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17:01
@AlexM. I wouldn't want to be a member of any club that would accept that as a joke.
@TonyTheLion woof
Puppy had a fun experience today
Puppy's colleague renamed some shit for fun and broke the application.
Puppy's colleague then decided that this wasn't the fault of pointlessly renaming shit, but because he didn't pointlessly rename enough shit, affecting far more code, including the legacy codebase instead of the new codebase.
Puppy is looking forward to eviscerating this colleague tomorrow.
Puppy's colleague is now missing
Ven
Ven
no, tomorrow
17:15
puppy's colleague is now tomorrow?!
Ven
Ven
no, tomorrow's puppy is now a colleague
I don't understand why people keep installing dicsourse
shouldn't that be dicsource?
dicksores
yep
looks like there already are reports in the tracker where constrained templates are handled differently (and wrongly) depending on whether they are a member template or not :|
:D
when's GCC 6 scheduled to hit release anyway?
32
Q: Should we avoid language features that C++ has but Java doesn't to increase maintainability?

amuseSuppose I am limited to use C++ by the environment in the project. Is it good to prevent the use of some language features that C++ has but Java doesn't have (e.g.: multiple inheritance, operator overriding)? I think the reasons are: If Java doesn't provide a feature that C++ has, it means tha...

lol
@melak47 it’s at the maintainers’ discretion (I think), but if it’s anything like the previous years it’s in a few months’ time
programmers being garbage as usual
17:28
the other one programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/308279/… on the hot question list
Uri
Uri
for (auto i = my_unordered_set.begin(); i < my_unordered_set.end() - 1;
so garbage
Uri
Uri
what's the correct way to do this
with std::prev and !=
@Uri for(auto&& elem : my_unordered_set)
17:28
hopefully you have covered the case where the container is empty beforehand
Uri
Uri
i want to stop one before last
why
the order is meaningless
Uri
Uri
std::prev(my_unordered_set.end()) ?
there is no last element in the unordered set because there is no order
Uri
Uri
if there is no order what is the meaning of an iterator
17:30
iterating
it iterates in unspecified order
Uri
Uri
ok.. i don't care about the order
i just want to stop once before last
Uri
Uri
cartesian product on unordered_set
get with it gentlemen
@Uri THERE IS NO LAST IF THERE'S NO ORDER
17:30
there is no last element ffs
brilliance has ensued
@MadameElyse beter loat as noot
It could as well randomize the order every iteration
@milleniumbug I’m actually curious about that and looking it up
Uri
Uri
17:31
then how to do cartesian product on unordered_set
i want all pairs, with first element and second different
just early return on equivalence?
@milleniumbug IIRC some language's (Go's?) stdlib did just that
@LucDanton that's probably not true I think
@Uri at worse you have to iterate once and cache the arbitrary order it gives you, and work on that instead (but hang in there, we’re double checking)
Uri
Uri
wow cpp sucks
so does your face
Uri
Uri
17:33
gotta be a better way
@AndyProwl yeah a bit. I'm bad at memorizing details. Roland supernatural seemed nice for sound. But some instruments are nicer than others to the touch. In general I can recommend that - but you'll have to check about touch preference yourself
sets are ordered, unordered_sets are unordered
it sucks because there is no order in, get this, unordered_set
@Uri Not using unordered containers
Uri
Uri
but you must see that it makes sense to go over pairs of a set
with ordering or without
17:34
sure, you can iterate over them - that's what the iterator is for
@Uri indeed
Uri
Uri
scarlet, not seeing a solution
@Uri go over to the C++ room with questions about C++. Oh, and read The Rules.
@ScarletAmaranth OP wants to filter (uncurry (/=)) $ zip xs xs
@milleniumbug Wow.
17:35
@Uri oi this is not a helpdesk
forget about help, I’m done with you
@LucDanton I have just decided to troll him because he has just walz'd in randomly
formulate a proper question, put some thought into it and post on StackOverflow
mmm, windows GUI much pretty lately
> >thought
> >OP
scarlet plz
@Uri If you want to leave one item out of your set at random then you could do std::for_each(std::begin(my_unordered_set), std::prev(std::end(my_unordered_set)), my_functor_or_lambda_goes_here);
@caps success guaranteed
@caps It's almost as random as uninitialized variables
17:39
But you would need to check for an empty container first.
I don't really understand why you'd want to do that though...
Uri
Uri
@caps cartesian product on a set
nested loop
@Uri I don't understand why the cartesian product calls for leaving out one element at random... ?
Uri
Uri
never asked to leave one element out
