For a constructor, though, it makes sense to just use T, right? Like, my_class(some_other_class foo) : bar(foo) vs. my_class(const some_other_class& foo) : bar(foo)
@sehe Yes. "otherwise, begin-expr and end-expr are begin(__range) and end(__range), respectively, where begin and end are looked up with argument-dependent lookup (3.4.2). For the purposes of this name lookup, namespace std is an associated namespace."
@Lalaland For me, there's a form and it takes advisor approval. But, because I changed around my schedule a lot I'm not over 21 credit hours despite taking 7 classes.
@JerryCoffin That's actually very nicely expressed. It's conveniently forgoes the requirement of having std::begin or std::end declared at all. Just reserves the name of a namespace, really - which was a no-brainer already
I could be a prostitute. I'd rather be a nerd. ... wtf - obvious journalist don't study enough maths. Set theory says that you can be a prostitute and a hacker at the same time. They are not mutrally exclusive.
Possible Duplicate:
Why doesn't ADL find function templates?
Calling get does not seem to invoke argument dependent lookup:
auto t = std::make_tuple(false, false, true);
bool a = get<0>(t); // error
bool b = std::get<0>(t); // okay
g++ 4.6.0 says:
error: 'get' was not decl...
You obviously didn't watch the interview, lazy kitten. That's a pretty inspiring interview. In fact I'm linking it again so people can star it without prejudice:
@AndyProwl Not normally. I do admit that most often the Fusion use uses boost::fusion::at_c which I end up using explicitly for the obvious reason of bringing it into view. So, I'll read up again
@AndyProwl In that case probably around a third (and maybe even half) is basically just syntactic noise, and the actual code is probably more like 20-30 lines. Admittedly, still longer than I'd like, but not particularly horrible either.
@sehe I do know the whole story. Just being sarcastic about the title's attempt at attention grabbing by suggesting someone would prefer to be a nerd than be a hooker
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper I agree about the cheap attention grab (same goes for the still captioning). But you can see how the quote is not outrageous at all. I certainly reflects a decision she could make, at a certain time.
@sehe Can't say I like the syntax very well either. For work some time ago I had to write some code that was largely stringing together processing blocks like that. I overloaded | and >, so a lot of my C++ functions looked pretty much like shell scripts (initially though I'd need an overload of < as well, but never really did).
@sehe Well, I've had a lot of trouble with the compiler complaining it can't find draw for the types I'm trying to use. I think it's mostly a link-time and/or include issue.
@caps I'm actually really puzzled, thinking about it now, about what issue it is, because I've fixed it in several places where I'm using that pattern over the past week, and I don't remember what I did in any of those cases. Except, I do remember a few cases where the solution was to move the helper functions into the global namespace. :(
@caps define type in nested namespace, import it into another namespace. ADL considers the namespace where the type was defined, not the namespace where it's visible.
@caps That looks to me like it probably doesn't use ADL at all. It would only involve ADL if the draw you're invoking is found in the same namespace as one of the arguments you pass was defined (and that wasn't the current namespace or one you're using, or anything like that).
@JerryCoffin For me it often uses ADL. I have namespace A { namespace B { class C {}; } } and I use A::B::C with that draw pattern in some class namespace D { class E {}; }
@caps I think I came up with that pattern before I saw the talk (because I used variants quite heavily with Spirit ASTs). stackoverflow.com/a/18859931/85371 (the variant visitor) is an example using ADL;
@jaggedSpire Oh. You know what. I am doing that in some cases. How do I make the functions that operate on nestedNamespace::myType available via ADL in the class that wrote the using alias?
@sehe I'll check these out. I like that Sean Parent's model thing moves the interface constraints into the user code instead of in an inheritance tree. I don't like that it still requires heap allocations (even though he says it doesn't? I'm confused about that claim)
@caps However, you can do the inverse. Derive your type from template <typename...> struct adl_tag_base {}; and you can associate any number of special purpose namespaces! struct my_type: adl_tag_base<lib::fancy_operators::adl_hook, lib::serialization_functions::adl_hook> { ... }
@Borgleader I am getting pretty tired of never playing any games with anyone though. If only there were some MMO someone were encouraging me to play... I need to finish my present scarf inside of the next three weeks though.
> Although a function call can be resolved through ADL even if ordinary lookup finds nothing, a function call to a function template with explicitly-specified template arguments requires that there is a declaration of the template found by ordinary lookup (otherwise, it is a syntax error to encounter an unknown name followed by a less-than character)
@jaggedSpire It's not very hard. It's actually just very intuitive (you have to give the compiler something it can parse before it can start resolving things) /cc @ThePhD