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04:00
@jaggedSpire I've known about that for quite some time: it's why I threw my own formatting library out the window.
@ThePhD Ah. It's news to me. Very shiny news.
gleaming like snow or innocence to be lost silver
@HubertApplebaum kinda wish I could get a glimpse of your JSON-handling code, out of curiosity
On the bright side I'm not farting as badly today as yesterday
Give me 3 mins
Hm.
@jaggedSpire I haven't submoduled it into Furrovine yet, but I'll get there soon!
04:02
@ThePhD Formatting of what?
@Shoe Strings.
Luc and I talked about format strings forever ago
fun times etc
I like iostreams for data (e.g. streambuf and friends are fine): hate them for outputting formatted data (boooooo, ostream&).
anyway time to sscceeeeeeeeee
Is Luc your best friend?
04:04
sure
@jaggedSpire dear god the double space tabs
Were you the one that brought him here?
no
lol
Luc has been here since the dawn of time.
He is ageless.
A deity that deigns to take human form and walk amongst mortals.
@Nooble it's like some people enjoy not consuming half their screen with indentation-born whitespace or something
04:05
@jaggedSpire Do you use two-spaced tabs?
actually I use 2-width tabs in my personal code
You're a monster.
@Nooble This surprises you... how?
@ThePhD lol
RIGHT I was thinking about what to name table.deep_dive("a", "b", "c")
It's honestly a get operation that is meant to retrieve a single valu-
04:07
look I like to keep my text editor at 80 columns and that's difficult when you consume 12 columns for the first level of code in a member function (4 for namespace, 4 for class, 4 for function scope)
table.get( chained("a", "b", "c") ) // == table["a"]["b"]["c"]
@Rapptz what are you up to
What do I call chained here?
and heaven help you if you have nested classes or anything in the detail namespace
That's the kicker. I just need that wrapper.
04:07
@LucDanton trying to figure out how stupid I am
@ThePhD What does chained do exactly?
Puts stuff in a tuple?
similarly, navigating column-by-column through indentation is a mild frustration I'd like to avoid if possible, so I use tabs, instead of spaces.
@ThePhD you're right
04:09
@Shoe The default would be table.get("a", "b", "c");, which produces a tuple of three items. table.get( something("a", "b", "c") ); means "get a single item, but dig down through table a and b, and finally get the value of c."
this works as I expect
@ThePhD I see
Maybe I should just call it key.
@Rapptz do you have a workflow for Sphinx docs and the gh-pages branch?
@ThePhD call it robert we don't have enough roberts in here
04:11
@LucDanton I ditched it and use rtfd.org now
I’m getting tired of trying to co-ax GH in doing my bidding, I feel like I should just go with the flow
we need more confusion
@Rapptz lol
it has commit hooks
so it builds the docs every commit
good for lazy people like me
@Rapptz thx now I know what my final project for the class is going to be.
"How to use rtfd.org."
04:12
I'll call it a day. See you later. Memory Mapped Files are my new favorite thing about life.
it's not hard lol
O_o
It doesn't matter if it's hard or not, as long as I do an evaluation ~~of the current field technology~~.
And give it a ~~software engineering perspective~~.
WIGGLE WIGGLE TILDE TILDE.
How do websites like readthedocs.org make money to support themselves?
@Rapptz what are you looking for
04:14
are you surprised because it was no challenge
( At the bottom: "funded by readers like you" )
right
@HubertApplebaum this should work:
missed that grey on lighter grey text at the bottom of the page
gist blocked sigh
sigh m8
@HubertApplebaum yeah that’s exactly types don’t know #
#goodfirewallpolicies
04:16
@Rapptz dude
We're not talking about to_json
the other way around
see I'm retarded
LONG DAY
04:17
excuses
Oh, yeah.
I think my gf is ignoring me
"types don’t know #" is about bidirectionality btw
(I felt like mansplaining)
I know
it worked
04:17
thanks Luc I'm not actually retarded
I have the sample problem writing from_lua, don't worry @HubertApplebaum It's a hard prblem.
night newbs
AND YOU GUYS WONDER WHY I DON'T TALK HERE
it was worth the chuckle I regret nothing
@LucDanton No my initial concern was "how to not boilerplate"
04:18
That said, any solution you two come to I'd be interested in.
bc as you can see to parse a shitty structure it takes FOREVER
Right now what I do is is pass a type<T> tag to the function
And so what you do is write a free function
lemme tell you something
from_x( type<T>, /* whatever */ )
python has really good library design
04:19
It gets hard, though. What about T& and shit.
