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18:00
Some of the assumptions in some of those papers seem to nearly defy description. For example, one talking about the effect on the value of the land speculates: "The WTP estimate for ‘Lowland New Broadleaved’ of £0.84/ha/yr may be the closest category, [...]", then concludes:
"For the purpose of this valuation, a value of £300/ha/yr is assumed for the high estimate from the top end of the Eftec (2010a) range, with low and central estimates of £250/ha/yr and £275/ha/yr, respectively, [...]
So, the most comparable value is a little bit less than £1/ha/yr, but we're still going to treat £250/ha
There are so few otters here. We otter do something about that.
I'm having trouble telling the match2 function at the bottom return auto since I don't how to specify the lambda return types without a tempate typename - melpon.org/wandbox/permlink/DVOlhvYBbEjIrZmH
@JerryCoffin I have no clue. I did wonder what @WTP'-- is doing in there
@BryanEdds Stack Overflow is a great place to ask questions
@Elyse ^
18:02
this isn't a real good question for SO
there's already an answer for it, I'm sure
@sehe "WTP" is "willing to pay".
user1804599
?
@BryanEdds So?
@BryanEdds look for it then
jeeebus
the problem is that I don't know how to find it
18:02
@Elyse the nick
jeebus right fucking back at you
user1804599
???
user1804599
more like the fuck
I don't know the name of the feature, so I don't know how to search for it
@sehe you may find this interesting.
18:03
@BryanEdds reword your question
hm, i'll try
i don't even really know how to word it
well then there's your problem :D
@JohanLarsson damn it took me forever to realize that they were referring to using() {} not using bla = blo; I was really wondering whether everyone was mad for even thinking about it :) The answer is precisely as expected. Same thing happens with generic type arguments suitably constrained. TL;DR: C# is nicely designed
@BryanEdds The feature you're looking for doesn't exist. You can't take a runtime variable (your const bool is_right) and magically make it a compile time decision: the closest you can do, you've already done with either: there's no other way to peel of the abstraction any further without checking at the site where you need to check.
@sehe do you know the answer to Bryan's question? He is my friend, help him if you have time.
Also he goes on massive rants for almost zero input :D
18:06
The two functions you have there need to have the same return type (or ones convertible to some common type) that you'd have to return, otherwise compilation will just outright fail.
@ThePhD: interesting. someone told me earlier that auto would work, but that confused me
they actually do have the same return type in this case
in this case, they both return T
@sehe yep, nice special case
if this is the best that can be done, that's okay I suppose, it's just a bit saddening as it means that the caller has to always specify the return type
Not exactly.
template<typename E, typename LeftFx, typename RightFx>
auto match2( const E& eir,
    LeftFx&& left_fn,
    RightFx&& right_fn) {
    if (is_right(eir)) return right_fn(get_right_const(eir));
    return left_fn(get_left_const(eir));
}
That won't compile I think
18:09
That's... all you need to do, really. If the return types agree auto will work it out (should work it out).
T is undefined.
std::function<T(const typename E::left_type&)>
Fixed.
ah, interesting...
I'll try it out, thanks!
altho - shouldn't LeftFx and RightFx be the same typename?
No, they're different functions.
There's no need to constrain it with std::function, or by making them the same type.
ah, so even modern C++ can't unify those types
ahhhh
18:11
Why do you need to unify them?
ahhhhhh, ok
right, I don't need to :)
If I'm on a branch A that is 3 commits ahead and 12 behind branch B, and I do: git checkout B && git merge A, what will happen?
Yay. Have fun!
sorry, I was thinking in the generics mindset, rather than templates :)
too much .net programming :)
user406009
@AngryShoe Chaos. Absolute chaos.
18:18
anyone heard updates on the progress of C++ 17? two things I'm keeping my eyes on are concepts and uniform call syntax.
@sehe Looking through some of the papers, it appears that in the end the flood management wasn't all that original anyway. Despite the discussion of "natural" measures, it looks like the majority really came down to two dams they build up stream. I guess you could consider these a bit more "natural", to the extent that they're built from wood instead of concrete, but ultimately they seem to be pretty normal dams (up to some limit, water flows freely, more than that is slowed substantially).
@BryanEdds Clang.lvm support the most updates.
after reading n4474 (open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2015/n4474.pdf), it looks like uniform call syntax is going to get into an ugly slog of a compromise / fight
I think.
FUCKING SHIT
gvim, where's the .hpp extension
user406009
18:25
@BryanEdds Like pretty much everything that goes into the standard.
user406009
Did you see the epic variant battle?
