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18:00
Proposal for a standard packaging system for C++. Is there any way it can work?
@Morwenn no
is that a rhetorical question
user1804599
@Morwenn No, lol.
@milleniumbug obviously
@milleniumbug I mean: there is a proposal in the latest mailing.
user1804599
18:02
@fredoverflow I'm surprised Java really represents strings as objects that store pointers to char arrays. Mono doesn't do this; it stores them the same way it stores arrays.
@milleniumbug What if there were no rhetorical questions?
omg i luv xinput
I used this weird tool to disable scroll inputs on my logitech mouse it seg faulted but it worked THEN I used xinput to remap one of those buttons to left mouse click aaaaaahhhhhhh so happy
I forgot what I was doing before all this
@caps What is it supposed to do?
What output were you expecting?
18:18
@caps Your whole life.
Ohman, didn't think I'd ever have t install IntelliJ again.
@Zoidberg thx will check out at home
user1804599
The link expires after 72 hours.
@Morwenn Link meee.
@ThePhD Now kids look carefully at him. If you don't brush your teeth, you could end up having to use a Java IDE too!
18:21
What am I? A proposal linker? :o
sanity check:
@Morwenn Apparently, yes.
in The 2nd Monitor on The Stack Exchange Network Chat, 1 min ago, by Johan Larsson
    public static int Foo()
    {
        return Bar(null);
    }

    private static int Bar(List<int> ints)
    {
        if (ints == null)
        {
            ints = new List<int>();
        }

        ints.Add(1);
        return ints[0];
    }
I say ^ is therad safe
rest of the room says it is not
Xeo
Xeo
> [...]@blizzard.com
huh
@JohanLarsson is that C# or Java?
18:23
C#
@Borgleader I was expecting this: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/1b47c82dd68c1f76
boost::unique varying from std::unique with that interface in a surprising way.
note the recognizable marks: it's posted by Johan, the method has first letter uppercased, the List is instantiated, the List has value type as a template parameter
@milleniumbug ohh, I just noticed the operator overloading
@JohanLarsson At least at first glance, it looks to me like the rest of the room is right.
@Xeo Well...
@JerryCoffin gah, feel like I'm on crazy pills when you say it, glance again?
@Morwenn what lol
@milleniumbug if there was no operator overloading, you can't tell, you can write functions in both languages against the convention. same code compiles in both languages.
@Morwenn THat's a bit of a trainwreck
If it were documented it would be clever.
Since it's undocumented, it's confusing.
18:25
@KhaledKhnifer actually no
@ThePhD To be honest, I didn't take the time to read it yet.
the "the List has value type as a template parameter" still wouldn't be a thing in Java regardless of what your imports are
@JohanLarsson Let me ask a question instead. What happens if thread A executes the if (ints == null), then a task switch takes place, then thread B does the same, allocates ints, and (some time later) thread A starts executing again?
The #using directive looks aweful.
@Morwenn It is truly awful.
The manifest file syntax doesn't help either.
18:27
@JerryCoffin different ints for each thread
@milleniumbug I see, well beside these differences, C# and Java code look quite similar to me
It's basically demanding compilers support some kind of automatic include addition. Not only that, but it specifies packages in terms of the file system and has things like "path" and "version" and "architecture" folders.
Anyone know how to file a bug report with boost documentation?
Hey, at least it uses JSON.
@ThePhD So?
18:29
@JohanLarsson And is that what you want? If you're never sharing the resource, then thread safety is pretty much a given.
@JerryCoffin and this is why I find it so strange that everyone in the room says it is not thread safe
It is trivial imo.
Xeo
Xeo
@JohanLarsson if Bar is only ever called with null, should be safe. If it is ever not, no.
It's a fucked up piece of code anyways, tho
Bar is private so we are safe
and even though both high level C# and Java code would quite similiar, both sides would do stupid things to be uniquely different, as if Java guys would say "We walk in spirals" and C# guys would say "We walk in zig-zag"
@Xeo yeah, dumbed down sample of a thing
18:32
@CatPlusPlus So it's entirely unwieldy. Not only that but it's also incredibly specific to the architectures and compilers currently available. Not only that, but throughout the whole paper there's a serious amount of "Compilers are recommended to, but DON'T HAVE TO implement this thing here..."
Unwieldy how
Also having a concept of architecture doesn't mean it's limited to existing architectures
So they're basically CONTRIBUTING to the problem: without any kind of demand for a baseline of features, they're basically throwing their hands up and shrugging "I mean, you can totally do this, but you don't have to."
The baseline seems to be discovery and the package format, that's not nothing
what is this #using directive?
Oh nevermind. Sort of.
It is documented, just kind of in the wrong place:
18:37
@Prismatic Proposed directive for a packaging system in C++.
@JohanLarsson Why wouldn't it be?
There's no shared state.
@ThePhD I think from the committee's viewpoint, it's going to look a little different. Their concern is going to be much simpler: it's building a lot into the compiler that has essentially nothing to do with compiling at all.
@EtiennedeMartel not sure how they can get it to not be, probably just a bandwagon.
@JohanLarsson The only guess I can make is that they think ints is somehow passed by reference, so the second call to Foo() will reuse the same variable.