Do you have to rewrite that stuff?
imo anyway
the relevance to that btw
python's libraries are nice.
is that most of my stuff is inspired by it
@HubertApplebaum I bring up types don’t know # because I feel like it’s minimal re: boilerplate. Sadly that’s only by C++ standards, I feel like it’ll still look ugly because of the member names etc.
Really the only thing I don't like about python is func( l = [] )
04:20
use None
I know, but I'm just saying.
@LucDanton if this is as minimal as it gets I'll just shoot myself
That's kind've a wart to me.
Python has this thing
@HubertApplebaum naw, what you have isn’t types don’t know #
04:20
int main(int arg, char * argv[]) {
    handler handler_;
    http_server::options options(handler_);
    http_server server_(
        options.address("0.0.0.0")
               .port("8000"));
    server_.run();
}
called object_hook
Speaking of atrocious styles @jaggedSpire
@LucDanton It's a recursive descent parser sort of
which is basically from_json
except only if they're dicts/objects/whatever
cause no one would serialise a class into an int right?
riiiiiiiiiiiight?
Maybe Of course not.
04:22
@Rapptz oh is this why you brought up implicits?
yeah
I’ve been experimenting with reflection, but 'TDK#' style cus part of the appeal is that you can have named 'recipes'
which is nice because it’s explicit, not implicit mind you
@Rapptz are you considering adding something like that object_hook?
I like object_hook a lot but iunno if others do lol
it makes it really easy to deserialise stuff
but
it only works because python is dynamic
04:25
@Nooble I see you like whitespace consuming your screen
or is that not your code I'm too lazy to scroll up
@HubertApplebaum basically my lib + implicits
except with broken string handling last I checked
@HubertApplebaum the README doesn’t show how you define custom (de)serialization, if that’s what you wanted to point out
I was knitting/being actually productive for once I will have you know
which btw wasn't that long ago
@Rapptz naw
04:26
I think it was 3 months ago
you can type it
@jaggedSpire of course it's not mine
object_hook in python is only one function :/
that's just horrriibbbllleee
@Rapptz meaning?
04:27
@HubertApplebaum it doesn't handle unicode and string escapes very well
@Rapptz oh, then I’m not reading the right thing cus it’s a named argument where I’m looking
who needs unicode anyway, this is america
might be improved though
as the argument to e.g. the JSONDecoder constructor?
mmm yeah I use trailing underscores for members, not local variables. It needlessly decorates the name of something that won't be in scope long when used in a free function
@jaggedSpire Here's my style which is like super superior.
and it's not consistent either. options doesn't have the trailing underscore...
@Rapptz one hook per JSON 'type'
no it just so happens mine is one type :v
I do like the way they call the mutating functions for the argument builder as a list though
04:30
I mean if/when translating to static typing
yeah
@LucDanton Also generating a "stack trace" where the parse error occured is extremely verbose
it's actually not that hard to do it that way
I can't even throw_with_nested so I basically have to catch and concat exception messages all the way up
04:30
just too much whitespace, and I'm not sure about starting on the same line as the declaration--it means you either confine the name to a specific length or get one line that's misaligned in the list
you could maybe do value.as<SomeCustomType>();
and check if it has a hook
@Nooble seems okay enough.
@HubertApplebaum are you saying that lib does it right?
no I'm saying it's a problem I don't know how to handle well
should I resign
ime TDK# can handle that as well
04:33
lol Santorum got 1% of the vote in Iowa so far
> 822 errors
what semicolon did I forget now
@jaggedSpire it's beautifullllll
Trump didn't win, though he does still get 7/24 delegates
thanks Cicada
got me in the C++ mood again
lol
sure is nice
04:35
@Rapptz am glad
@Nooble you fucking bookmarked that?
@jaggedSpire Yes.
1 hour ago, by Rapptz
my lib does use types don't know #
what happened to that
The things I would do for Free Cancer Treatment
@LucDanton it's still true
04:36
@Nooble ...why?