just to get pairs of different elements
@Uri You did. You said you want to skip the last element.
Uri
Uri
nm it was a specific implementation i had in mind
17:42
11 mins ago, by Uri
i just want to stop once before last
If you don't want the last element it means you want to leave the last element out.
Uri
Uri
bravo
But the "last" element is effectively random (though, not actually random, strictly speaking) in an unordered_set.
Uri
Uri
even if only accessing?
it changes order?
@Uri It doesn't necessarily "change" order. There is no defined order.
You could run the code with the same inputs twice and there is no reason you wouldn't get two different results.
17:44
user image
9
Because the order is not defined.
photoshop lol
user3790646
@orlp LOL
@Uri Yes and no. As long as you only read from the set, the elements remain in the same order. If you insert or delete, however, the order can change arbitrarily.
17:45
It's just... you can't really reason about what's going on when you read the code if you're leaving out the "last" element in an unordered container.
@JerryCoffin And, perhaps more importantly, the order is not defined. You can't know when you write the code what the order will be. /cc @uri
Uri
Uri
that doesn't matter
@caps To an extent he can, and in this case it even makes perfect sense. Have you looked past your own preconceptions long enough to understand what he's asking, and why?
If you want order, use <set>
Uri
Uri
read-only
@orlp He doesn't. He's made his intent clear (repeatedly) for anybody who bothers to read what he's said.
17:47
@JerryCoffin I just joined the chat room
forgive me
@JerryCoffin I tried looking up cartesian product, but I didn't understand why you'd leave one element out at random. That seems like it would lead to unpredictable results that are difficult to understand and reason about.
@orlp One virgin and all will be well.
@JerryCoffin One male specimen from reddit will be shipped to you shortly.
Uri
Uri
never realized ineffectiveness can be so fun
17:48
alright enough bugs filed for today
I mean, sure, if he's given an immutable unordered_set then he can loop over it and figure out the order and know it won't change as long as he (or another thread) doesn't change it. But what is the state of his input?
@Uri I think I understood what's going on: do a nested loop, if the element from the outer loop is equal to the element of the inner loop, continue
@caps Think of a distance chart with some list of cities on the left and across the top. The order of the cities is irrelevant. He just want to eliminate the grayed out box across the diagonal for the distance from a city to itself. For every other box, there's a distance. For that box of X to X, there's no meaningful computation or result.
@JerryCoffin where can I read his requirements?
Uri
Uri
@mill
@milleniumbug yeah that'll work
17:50
@orlp 10 minutes ago (or so) in the transcript. E.g.:
10 mins ago, by Uri
@caps cartesian product on a set
Uri
Uri
@orip i have an unordered_set, i want to iterate on pairs of objects from it, where the two objects are different
@milleniumbug although that blurs the line between element and value, a mistake (or not, depending on what one wants the program to stand for) that I see crop up often when the Cartesian product is involved
I don’t know it’s for the Cartesian product specifically, e.g. I see no confusion like that when zipping is involved
if identity is important, compare iterators instead
Uri
Uri
but complexity is a bit worse right
I don't see the problem, iterators shouldn't change if you're reading from a set
Uri
Uri
17:51
not asymptotically but still
(@milleniumbug)
can you walk the iterators backwards in the inner loop?
@Uri I don't know what are we comparing to
then just preincrement, then you skip the "last" element by default :)
@melak47 I think that's what OP is talking about, but I'm not familiar with this algorithm
Hmm, I thought C# questions had so many followers I'd get answers immediately.
17:53
for (auto i1 = s.begin(); i1 != s.end(); ++i1) {
    for (auto i2 = s.begin(); i2 != s.end(); ++i2) {
        // ...
    }
}
Now I've only gotten an upvote.
I don't really see the problem
Uri
Uri
@orip i'll SO this question, it seems general enough
will send link shortly
orip?
who's that
@orlp You're comparing iterators.
17:54
@rubenvb which is perfectly valid?
@orlp sure, but what is it then that you're doing exactly?
err, I got confused, you don't even need that
@rubenvb it's a feature, in sets there won't be any duplicates anyway
cartesian product is also pairs with itself
oh wait, I did cartesian square
Still not sure what you're trying to accomplish here. Just compare the set objects and be done with it...?
17:56
I should have s1 and s2 for a cartesian product of sets
Uri
Uri
0
Q: How to iterate on unordered pairs inside an unordered_set?