@JerryCoffin Their arguments at the end of the paper are mostly that the C++ standard is the best place to put this stuff, since it'd force the hand of every C++-compatible build system on the planet to support this simple MANIFEST/File Set format they're proposing.
I'm not sure the committee will spring for something like that, though? Usually the committee waits for something like this to be community-battled and approved before they even think about adding it.
Xeo
Xeo
18:41
@EtiennedeMartel well, it would be, if Bar was ever called with something other than null. But in the small snippet there? Nah.
@Xeo Exactly my point.
@Morwenn Can't they just start fresh? They keep piling up all these features and stuff to the language
@Prismatic They could, but that wouldn't be C++ anymore.
that seems like a good thing
the more code people write in c++ longer it'll take to die
Just do D or Rust or whatever then.
18:44
It isn't enough for other languages to succeed, c++ should also fail :p
Why don't you submit a proposal called « let's not write C++ anymore » and see how it goes?
@ThePhD Yes--that's part of their charter ("Codify existing practice"), and departing from that has led to serious problems (remember export?)
Aww yeah I can't wait.
That would simplify SO much of my code.
user784668
@JerryCoffin You're murrican, no wonder you still believe in go^H^Hexport.
@ThePhD oh it's this dumb thing again
18:47
Oh cmon, it's a good idea. :<
user1804599
@JohanLarsson It is not thread-safe.
trolling? :)
std2 namespace incoming
user784668
@ThePhD It is, thus can't ever make it into the standard.
At least there are more and more proposals to remove small things :p
user1804599
18:50
@JohanLarsson If somebody calls Bar with a different list that is also being modified by another thread, it'll break.
user1804599
You should use immutable lists.
@Fanael I don't believe in anything (except my own supremacy, of course).
@Morwenn not_fn
STL is on a serious bender to kill all of std::bind and its friends.
@Zoidberg yeah, but Bar is private, only Foo can call it.
user784668
@Zoidberg lol
user1804599
18:50
Then it's perfectly thread-safe.
@Zoidberg no need for that overhead here
user1804599
What overhead?
but immutable are nice
@ThePhD std_no_legacy:: ?
user1804599
18:52
PEP 8 is horrible.
@Borgleader Sounds like it.
@ThePhD But also std::iterator, value_compare in maps, range-and-a-half algorithms and some stuff in std::allocator.
Xeo
Xeo
@Borgleader stx - std neXt :D
user784668
sti: std Improved
stud
for how herb sutter pronounces it
18:54
Plus the proposal advocates to reconsider std::vector<bool>, std::is_literal, the temporary buffer thing and std::raw_storage_iterator.
user1804599
Herb Stutter pronounces it stutututustutud.
@Borgleader boost::
std::shared_ptr "stud shared putter"
user1804599
@fredoverflow also fun:
user1804599
18:55
OMG BRIAN GÖTZ
@Morwenn Would it be a breaking changed to fix std::vector<bool>? Aside from the size things.
@ThePhD Yes, obviously
Weird proposal for using template parameter packs for reflection.
I'm sure there are people out there using std::vector<bool> solely because its specialized in the way it is
@Xeo i woud like that
18:56
idgi
what's wrong with std::is_literal
@Prismatic Yes--if we "fix" the current class, it should be by renaming it, not eliminating it.
@Morwenn implying boost doesnt have legacy code, hahahahaha
Well, removing std::vector<bool> would only be possible with the standardization of a drop-in replacement.
@JerryCoffin You mean renaming 'vector'?
@Morwenn bitset ?
18:58
@ThePhD dynamic_bitset
@Rapptz I can't find that. Where is it?
@Prismatic No, just the specialization for bool.
is_literal_type
So.... it's really std::is_constexpr_ready?
18:59
More like std::maybe_constexpr.
Oh, wow.
The requirements on it are really weak, pff.
Oh yeah
Where are my
Nested namespace identifiers
that were all the rage a few moments ago.
namespace A::B::C { }
Was that already voted in to C++14/17?
Already accepted in C++17.
\o/
Now we just need implementation support.
GCC 6 & Clang 3.6
@ThePhD yippee
@Morwenn 3.6?
19:03
@Nooble Yap. At least that's what their page says.
Interesting, I've run into this problem myself.
user784668
Why the hell do LLVM version number have a dot?
@Fanael probably due to rounding
@Morwenn Isn't 3.6 old? Thought the new one was 3.9.
user784668
19:04
LLVM 3.7 is really just LLVM 28.
@Nooble Yeah. Apparently they don't have much to implement these days so they just implement small features whenever they are standardized.
Lol.
A compiler that came the latest to the game is trashing all the other ones in implementation.
Get fucked, g++ and VC++
Add to that the fact that many people experiment some proposed features with Clang, so some of them are aleady somewhat available before being standardized. Like constexpr lambdas for example.
@ThePhD Well, g++ has concepts and transactional memory, and VC++ has coroutines and modules.
user784668
@ThePhD A compiler that had lots of monies thrown at it is trashing all the others? Who would've thunk?
clang++ has modules.
