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20:00
@ScottW I have a friend in Eindhoven who I met in the Efteling. :P
@daknøk how to pronounse "jij"?
@daknøk Similar in English with "its" vs "it's" , "your" vs "you're", etc..
@SethCarnegie yay
@StackedCrooked yay what
@SethCarnegie That's how you pronounce "jij".
20:01
click the speaker
I think it might be easier if every language used its own alphabet instead of trying to use the English letters
It's really just like shouting "Yay!" in English. (But not shouting.)
@SethCarnegie Languages do that.
Most European languages have special characters.
@SethCarnegie now try to pronounce "onuitspreekbaar"
ça va ?
@daknøk I once read that "rijbewijs" sounds funny to English speakers.
20:03
@StackedCrooked reeeebahweees?
@ScottW Pronouncing it as "eye" is very common for non-native Dutch and it's really wrong.
I know.
There is only one good explanation.
Documentation. Listen to 1:37-1:40
"jij" is pronounced /jɛi̯/
20:06
Nah. Not Asus. Sony maybe…
I hate CMake. Took 5 hours just to automatically build hello world.
OMG, fuck Cmake, seriously, fuck it
5
Ok then.
user406009
All build systems suck.
@TonyTheLion Do you have a favorite one?
20:08
@EthanSteinberg shellscripts ftw
I should still try SCons.
@Pubby I don't use make files
@StackedCrooked I dreamt about SCons a few days ago. It was a very strange dream.
I've never used SCons, though. Only GNU Make, premake4, Xcode, Visual Studio, Dev-C++ and Netbeans.
@TonyTheLion You mean like IDE?
I dreamed about having a ciggy last night, this is how much I suffer not being able to smoke
@Pubby yea I have Visual Studio
and sometimes in Linux I just use GCC, but not make files
maybe my projects were never big enough to justify it
20:10
I always have a makefile because it allows me to type :make in Vim :)
"A project with one programmer that takes about a week from start to finish probably can live without a VCS." seriously, this book sucks.
C++ Coding Standards
No, by another Herb.
C++ Coding Standards by Herb and Andrei is an excellent book.
Yes.
It is a great book, only the sentence I quoted is infinitely wrong.
2004 I guess.
I'll look it up.
Published October 25, 2004.
So it was written in 2003 and/or 2004.
Stuff between 2000-2005 seems outdated to me. Strangely, before 2000 is fine.
20:17
I have to maintain a website for someone and I can only update is via FTP. FTP sucks, all hosts should upgrade to Git, Hg or SVN and have those as the only options (maybe Fossil and Perforce too, but I'm not interested in those). Similar to how Heroku does it.
verb ( FTPs, FTP'ing, FTP'd or FTP'ed ) [ with obj. ] informal
transfer (a file) from one computer or system to another, esp. on the Internet.