UriWhat's a concise way to iterate on pairs of elements in unordered_set, where order doesn't matter and elements should be different?

@rubenvb no comparison should be needed?
wait, elements should be different?
@orlp Although it's not a huge deal, I'd guess he only wants to compute either the upper or lower triangle of the matrix, not both.
no one told me that =/
yes, these were the requirements
17:56
Ah now I see what this is.
I was just told cartesian product
I was thrown off by your first double loop code version.
@Uri give an example input set, and what you expect the result to be
that's not the cartesian product
Uri
Uri
you're right, i changed the specs
i'm fickle as weather
17:58
@orlp rip
Wow the Lounge has lost coherence. Again.
@Uri so if I understand correctly you want the cartesian square of a set, but only with distinct pairs
In other news: I'm delivering the physical copies of my PhD thesis to my jury tomorrow!
@rubenvb Nice, what is it about?
@orlp Electron vortex beams, the quantum mechanical theory thereof.
18:00
Delivering physical copies of PhDs efficiently
@rubenvb Can't you beam the thesis* to the jury?
@orlp They already have the PDF.
I put metal rings in it
so it's easy to read
I'm such a friendly PhD candidate.
They should pass me just because of the metal rings.
No need for a formal defense.
This is not the PhD defense you are looking for.
@rubenvb Maximum Decoherence Drive enabled sir. Currently passing the event horizon. Unfortunately, we'll lose all sensibility soon, so we may never know with certainty whether we've actually entered Lougespace or not.
@JerryCoffin I think you may have just out-geeked the Internet.
> {1, 2, 3} => (1, 2) (2, 3) (1, 3)
Why didn't you put it that way in the first place??
That's not "skip the last element"...
Uri
Uri
18:05
because my implementation was: for (i=0; i<size-1; i++) { for (j=i; j<size; j++) {
specification by telepathy/osmosis, mumble some words related to the problem at hand and assume that everybody else will get it
a big portion of 'give teh codez' questions take this approach
Oh, you guys don't have a crystal ball?
@rubenvb Mooooomm...Daddy just broke the internet again...
18:07
That's how I wrote most of my SO answers.
@rubenvb you know the true technique to pass your PhD?
give them pens
and tell them to keep em
Haha. I've got just short of a month to get pens printed.
What should I put on my PhD pens?
My face?
user1804599
Rasputin is a great song.
Let's Encrypt successfully tamed, no more self-signed garbage
18:21
@rubenvb Depends on your face
@caps I keep thinking the standard library algorithms must have something that does this, but I can't find it. inner_product is kind of close, but doesn't do the trick. At the very least you'd have to massage the inputs first.
ITT caps talking to himself
:D
Uri
Uri
:D
@caps it’s std::for_each
18:30
@caps Those are combinations, not products
Also bored
@CatPlusPlus aren't you still using self-signed garbage?
Bask in the glory
oh, well, logs where down when I checked
Uri
Uri
18:36
@orip thanks for the help
Uri
Uri
@orlp
cool
orip pls
@CatPlusPlus ლ(ಠ益ಠლ)
1il|I is it really that hard?
18:39
orip
no
or1ilI|p
there
Uri
Uri
i have a new 30'' screen
everything is small
i'm blind
I have a new 30"... nvm
@ElimGarak good news and bad news. The dual link DVI screen does not want to work with the dp -> dvi dual link cable. However, the DP -> HDMI for the other screen works fine, so I could vacate the working DVI port for the stupid display
@orlp relax, or!p :p
Hi guys! Is the analyzer in XCode always accurate about its warnings?
18:48
lol
I've been debugging the past few hours trying to find where I'm accessing memory that might already be deleted, and it's giving me a headache omf
@OneRaynyDay aren't there tools for that? valgrind, address-sanitizer, etc?
Never mind. Clobbered my clipboard anyways
TOO LATE
@melak47 Ooh, I'll look into them, never knew they existed tbh
@Uri what's the resolution then o.O
2560x1600 usually
Uri
Uri
what he said
What, the 4k or the 2560x1600
0
A: 35 + 6 = 30 + 11

