up
@Fanael it tickles
@Fanael are you good at C++?
user784668
15:52
@daknøk What do you mean by good?
@CheersandhthAlf I see. You can also use BitBucket with git, if you like that.
@Fanael Quiz: what will int foo(int a, int b, int c) { std::cout << a << b << c; } int main(){ foo((2, 3), 4, 5);} print?
@Fanael The goodest C++ persons here are Johannes and Luc. Then you have sbi and me and deadmg and so forth
And I'm somewhere down the list. :P
user784668
@daknøk Why would anyone want to do that?
@Fanael to do what?
user784668
15:54
@daknøk 345. (2, 3) evaluates to 3.
@Fanael you are good at C++.
@daknøk yes. i thought mercurial could be simpler than full GIT
user784668
@daknøk To use BitBucket with sh^H^Hgit.
@CheersandhthAlf I've never used Hg, only Git and SVN.
@ScottW it shows that you are interested in the language. In my entire life I've seen the comma operator used only once, and that was in the source code of bash I believe.
user784668
@daknøk And why does it matter if I'm good at C++?
15:55
@Fanael I was just wondering.
The only thing I like about Subversion is Cornerstone. Other than that, it sucks balls.
^ Interesting error that I waited forever to see Norwegian or German newbie do
@CheersandhthAlf or Dutch :P
user784668
@ScottW 3;14.
user784668
15:58
@CheersandhthAlf I've seen Polish beginners doing exactly that.
Using commas for that purpose sucks in tuples. (2,4) is ambiguous, it could either be a 1-tuple (2.4) or a 2-tuple (2, 4).
sbi
sbi
@CheersandhthAlf Are you on Windows? If so, have a look at TortoiseHg.
@sbi thanks. i've installed it. it's probably good but takes some what do you call it - getting used to? yes.
user784668
@CheersandhthAlf Probably it's a better idea to rename with hg move than to do that with something else and then hg move --after, though.
user784668
16:00
And I don't remember if --after even works with move command. It should, but I'm not sure.
The --help says it should work. I've not tried yet. Dinner's up. :-)
user784668
@sbi Or on Gnome. Never used TortoiseHg's Gnome integration though.
sbi
sbi
@CheersandhthAlf I have used first TortoiseCVS, then TortoiseSVN for more than a decade. TortoiseHg die feel strange compared to those, but that was probably because Hg is so different from CVS and SVN. :)
16:16
TortoiseHg is way better than TortoiseSVN ever was.
does anybody know if you have to call SelectObject before calling DeleteObject on a HBITMAP ?
@TonyTheLion why do you need to Select it ?
user784668
@TonyTheLion IIRC you have to.
I don't know
read msdn, anyway
16:19
@RMartinhoFernandes Not really a fan of those OpenGL tutorials you showed me. Much better than the majority of OGL tuts, but still seem outdated and lacking.
I have some HBITMAP's I put into a QLabel through setPixmap, but it seems when I put a new picture into the same QLabel, the old still remains in memory
@Pubby Which ones?
@CatPlusPlus "duriansoft" and "arcsynthesis"
It might be because I was trying to use them as a reference
There's nothing outdated about arcsynthesis one.
The former is written against OpenGL 2.0, so it uses some things that are different from 3.2 Core.
Haven't read much of arcsynthesis, guess I'll take another look
16:25
If you want reference, then manual pages: opengl.org/sdk/docs/man3
And the GL spec itself, obviously.
Yeah, that's what I'm using
16:49
@CheersandhthAlf The superlative of "good" is "best", not "goodest".
any Qt people with knowledge about this
0
Q: Deleting a HBitmap placed into a QLabel

Tony The LionI have a series of QLabel objects on my Qt GUI, and I fill them with HBITMAP objects. These HBITMAP's are buffers in memory, they don't exist on disk. Now I use the QPixmaps fromWinHBITMAPto create aQPixmapwhich I can then pass to theQLabelssetPixmap` function. Now, the question is, what happe...


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