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00:00
@Ell because my first line was (translate p) $ ... and <$> is closer
it's not important that it's a list
and also I can stop hitting coliru so hard
Ell
Ell
Is <$> infix fmap?
Ell
Ell
I see
replacing $ with <$> is amazing on many levels
it's like literally "go into another abstraction stage"
00:03
does the virtual destructor in a derived class automatically calls ~base()?
@bitcode that's the point
amazing
Ell
Ell
Eh
How does $ replace <$>?
non-virtual destructor also calls ~base()
Ell
Ell
Apples can't replace oranges right
00:05
@Ell It's map f $ whatever vs f <$> whatever
Ell
Ell
Yeah, and replacing map with fmap is the abstraction change
Ell
Ell
<$> vs fmap ... $ ... Is a syntactic choice
he means that he used $ in the line above
and not using <$> broke the pattern
fmap does everything map can
In fact, one version of Haskell had map being equivalent to fmap before they reverted it because "user friendliness of error messages"
Ell
Ell
00:07
@milleniumbug bartek said changing $ for <$> is like an abstraction change, I'm saying changing map to fmap is the abstraction change. Whether use use <$> or fmap is just a syntactic choice and doesn't affect abstraction
@Ell which I needed.
@Ell $ -> map -> <$> I ommited the intermediate step
Ell
Ell
That was the important one :P
@bitcode Virtual dtor allows you to destroy the object via a reference/pointer to the base, and still get defined behavior. With a non-virtual dtor, destroying the object will still invoke the base dtor--but if you do it via a reference/pointer to base, you get UB.
@Ell what I meant was that whatever intermediate thing you have often moving straight to <$> is the easiest and most natural thing
Ell
Ell
You could have gone map ... $ ... to fmap ... $ ... and have the same abstraction change as map ... $ ... to ... <$> ...
@BartekBanachewicz I see :)
00:10
I started with $ because I forgot there's a list there.
@JerryCoffin I see. after millenumbug mentioned that non-virtual destructors also call ~base(), I realized I was having the wrong idea about virtual destructors. virtual destructors actually work exactly like any other virtual function (e.g. refers to the derived)
@bitcode Don't worry, even interviewers don't know how destructors work, especially non-virtual ones.
@bitcode Not really. A (properly invoked) dtor is different from a normal function, in that it walks through from derived to base, and invokes the dtor for each class in turn (and that doesn't happen with other functions, unless explicitly invoke a base version in a derived version). With other functions, a non-virtual called via pointer to base will invoke base function, but with non-virtual dtor, invocation via pointer to base results in UB.
@Morwenn hahaha. are you in computer science school or you've finished that already?
@bitcode I've finished that already. I was unemployed for 6 months, worked almost 6 months, then I have been unemployed for another 6 months.
00:21
@jaggedSpire :P /cc @TonyTheLion
@Morwenn you worked with C++ or other language?
@Borgleader The dog is cute and fluffy but the child is a bit creepy.
@Borgleader such floofy majesty
@Morwenn mischief managed
00:22
@bitcode I never used C++ professionally. Almost always Python. I did a bit of Java and C too but that's when I left my job.
@Morwenn human children tend to not be as floofy as their canine counterparts
@jaggedSpire No need to specify "children".
@Morwenn I've seen some pretty floofy people, but you're correct
Time for @R.MartinhoFernandes to give a presentation on Rule of Zero?
I have the feeling that the languages people try to mimick the most with C++ (in articles) are Python and Haskell these.
I hardly ever see "let's do it the way they do it in Java".
mintty "glass" look is pretty cool
meh transparent consoles
@Morwenn why would you want to do that
@milleniumbug useful
00:29
@Borgleader I don't know, but that's pretty much what is done in C++ classes. Because OOP programming being super great and natural and stuff.
@Morwenn The only people I see trying to imitate Java in C++ are ones learning C++ and have only ever used Java before.
as cool as F# is tho I'm not sure what the point in using it with unity would be
unity is all about using the provided tools
@JerryCoffin Or the ones teaching C++ and have only ever used Java before.
and doing that would just be mimicking C# in F#
Ell
Ell
Java has some redeeming features
Enums are p cool in it
00:31
Java's good features (comparing to C++): 1.) enums 2.) lack of unsigned types 3.) multiple mains
Ell
Ell
Lack of unsigned is bad
@Morwenn They're learning C++ too (just a lot more slowly).