@jaggedSpire because it's beautiful.
just not for deserialisation
@Rapptz better point Hubert to an example to stop the moaning
@Rapptz lmao nice bidi
04:37
ikr
I said his dump is a pain to specialise
bruh
dump is not meant to be specialised
it's literally the types don't know # interface to it
Hubert don’t know types don’t know #
I'm lost now
and still can't tyep
well I guess it’s okay since it won’t help you there
04:38
@Nooble <3 in retrospect I think I'd have liked to make a templated function that returned the UniquePtrToPtrPtr object and called it transformToPtrPtr or something. It could have automatically deduced the type of the pointer, too...
not that that was ever actually used. :P
are you subtly implying that I should just be providing an overload of json::dump
anyway
@Nooble I have a concept similar to that.
no I'm implying
that json::dump is irrelevant to deserialisation
I think the name "dump" has clear implications of being serialisation ya know
T_T
ok I'm lost again I thought we were talking about serialisation
04:39
@ThePhD I posted that a few months ago as a question of what to do when encountering c-style apis for altering pointers
what
2 mins ago, by Rapptz
dump is not meant to be specialised
I can see that
you know what I'll just assume you're all wrong
when all you have are smart pointers because you are not being a dingus about resource management
okay
let me break it down
are you talking about converting to json
or from json
04:40
to_json I already do like you do in your gist
from_json I complain that it's a huge pain with the current design of your lib
the end
okay that's deserialisation friend-o
correct
now fix it
I will
@jaggedSpire That's pretty close to what I do, actually.
10 mins ago, by Rapptz
you could maybe do value.as<SomeCustomType>();
you can smell the pep8 from here btw
gonna get water brb
04:41
I also want tracebacks or idk
@ThePhD Nooble had UniquePtrToPtrPtr as his status for a while. When I noticed it, he changed it to UniqueReferenceToReferenceReference
why not adopt TDK#?
am I really asking for too much
@ThePhD we think alike then
@HubertApplebaum pull requests welcome
04:42
I basically just want to give the path to the value and the type
@jaggedSpire We do!
And let magic be done
@LucDanton long time no hear
... I'm not sure if I should be scared or not by the revelation that we solved thing similarly.
@ThePhD quickly pretends to not be a general menace
@ThePhD should've called it peter
04:43
The thing I did that was Dirty™ was overloading operator& on my own handle type.
@HubertApplebaum nah it should be robert. Robert for everything!
Robert 2016
So &my_handle would return the ptrptr_type<handle::pointer> thing.
peter_peter
@jaggedSpire :D
@LucDanton was that for me?
04:44
@Rapptz yeah
@ThePhD ah
it seems hard to do for deserialisation of json
at least, it isn't immediately clear to me
@Rapptz k I’ll give a try
is that what you wanted fam
yes finally people working for me at no extra cost
04:46
a challenge?
shush hubert
took a while today
@Rapptz no, not really but that jekyll business is making me very sad
I'm feeling sad right now
getting ignored by your gf is not a very nice feeling
ignore her back
it’s stuff I’ve already done but with Lua so I figure why not give it a try
04:47
TDK#?
solution: have no gf, drown sorrows in c++
@Rapptz how do you know she's ignoring you
the resulting error-reporting was also okay and apparently Hubert cares about that
@jaggedSpire But then no hugs.
04:48
Hugs are for the weak.
@Nooble I dislike hugs
@Nooble I've been ignored before to know how it is
@LucDanton Well tell me you enjoy having a process failing with "could not parse configuration"
Everyone plonk Rapptz to support his gf's decision
do you know how python errors out
do I want to
04:49
json is a well designed library
just a stack trace telling you X is not (de)serialisable lol
what we need is nameof
that works at compile time ._.
k anyway
anyone wanna tell me what's wrong with value.as<my_cool_thing>();?
and having that redirect to another function
@Rapptz I like separating what’s a customization hook and what’s not
i.e. separate the as<a_json_type> from bikeshed_other_as<udt>
04:52
@Rapptz Now I need to write 2x as many functions
does that make sense to you?
no
@HubertApplebaum why
@LucDanton could you explain it btw
@jaggedSpire Whyyyy.
@Rapptz I consider the 'downcast' from e.g. value to array a fundamental operation
going from value to a UDT is something else
@Rapptz Oh :(
04:56
so I like to separate those operations
of course if the second one is called for value to array then it defaults to the first one
one’s primitive, the other is extensible
I don't really feel the same :|
Maybe it's just me valuing a simplistic interface I guess
I feel the need for it for generic code
I mean to me I see as as a way of casting from value to T
sometimes you call as<some_computed_type> and you end up calling something very distant by mistake
@Rapptz sure
regardless of what T is
04:58
sure
I did say 'downcast', it has 'cast' in it
I know
I'm just explaining my feelings
@Nooble because they force me to engage in physical contact, which I dislike
well it’s your API, you do what you want
I care about your opinion too you know
@LucDanton lol
04:58
@jaggedSpire But but high-fives. And handshakes. Also cuddling kittens.
I like the way this is worded
@Rapptz well that’s pretty much it
alright
@Nooble it's okay to be sad, lots of people are disappointed :P
idk what I'll do then

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