Telkitty the Web DeveloperMaths is all about abstraction. Even apples have different sizes, how can you add 5 large apples and 3 small apples and get 8 apples? If they think apple and oranges as objects, it's much easier to understand why 35 + 6 = 30 + 11.

What a trash answer
18:59
I would expect no less!
@CatPlusPlus Can't get std::ostream_iterator<std::pair<int, int>> to cooperate... coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/84a26b47cd74139d
Using ostream_iterator is a sure sign you're overdoing it
@sehe "One doesn't necessarily equal one, because one rainbow isn't the same as one pound of rice."
@sehe in her defense, shittiest question ever
@slaphappy You'd be surprised
19:03
hey can you add morwenn to the gh group or something
Are you referring with this advantages to my examples in the question?... — alexj123 1 min ago
No. I'm referencing your mom
@slaphappy Not even. See the accepted answer + comments.
@JerryCoffin One punch in the face certainly fixes that, as D.R. Kaprekar showed in 1961
@caps Your operator>> overloads aren't being found because they're in the global namespace. One cheat is to implement them in namespace std. As an aside: you also want to #include <tuple>.
@JerryCoffin Gross. Thanks all the same.
@JerryCoffin Seems like there should be a way to do it without technically invoking UB (i.e. adding something to namespace std).
inherit from std::tuple :p
@caps There are other ways to do it--that's just a quick and dirty way that minimizes changes to the existing code. The usual is to define a type of your own, and define the operators in the same namespace as that type, so they'll be found via ADL. The problem (and solution) here stem from the fact that std::tuple and std::pair are defined (obviously enough) in namespace std, so that's where ADL searches for the associated operators.
19:11
Another popular hack is to have a derived ostream wrapping the real ostream and make the operators resolve using that its associated namespace
@JerryCoffin doesn't ADL search in the template parameters's namespaces though?
Another popular hack is to not use ostream at all
Another popular hack is to go out with friends and drink.
another popular and handsome hack is me
@slaphappy ADL searches everywhere.
@slaphappy wow such hack
19:16
@Puppy then why caps problem
I received my tax notice again. I owe: all of my money
Ell
Ell
Kernel oops
Great :D
@slaphappy It can, but in this case you only have std::tuple<int, int>, which doesn't add a namespace, because int isn't associated with any namespace.
int doesn’t play by the rules and goes it alone
@JerryCoffin oh, ok, I thought it was considered in the global namespace
you never stop learning
you do when you're dead
Ell
Ell
19:30
now just a black screen argh :V
God: "They misspelt my name. Again"
@AndyProwl I don't get the third from end...
also, you forgot the dislike for snackchat
19:53
@slaphappy For better or worse, no, it's not.

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