I like Java's new LINQ
Ell
Ell
Why would you not want unsigned?
@AlexM. Streams?
Ell
Ell
00:31
I've heard they outpurrrform LINQ also
could be
@Ell Because it's useless in C++ for expressing positive values
Ell
Ell
Its not useless
@Ell There's nothing wrong with unsigned per se. The problem is that people think of them as integers instead of bags of bits. Yes, they can be used as integers too, but it's fairly error-prone.
@JerryCoffin More like they gave up learning C++ 10 years ago.
Ell
Ell
00:32
I was going to say, there are some operations which are undefined on signed but defined with unsigned
Like overflow or shifting in certain circumstances
That's because it's C++'s quirk, not in general
Ell
Ell
I also don't see what's so terrible about representing positive integers as unsigned
Were they defined on signed types I wouldn't need unsigned
@JerryCoffin That's like std::vector<bool>: the biggest problem is the name.
@Morwenn They don't try, but most learn a few bits and pieces whether they want to or not. Oh, and at least from what I've see, more like 20 years ago than 10.
00:34
Now, byte being signed is a bad idea, because it's not actually a number type, but a set of values that happen to be numbers to me
@milleniumbug What is a number type, if not a set of values (that happen to be numbers)?
Ell
Ell
If I designed a language, byte would not support arithmetic
@Ell But bit tricks.
Ell
Ell
Yah
And you could convert it to an integer, but I think that conversion being explicit would be a good thing
@JerryCoffin In this context I mean set of values plus arithmetic operations
You don't need, e.g. * or / on bytes
00:36
@Ell Most just call that char (e.g., in Pascal or Ada). Doesn't really accomplish much though--you end up needing to support math on them anyway, so you end up with conversions to/from integer that add little beyond clumsiness and verbosity.
Moar bier.
@Morwenn Boar near? I'd advise running--boars can be downright nasty.
The only time I really focused on unsigned integers types was when I was trying to develop algorithms for Gray codes.
Ell
Ell
@milleniumbug this is a problem with implicit conversions, not unsigned, right?
00:38
@Ell subtraction becomes dangerous
@Ell Yes, mostly.
@Ell Well, you can fix the issue by fixing the conversions, or by removing unsigned
Guess which one is simpler to do
Ell
Ell
@JerryCoffin I disagree - if you're doing arithmetic then its an integer right?
So better to admit that and use as such
There should be wrapping_unsigned and unsigned separately
the latter throwing on under/overflow
Ell
Ell
Subtraction is dangerous in the same way it is on integers
00:40
Now, Java has too many integral types
short is redundant
Ell
Ell
Apart from its defined on unsigned
@Ell practice shows otherwise
@JerryCoffin IRTA « naughty » and I'm not sure that's what I wanted to read.
@milleniumbug 64bit or bust
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn gray codes.. These sound familiar
Like I need to know them on my comp arch viva
00:41
@BartekBanachewicz This is where you really want something like a policy, because there are more behaviors you might want (e.g., saturation) and they can apply as easily to signed types as unsigned.
@Ell Wat.
@Ell it's a binary code in which only one bit changes on decrement/increment
used in digital circuits to prevent data races between pins
Ell
Ell
Ahhh
They are related to carnough maps mebbe
00:42
@Ell Karnaugh. And yes.
Ell
Ell
Yes
@JerryCoffin true
Ell
Ell
I need to know this for my exam on the 15th
RIP me
digital circuits was my fav subject on uni
it was quite nice. broken equipment OTOH was not
00:43
broken cables :|
At some point this year I was trying to find an algorithm to add Gray codes without having to convert them to usual binary, performing a normal addition then converting the result back to a Gray code.
@BartekBanachewicz :|
I found an algorithm, created a second one, optimized both but it was still slower in the end :/
Maybe someday I will discover a useful algorithm.