So, FTP works on USB thumb drives too?
^ Quite nice.
user406009
@daknøk While we are out making the intewebs better we should get rid of javascript and PHP and replace them both with python
20:33
another exciting moment, one of my dwarf miners became possessed :D
@ScottW Not bad indeed.
@daknøk I would still recommend "Accelerated C++" for beginners.
I have a copy of that book.
School, however, forces me to read literature. That's counter-productive and boring.
When I was learning C++ in preparation for an internship at a game developer I got up early in the morning every day to read this book and do the exercises.
I have to read Saskia Noort and Dimitri Verhulst among others.
20:42
I guess there is some value in reading literature.
I guess there is more value in reading C++ books. I want to become a software engineer after all.
Oh I forgot the fun part: we also get poetry.
user406009
This has always bothered me. Is this "class foo{ int i;};" a declaration or defintion?
user406009
Technically.
When rating a song with iTunes I don't have the heart to give a song less than 5 stars. So I end up giving them either no rating or 5 stars.
Definition with a declaration in it.
Afaik.
A class definition with an int declaration?
20:46
I'm looking at this question and I wonder: Is an object the same as an array of one?
For T x;, can I form the pointer &x + 1, because it's one-past-the-end, or is that invalid?
Arrays decay to pointers, other objects don't.
@EthanSteinberg It's a shame that the standard isn't free. Because there it is explained.
@daknøk Why is it valid?
@StackedCrooked It's free on GitHub -- even more recent than the standard! :-)
Pointer arithmetic is valid only within an array.
@CatPlusPlus Ah. So if I have int x = 0, * p = &x;, then while(*p++) {} is UB?
20:49
AFAIK, yes.
ohhh the Cat is back
have a good sleep cat?
@KerrekSB Interesting. So it actually a draft that has been "updated" to match the actual standard or something?
I've been reading stuff.
ahh reading
reading what?
comics or tvtropes?
@StackedCrooked The amount of money they want for a copy of the standard is ridiculous. If it were only 20 bucks I would probably say "OK".
20:51
@StackedCrooked The draft is now beyond the standard. It incorporates some issues that were discussed in the recent meeting.
You can use git whatchanged for details, as usual.
Ctrl+Alt+Del mock thread on SomethingAwful, and bad webcomics wiki.
@StackedCrooked I initially read "Alan Thein Turing"
lol!
std::function or callback-base-class. Which do you prefer? I usually go for std::function (or boost::function) but I find that this can really clutter the stack-trace and make debugging harder.
21:02
Well, I'm curious whether my answer will stand the test of time, or whether the one-past pointer is actually always valid.
@StackedCrooked std::function is expensive, isn't it?
I don't know about performance. Polymorphic inheritance is also said to be expensive.
@StackedCrooked Haskell.
Haskell is awesome
I stepped into two homework landmines in the space of 10 minutes.
Time to go home.
lol
not bad ^
what you all up to?
21:21
Writing a VCS for recreational purposes. It sucks already.
oh
vss sucks ass
I'm gonna start over.
I need a name first.
"Version Control System". Or does anyone have a better idea?
I think I'll just go with "Version Control System".
Screw Google.
"Totally not git"
21:31
ungit
goth
lol
GNU Is NOT Ungit
Alternatively, dorcs.
0
A: Bug in boost::filesystem, is this possible?

Tony The LionYour second line of code has a -1 where none is needed. Below is the code of the ctor you're calling. template <class InputIterator> path(InputIterator begin, InputIterator end) { if (begin != end) { std::basic_string<typename std::iterator_traits<InputI...

I'm thinking I have it wrong here
21:40
Very advanced.
It can already run.
And exit.
@TonyTheLion first of all, he should just #include <boost/filesystem.hpp>. His way of #includeing boost libs can be the cause of the error already.
headers*
@daknøk oh right
akk
akk
OOP
-1
Q: What is wrong in this function?

InvictusI guess there is problem with the relation of malloc and goto. Or, I guess there is some wastage of memory or corruption of memory happening out here. Hope, someone can point to me the exact error. When I compile its not giving me any error, but, my senior is insisting that I have a mistake. #d...