Did anyone win that variant battle?
user406009
It was a compromise.
heh, I did not :)
@ThePhD Everybody lost.
user406009
18:27
The anti-UB people and the pro-performance people settled on a midpoint that they were all sorta ok with.
user406009
IIRC, those were the two main sides.
user406009
Last I checked, there were like 8 proposals discussing the topic on the C++ mailing list.
here's the paper I found on variants - open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2015/n4450.pdf
having a read
anyone here watched the hateful eight?
@BryanEdds That's because it's a dumb idea, much like uniform init, which was also a dumb idea.
18:32
Uniform init? You mean {} ?
I'm not sure what the utility of variant is without pattern matching.
user406009
Personally I think they should have just forced the move constructor to always be a no-throw.
user406009
But backwards compatibility, etc, etc.
@bitcode - not yet, you?
I hope it's at least a middling tarentino film
@milleniumbug or .cxx for that matter.
user1804599
18:36
@milleniumbug on your keyboard
@caps yup
@Elyse what's that
@ThePhD Yes.
@Puppy uniform initialization was a great idea, it's just that the wording is beyond dumb
I don't like that uniform init will select a different constructor based on its contents.
user406009
I still think we should have gone for a language level variant.
18:41
It makes it feel like "Yet Another Way To Get Bitchslapped" rather than unifying anything.
yeah well
C++ is bloated with crap even without it
@bitcode It's pretty good.
so it's just another brick int he wall
If you like what Tarantino does, you'll like it. If you don't, you won't.
18:43
nah; uniform init embodies what C++ has been about for 30 years
Why did we add uniform init, again?
What was the bonus?
bolt on features like ranged based for, uniform init, add some arbitraryAlgorithm_if variants and hope for the best
user406009
@ThePhD Fancy initialization of vectors.
just keep adding random crap until the language is nigh unusable
Oh, right. <initializer_list> bullshit that nobody needs.
18:44
@ThePhD void func (SomeType); ... func ({this, is, one, of, the, reasons});
I have been barely able to read C# recently too, the language is now too sweet from all the sugar that's been added
@ThePhD T val{}; is value initialized for every T, in C++03 you had to do boost::value_initialized<T> val_v; T& val = val_v.get();
@milleniumbug Did T val = T(); not cut it for most people?
@ScarletAmaranth the eternal cycle is that someone gets sufficiently upset about it that they start their own language with blackjack and, then later figures out they need to add features to reach parity until everything repeats
@ThePhD Decent (not "fancy") initialization for user-defined containers, and a fairly easy way to eliminate most cases of MVP.
18:46
there are plenty of things that are really nice about uniform-initialization, the problem is just that the pitfalls related to uniform-initialization not being exactly uniform are.. annoying (to say the least)
@ThePhD not generic enuff :P (needs copy constructor)
@milleniumbug I thought there was a direct case where T val = T() was turned into a constructor call by the language?
@LucDanton sounds about right - functional languages have been able to avoid that to some extent tho
@JerryCoffin Oh yeah, the constructor MVP.
@ThePhD Dunno, last time I read the motivation of boost::value_initialized they said this isn't the case
user406009
18:47
@LucDanton Clearly we should all use Go then.
@milleniumbug Rough life.
user406009
As it has the least number of features.
@Lalaland I’m waiting until it reaches parity before I start complaining about it
Still, std::vector<int> a(1, 2); and std::vector<int> a{1, 2}; being different makes me kind've sad.
@ThePhD there isn't. an implementation can elide the use of any move/copy-constructor, but whatever would be used in theory must still be available.
user406009
18:48
@LucDanton I don't think it ever will. Go's entire selling point is that they refuse to add things.
yeah they forgot to add generics tho
user406009
They would probably only add generics over the corpes of Google's dead, cold body.
@ThePhD ie. a non-explicit constructor must be available in T val = T (), if the side-effects of such usage is present in the resulting program is a different story
@Lalaland it’s not
it’s a shtick, sure, but it’s not a selling point
Ell
Ell
I recently discovered ceylon-lang.org
18:49
I want to work with streambuf() to replace all of my shitty IO::stream stuff.
@ThePhD or well, that's a lie; you can circumvent the fact that it must be non-explicit by using an intermediate user-defined conversion (because of bad wording in the standard)
I lie too often..
@FilipRoséen-refp My head hurts.
@ThePhD Great removals always feel good.