I'm fine with unsigned. If I were to change C++, I'd make variadic functions don't need an overload for the last argument. they already magically "strip" each argument each recursive call, why don't make another magic and accept the last argument on the same function? this syntax would be perfect for this purpose:
func(T first, Args... args = 0) { }
someone go ahead and propose that
I want this in C++17
There are already too many interesting things discussed for C++17.
00:48
@bitcode meh
@bitcode Presumably here you're talking about variadic templates, not C-style variadic functions?
@JerryCoffin templates, yes
@bitcode I that case, I think you'll have to write it up yourself. I don't see that it gaining enough to justify the trouble of writing it up.
@JerryCoffin the syntax I'm proposing is pretty neat though, right?
I have no idea how to implement that though
It's not
00:53
oh cmon
@bitcode I...guess, sort of. My immediate reaction is that it strikes me as a bit too clever.
I we are to improve variadic templates, I'd rather have that fixed-size variadic templates proposal.
template<std::size_t N> void foo(int...[N] args);
terrible
00:55
the default value 0 for the argument pack would tell the compiler to stop recursive calls. and at the same time this syntax is familiar to C++ programmers
the problem with variadic packs is that they're not first-class
@Morwenn that's called passing an array of ints :P
@AlexM. With less syntax. I'm pretty sure that I had other ideas for that thing at some point, but I don't remember.
you can do the func({5, 4, 5, 6, 7 }) in a comfy way
I think
Anyway, it was considered not mature enough, and I haven't seen a follow-up yet.
00:56
@AlexM. ...except that it's more like an initializer_list--it can take any number of ints, and N tells you how many (at least that's how it looks to me).
vs func(5, 4, 5, 6, 7)
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn also fixed types
0
A: Get the multiples from a file and copy them on another

seheIf you just enable warnings (-Wall for starters), the compiler just tells you: test.cpp:20:29: warning: format specifies type 'int *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat] n = fscanf(f, "%d", multiple); ~~ ^~~~~~~~ Always use the tools to spot your erro...

Ell
Ell
void sum(int... is);
I've yet to find a big # of params function that can't be refactored
00:57
std::initializer_list doesn't have the number of elements as a template parameter, and std::array has some annoying warnings with Clang when you try to elide outer braces :/
Ell
Ell
You can do std::size(init list) can't you?
@Ell You can, but if you need to specialize on size, it won't help you.
You also can do sizeof...(list) on variadic parameter pack
@sehe have a !down boat
@JerryCoffin ye, good point
00:59
@Borgleader ...and despite lack of use of C++ specific features in the question, probably still should be, as it indicates that an answer using C++ specific features is fine.
@Borgleader It's not even an answer!
@sehe No, but it falls into the "teaching to fish" category, so it's probably better than any direct answer to the question he asked.
@JerryCoffin I'm not seeing it
@JerryCoffin C++ specific features in the question which ones?
Yaaay
VS 2015 Update 1 installed!~
01:00
You want update 2
@sehe Not seeing what?
@ThePhD how did you do it?
@JerryCoffin the c++ specific
and congratz on a fast install. only 10 ours or so
1. press 'install' butan
2. wait until thing is installed
01:02
@CatPlusPlus he was having trouble with installation earlier
as crazy as it sounds, step "1" was not working
@sehe That's my point: there is none in the question, but the tag indicates that there could be in the answer. Changing the tag says there can't be in the answer. (and, of course, a good C++ answer would be entirely different from a good C answer).
I somewhat get the impression LC really hopes I will "read the docs"
maybe they'll send a creepy guy at your window at night
knock knock
read the docs maybe?
@sehe I dunno--there is one button that doesn't seem to lead immediately to docs.
UX fail
@JerryCoffin oh... you cheated
01:05
@sehe is livecoding blocked for certain regions? I'm never able to access that site
@sehe Corrected a typo. But yeah.