this guy is a troll
@JohannesSchaublitb "I guess there is problem with the relation of malloc and goto." he doesn't even use a goto.
Not even after preprocessing.
And the mistakes are: goto macro, unnecessary void* cast, unused variables, unused label…
21:53
@daknøk i think you are missing his edit.
ROFL!!1 He should submit it as an entry to IOCCC.
Haï guys.
@EtiennedeMartel Haï.
@ScottW And it's cross-platform.
any Grails developer here ?
22:04
So... here's a guy for whom std::vector is too slow for random access. Now what?
@CatPlusPlus You mean "whelp"?
How much overhead is associated with vector really? 0? No bounds checking or function call?
@KerrekSB Dafuq.
@Dervall operator[] doesn't check bounds.
22:08
@Dervall function call, but any decent compiler would always inline operator[] on an std::vector, so none.
Though IMO at and [] should have reversed behaviours, but oh well.
@Dervall Probably some light overhead in debug due to checked iterators (on most implementations anyway). In release, probably no overhead (unless you use the methods that do check bounds, like at).
@EtiennedeMartel a) ancient city in Morocco, b) common reaction to SO questions.
Even if there were a function call, it probably wouldn't matter in the big picture.
@Dervall The object contains three pointers so there is a little size overhead compared to pointer + length combo. In practice this is not relevant I think. Whether you allocate 2 words or 3 words on the stack or heap, it's the same.
22:09
You'd need to store array size somewhere anyway.
Otherwise it's useless.
It is also to overlook concrete runtime when obsessing about asymptotic complexity: The simple fact that vector memory is contiguous sometimes makes it much faster in practice than one might expect, compared to non-local node-based containers.
I remember the paranoia at my first workplace regarding anything STL from the old school hackers who didn't trust c++ because they couldn't compile it to assembly in their head like they could C...
I plan to create some simple benchmarks on vector vs array a work. So that we can finally settle this issue once and for all.
actual quote by the way
22:11
@StackedCrooked make sure your compiler doesn't optimize everything away.
It should optimise everything away.
I did the same with scoped_lock vs "manual" mutex locking/unlocking. The result was that there is no difference for optimization level >= O1.
That's the point.
@daknøk Yes.
@CatPlusPlus I make sure that it doesn't optimize away the test code itself.
// can the compiler optimize this away?
int main() { malloc(1000); }
@StackedCrooked Well, the compiler is not required to know the effects of library functions, is it? Even if it's the standard library.
22:14
I see.
I mean, such a compiler would be entirely ridiculous.
hi
Like, it could optimize out strcmp("Hello", "World") etc.
@KerrekSB no compiler is required to do any optimization
that's what optimization means
@StackedCrooked a compiler could optimize that away. AFAIK Clang does that
@JohannesSchaublitb I wasn't saying that... I think I was saying the opposite...
22:21
But malloc is implemented in a shared library which can be replaced at runtime.
So the compiler cannot see into the implementation.
@StackedCrooked compilers are allowed to know what standard library functions do in order to do optimization. AFAIK the standard says that. Correct me if I'm wrong.
That would make sense.
@StackedCrooked In principle, the compiler could know what malloc is supposed to do, conclude that it has no side effects, and thus declare the entire function redundant.
@StackedCrooked it doesn't need to know the implementation.
it only needs to know its interface. if malloc allocates and free deallocates, that's enough for it to know
That is, the compiler would have to be sure that malloc refers to the standard function, i.e. that <stdlib.h> is included.
22:25
@KerrekSB IIRC that's a known problem in the LLVM optimizers, but perhaps that's already solved by know
I don't know whether C makes the standard library function names reserved. I didn't think it would.
@JohannesSchaublitb Makes sense.
In a destructor I call a function which could throw. What are common approaches to this problem?
I don't want my application to terminate.
same for "operator new". both GCC and Clang write 0x00 into the memory returned by "new int()" without checking for a NULL return.
@daknøk Silence the exception. try { foo(); }catch (...){}
22:26
@daknøk catch the exception
since the c++ language says that the normal operator new never returns NULL
@jalf @StackedCrooked thanks. I'll print it to std::cerr.
@ScottW How do you mean?
@daknøk I think std::cerr might throw ..
@StackedCrooked I'm screwed then.
No wait.
22:28
@daknøk you can always catch that too ;)
I can use printf.
@JohannesSchaublitb That doesn't sound right. I think operator new() is allowed to return NULL, in which case no construction or initialization must happen.
@KerrekSB no if it returns NULL then your program has UB. the spec requires a user specified replacement function to either throw or return non-NULL
@daknøk Or system("beep"); :)
@KerrekSB in which case would it return null?
22:28
That's how the nothrow versions are possible...
@JohannesSchaublitb Are you sure about that?
Ah wait, this error isn't that important. I'll just silence it.
@JohannesSchaublitb Is that only for the non-placement version?
@KerrekSB the nothrow version is possible because it's allowed to behave differently ;)
@jalf Wait, only the very (nothrow) version, or any placement form?
IIRC if a destructor throws during stack-unwinding the program will terminate. So it's all defined behavior? That's maybe not so bad.
22:30
oh dunno, I wasn't paying much attention. Better let @JohannesSchaublitb answer :)
@KerrekSB yes only for the non-(nothrow) version ofc :)
Anyone care to add some duplicate votes please?
not sure about arbitrary placement overloads
@JohannesSchaublitb Hm. For the longest time I thought that all allocation functions must return a valid pointer or throw, but then I read somewhere in the standard that NULL is an acceptable return value, and ever since I've been confused.
@daknøk Do you have two accounts?
@JohannesSchaublitb Clearly this justifies some more careful reading.
@KerrekSB nah I won't do that two times, it's cheating. I do have two accounts, yes.
I promised to myself I'll never, ever vote something twice.
22:33
@daknøk Ah. Hence your many upvoted answers ;-)
intel's compiler is a bit more forgiving for broken code. it always checks for NULL even for the plain "new"
(just kidding)
:P
I don't do that either.
0
Q: How to compile C++ on web application