The problem with streambuf() is that nobody uses it directly.
especially after having been teaching for these last couple of years. not sure how often I say "alright, that's not entirely true - but it's true enough. don't kill me when you find out the real truth"
18:51
Everyone who does IO in C++ opens an o/ifstream. I'd either have to take that and then retrieve the streambuf, or just work on the o/ifstream directly...
maybe that's a great summary of as a language: "nothing is really an accurate description of language semantic X, but most often it is accurate enough".
@FilipRoséen-refp No, it's a genuinely terrible idea. You're taking a bunch of completely distinct semantics and giving them all one syntax so that the user doesn't even know what he's doing.
@ScarletAmaranth Not really. Consider Lisp (even if it's not purely functional). The original description was less than 10 pages long. It grew to 600+ pages in the Common Lisp standard. Then they started over with Scheme to simplify things--and now Scheme has grown to the point that they're forking it into a "small language" and a "Large language" (but even the small language has a ~90 page definition).
user406009
@FilipRoséen-refp So you are saying C++ is a fractal of complexity?
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD why do you think this?
18:52
@Ell Because that's what people do?
user406009
Once you get close enough to one complex feature, you realize that it contains multiple, more complex features. And so on.
@Puppy I'm not sure if you are just being DeadMG or if you really misread what I wrote. The underlying idea of uniform initialization is awesome, but the wording that lead it to completely frustrate the shit out of those not completely familiar with the semantics involved isn't.
Ell
Ell
I don't think people do that
I think the Puppy's language does initialization right
Ell
Ell
unless they are nubs at c++
18:53
@Lalaland I'm saying C++ is complex enough that any book should have a disclaimer saying; "alright, I think I know what I'm talking about - but given the circumstances there's a good chance that everything in here is just complete bullcrap. Most often, that is enough though!"*
In lieu of concepts, I threw these type constraint macros together - // Declare a type constraint.
#define constraint(constraint_name) using constraint_name##_constraint = void

// Assert a type constraint.
#define constrain(type, constraint_name) type::constraint_name##_constraint assert_constraint_fn()
@FilipRoséen-refp No. The underlying idea of uniform initialization is awesome, and therefore there should only be one semantic for initialization.
by the time of C++11 you've already lost.
@Puppy that's my point.
@JerryCoffin don't keep your hopes up for a language that uses car and cdr instead of head and tail :)
@FilipRoséen-refp I don't think this is exclusively (or even primarily) a matter of wording. It's a matter of trying to get a single syntax to meet too many competing goals.
18:54
adding a uniform initialization syntax just makes things a thousand times worse.
Ell
Ell
the problem with uniform initialisation is that it's not uniform
now in the either type, I can put constraint(either); and in the match2 function, I can put constrain(E, either);
std::initializer_list should've never become a thing, std::tuple is enough
@JerryCoffin I don't think too many really thought about the things that weren't so uniform about uniform-initialization when they put together the wording to be honest
@milleniumbug it is not enough
you need additional things to unpack etc.
Ell
Ell
18:55
@milleniumbug we'd need tuple literals
oh wait
we have make_tuple
uniform init syntax I don't really use. initializer_list, on the other hand... very useful for my DSEL stuff.
@Ell compare with std::initializer_list "literals"
@BryanEdds @EtiennedeMartel I also found it to be pretty good. but I just read a review saying that it was sexist hahahaha
Ell
Ell
> Note that Ceylon doesn't (yet) support scripting. You can't write statements like print("Hello, World!"); outside of a function or class, like you would in a scripting language.
@Feeds I feel sad about this. He was talking with the cppcast guys about doing another book or two. The premises sounded interesting. cppcast.com/2015/09/scott-meyers
18:57
oh god, please not the 's' word :)
Ell
Ell
Hmm. that's a take on "scripting vs programming" language I've not heard before
@bitcode I understand how someone would believe that, yes.
@EtiennedeMartel "We finally learn what will bring them together: a lethal hatred of women. And the sides, we’re led to believe, are clear cut. Men are the winners, and women, the losers."
i like initializer_list, but I think it adds some confusion
thats a bit of the review. the rest is here: theverge.com/2015/12/31/10695780/…
18:58
i have got to read that - link plz
thx
one of the worst review ever written
@Lalaland "they won’t add generics because they prefer a simple language" is silly, see this comment (rsc is Russ Cox, Googler involved in golang)
@milleniumbug Absolutely it does.
oh, I thought you were saying they said initializer_lists were somehow sexist... heh.
std::initializer_list is good on its own, but having decltype(x) => std::initializer_list<int> in auto x = {1}; is just hella weird.

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