@bitcode not that I know. Your company proxy might. Or maybe that page (it's private beta IIRC)
@JerryCoffin lol
@sehe im at home. it must be something else
browser? platform? ISP? (in fact, don't tell me, tell LC)
he didn't disappear he was finally employed by the KGB
01:13
> Rumors that Putin himself is responsible for the mysterious disappearance of the little points Vlad the president flatly: "These are Western fabrications. We have satellite imagery showing very clearly that I was on Barteljorisstraat at the time. "
Slightly fixed translation. I like the allusions
Ell
Ell
Ahaha that's funny
Man, the ending to True Detective S01 is so satisfying.
@ElimGarak I want to watch that but its not on Netflix
:(
@Borgleader I've watched it several times and I loooove it. :D
This is your daily reminder that fuck Apple.
@sehe Have added a proper answer, just in case:
0
A: Get the multiples from a file and copy them on another

Jerry CoffinI'm going to assume the original c++ tag was actually correct, and give an answer that (I think) makes better use of the capabilities of C++ instead of just C. Since we want to copy items that meet a particular criterion, we can use the std::copy_if algorithm to handle the majority of the work. ...

01:22
@JerryCoffin Short and sweet.
@ElimGarak Just like me :3
If you're looking for me, I'm already far away.
@Morwenn But with minor differences--this uses four headers; I at least hope you have only one head... :-)
@JerryCoffin Yeah, and unlike this answer you didn't breed me into existence.
shouldn't you close the files?
@bitcode ifstream dtor does that
01:28
@bitcode Destructors are magic.
@bitcode They'll close themselves automatically when they go out of scope.
fstream doesn't close the file on destruction then?
@Morwenn I'm tempted to crack a joke about being so old that virtually all of mankind descends from me one way or another. That wouldn't be true though. Actually hardly even half of mankind descends from me.
@bitcode Yes, it does too.
> This function is called by the destructor of basic_fstream when the stream object goes out of scope and is not usually invoked directly.
@JerryCoffin I'm probably young enough to qualify.
01:31
@bitcode when going out of scope dtor gets called and dtor closes the file
Brocode, do you even RAII?
RAII is a funny name.
do you know what @AngryShoe's favorite TV channel is?
RAII Uno
(it's a funny pun)
thank god for subtitling
@user3886129 SBRM (Scope Bound Resource Management), if you prefer.
01:41
I prefer ICBM
@JerryCoffin That's much better. Makes more sense, anyway.
@CatPlusPlus A prefer ALCMs.
And SRBs
Student Reference Book.
solid rocket booster
01:44
reminds me of my cock
@CatPlusPlus Single-Responsibility Barges.
Rocket Acquisition through Infidel Intimidation
2
@ElimGarak How often do I have to remind you that the real SRBs aren't the size they look like on your feature phone's screen?
@JerryCoffin :(
01:52
@jaggedSpire resource ecquisition kiss tinitialization.
@user3886129 good job
REKT rk {};
I wanted a free medical screening, the lady told me it's only available to women over 40. But I could get cancer and die during this period. Also I am still trying to avoid GPs because ... I am scared of going to the doctors :'(
@ElimGarak Curly brackets scare me please use the more sensible ()s.
Reality As In Inception
01:54
GetClientRekt
@user3886129 Wat. You'd be declaring a function.
@user3886129 Definitely more sensible (at least if you wanted to declare a function).
You're vexing me the most.
LOL WAT
Most Vexing Nooble
01:54
Whoops.
Most Vexing Noob (2017).
@Morwenn No, he's vexing me the most!
Ell
Ell
@Telkitty just pay for it - what price can you put on your health?
@Ell Don't give it ideas
@Ell GPs are free too here ...
01:56
if you think it's cancer, cut it off.
ITT Nooble is a parse.
then you have to go to the doctor to take care of the wound
so you can decide in advance to go to the doctor to minimize the would from cutting it off, and get good care for said wound straight off.
and while you're at it, you may as well check to be sure the wound is really necessary.
I prefer my body in a non-perforated state, though I don't know if you feel the same way about yours.
Knitting sort, the sorting algorithm that fears to show its Big O and only shows its Big Theta instead.
01:59
Yeah, jagged is a pretty hot red panda
@jaggedSpire Based on the number of people with piercings, quite a few seem to disagree with you.

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