VoltsraveI want to compile C languages on web browser. Can I write with php?

Genius. The shortest questions are often the best.
I'm not even proud of any of my answers. Except maybe this one.
22:34
"C languages"...
Anything that clang compiles and C++/CLI and C++/CX? Oh, and D.
Also, I'm not aware of any web browsers that can execute PHP code.
@daknøk don't forget C#...
and while we're at it, coffescript begins with a C, so whoever answers should support that too :)
what's C++/CX?
@je4d Microsoft's new extension to C++. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%2B%2B/CX
It has crap like partial classes, runtime classes, runtime generics. It's like Objective-C with C++ (but not Objective-C++). DO ALL THE THINGS AT RUNTIME!!1
22:42
I've traced that blinking light issue.
Both sockets on the same wall just stopped working altogether.
@daknøk I was just reading that... it's WinRT stuff
I can't plug monitor in, waaah.
Microsoft doesn't want your code to be portable, and look what Ballmer said about Linux.
// This looks weird...
if (stm::atomic<bool>([&](stm::transaction & tx) {
    if (boost::optional<GameState> gs = getNextGameState(tx))
    {
        move(tx, gs.get());
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}))
{
    return;
}
FOLKS
@StackedCrooked how does it work?
22:45
@StackedCrooked it looks weird because it's C++, that's obvious.
@daknøk I actually had a talk to Jim Springfield about why they extend the language at GoingNative...
their outlook is completely different to anyone with a linux background
@JohannesSchaublitb It's supposed to return if the action succeeded. The problem is that the lambda syntax is breaking my current formatting style.
they have a constant conflict between wanting to work with the standard and delivering things that their customers want (shorthand syntax etc)
@je4d Jim Springfield, you mean the tattoo artist?
@daknøk the ATL guy
22:47
@je4d also: don't take anything I say about Microsoft as a fact.
@JohannesSchaublitb OK, found it, in 3.7.4.1: If the allocation function is declared non-throwing, then it must signal failure by returning NULL, otherwise it must throw an exception, and moreover the exception must be catchable via bad_alloc.
@KerrekSB ahhhhhhhhhhh
@daknøk don't take what I said Jim said as fact either... I can't remember the exact words used, and can't afford to be sued by MS :P
22:51
CakePHP
Has anyone heard of STLSoft?
@KerrekSB you have.
@daknøk Only for the past two minutes.
@KerrekSB I've heard the name before.. but no more than that
@KerrekSB according to Wikipedia, it's badly documented.
23:02
@daknøk Yeah, and their website is "rudimentary" at the moment.
argh screw it, Version Control System sucks again already.
also from their website: "Last Updated: 13th February 2009"
which means that it's so incredibly good, it didn't need any improvements since then.
No seriously that's over three years ago.
I only noticed it because it's needed by FastFormat.
@daknøk so I guess they knew what was going to be in the new standard 3 years before it was finished... that's pretty damn good
23:07
@ScottW is this better than VSS?
to be fair to them, their SF project has an upload only 2 weeks ago, so it's not dead
yay!
Wait, I forgot making it non-copyable.
Fixed.
Useless random idea of the moment: you could implement logging by requiring all your functions to take a logger argument by value. The logger copy constructor would increment a ref-count which is then used to print the log statements with indentation corresponding to the stack depth.
@StackedCrooked all functions?
23:20
If you make it a language extension and implement it in clang so that the compiler does that implicitly, OK. But seriously don't do that in real code :P
@StackedCrooked Yay, how to make hard, extremely difficult =)
@CaptainGiraffe No it's easy. It's just cumbersome to pass the logger around.
@ScottW Yeah, you don't know the stack depth based on that.
@ScottW Almost elegant
@ScottW Btw I just use free functions: LogInfo(msg), LogWarning(msg) and LogError(msg).
@StackedCrooked The std:: introsort has a quite nice method for finding out the depth
23:24
@ScottW Yep. I claimed it.
@ScottW I have VIM on my iPod touch.
@ScottW Maybe not if new ways of interface were invented. Otherwise, I'd kill kitten.
@daknøk mmn
@ScottW You expect me to code on a touch screen?
Hell no.
23:29
There is also a Lua IDE for the iPad.
@daknøk It must be a nightmare coding as such.
That's like asking would you still have sex if women had needles in their vagina.
@LewsTherin It is :P
@StackedCrooked there is always a backdoor.
@daknøk Lol
Ha, victory, I managed to move everything so monitor can be plugged into power!
23:34
@daknøk Lol
@StackedCrooked I'm made of steel anyway :)
I desperately need another extension cord.
Damn always-too-short cables.
One good application of lambdas is that it helps you practice typing the different kinds of braces while still producing valid, compilable code: [](){}();
user406009
Soon C++ will start looking like lisp. [](){ /* blah code here */ async_call( []{ /*more code*/ async_call([]{ /*etc*/... }}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}}();
Holy crap.
I'm glad I don't use this language any more!
23:43
back
@EthanSteinberg redesign your app. Async calls inside of other async calls are rare.
sbi
sbi
@daknøk Of course, it is better than VSS. VSS is the proof that "Anything is better than nothing" is not always true.
@sbi my code is a piece of crap, so I was just wondering. :P
sbi
sbi
@daknøk I hadn't looked at it.
@ScottW :P
Is this the good way to make an object non-copyable in C++11 (see the Repository class)?
sbi
sbi
I appear to be in the top 20% for the 'homework' tag. I don't know if I should be proud or begin sobbing.
23:47
@sbi is that only questions or only answers or both?
@sbi Me, I got a sodding homework badge today. Jeez.
sbi
sbi
@daknøk I think it's rep in homework. I seriously doubt that Tim has asked any questions, though.
@daknøk Yes.
I have 14 upboats in .
In 3 answers.
sbi
sbi
25 answers, 78 rep in homework
I have 6 upvotes in from 3 answers, on my other account. I usually ignore questions tagged homework.
@CatPlusPlus thanks!
23:52
I should be working but hell, time for some RotMG.
sbi
sbi
> Dear people rehearsing at 4:30 AM above me: If you haven't gotten 'wake me up inside' down by now, it's never gonna happen. Just give up. — Tim Post
3
A: Ambiguous call to overloaded static function

BingoThe reason is name resolution happens before anything else the compiler does, like figuring out which overloaded function to use. Qualifying the function with A:: simply tells the compiler to "look inside of A to find the name a". It doesn't actually help resolve which function you are referring...


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