19:07
KREYGASM standard byte type FINALLY.
Not exciting :(
Oh come on it's totally exciting.
user784668
@ThePhD There's already a standard byte type, introduced in ISO/IEC 9899:1989.
@ThePhD It's just another fucking integer type in the end. We already have dozens of those.
It's useful but far from interesting. No fun allowed.
Where's my std::bit.
19:10
what is wrong with unsigned char again?
@Morwenn If it gets libraries to stop using char, I'm all ears.
jokeplsnokill
@Nooble You'll have std::bit_value, std::bit_reference and std::bit_iterator. Maybe.
user784668
@ScarletAmaranth Retards confuse it with char.
Lolwut. 2D graphics render for C++? /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @Nooble
19:10
@Morwenn :D
@ThePhD D:
I'm not sure which proposal deserves the retardation award in the latest mailing.
user784668
Is filesystem voted in?
The 2D graphics rendering paper looks interesting in so far as its class usages.
Wait wait are they integrating boost::asio hmm
@Fanael There's a proposal to include it in C++17.
19:13
Shiiiiit
This 2D graphics paper is full of base classes
for (/* ... */) { /* ... */ } catch default { /* ... */ } catch break { /* ... */ } probably has its merits when it comes to retardation?
user784668
@Morwenn I only hope they can realize how retartedly broken it is.
@ThePhD Yeah, it's full of ugly. Just like the Cairo one.
@Morwenn the one by Herb?
@Fanael I don't know. I never used it.
19:14
@Morwenn Lol, the cairo one is was so bad.
@ScarletAmaranth Yeh.
user784668
@Morwenn Not really, for..else is kinda useful in python sometimes, and that's essentially the same thing
@ThePhD I am really not sure what business he has writing graphics proposals
@Fanael How many additional control structures do we need to get into C++?
@ScarletAmaranth Absolutely fucking none.
user784668
@Morwenn It's very good if your filesystem is a state-of-the-70's UNIX fs.
19:15
Even Bjarne in his class here wants someone to propose a standard 2d graphics proposal for C++.
So they know that what they have is shitty.
@Fanael so you’re saying it’s very good then
why for 2d only tho?
user784668
@Morwenn So basically useful only for Jerry, because everyone else lives in the 21st century.
isn't it a half measure? or is the 2d stuff a precursor to a GUI rendering thing?
19:16
@ThePhD All your base are belong to us!
Because 3D is hard and is much more difficult to standardize.
It seems that nobody can come up with a decent modern C++ 2d graphics design :p
@Morwenn Hey, I'm working on mine! :<
Xeo
Xeo
> "Create declaration of blah in blub.h"
> Microsoft Visual Studio has stopped working
tch
@Fanael Basically it handles simple file systems but not slightly trickier ones?
19:17
lounge, lets all watch youtube.com/watch?v=pi62S_MvheE together
@ThePhD what's the point anyway? wouldn't a GUI thing be more useful than standard 2d stuff?
@Morwenn Skia
Considerations for the design of expressive portable SIMD vectors highlights some interesting points.
@ScarletAmaranth GUI is .... dare I say it, TOO high level? For C++.
@Fanael That's all right--you'll catch up to me eventually! Well, probably not to me, but eventually you'll get to where I am now...
user784668
19:18
@Morwenn I'd be fine with only handling simple shit if it also had no clue about old UNIX permissions and links.
Xeo
Xeo
@Morwenn Yeah :(
Like.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD No, fuck you.
@ScarletAmaranth It's meant to be a low-level 2d graphics stuff to build other things above.
user784668
@JerryCoffin I know, everyone dies after all.
19:18
@ThePhD but rendering 2d stuff... isn't? like that's just so arbitrary
2 mins ago, by ScarletAmaranth
isn't it a half measure? or is the 2d stuff a precursor to a GUI rendering thing?
@Fanael Can't we just ignore them most of the time?
skia is already in c++, no idea why they dont just adopt that
Its what chrome and android use to render graphics
2D rendering and related things are pretty much set in stone.
But GUI is... so very flakey, on how it's all supposed to operate.
Not sure if there's an established best practice or a really well-defined set of tools and etc. for it.
Plus there's also the idea that any GUI library needs to be insanely customizable.
user784668
19:20
@Morwenn Good luck ignoring them when some code tries to use these facilities when they have no obvious mapping to actual filesystem features.
Plus, most GUI libraries provide a mockup language... do you standardize that, or just make it easy to build a mockup language on top of what you decide to specify?
The C++ committee has said several times that it's not its job to maintain a standard GUI library.
use my gui lib when its ready :]
19:21
@Prismatic So that's a "don't"?
wow rude
it'll be done some day you'll see
@Morwenn I would agree with them.
@Prismatic same
Honestly, GUI specifications come down to "and you render these pixels with this size to this part of the screen".
They have already craploads of shit to handle on many levels.
19:22
how is GUI different from... say networking?
That's really high level and hard to pin down.
in the sense of arbitrarity
Because networking is well-defined.
Nothing about GUI is well-defined.
@Fanael I honestly thought at one point that std::thread would have set the trend with native_handle but it looks like it hasn’t. (And to be fair it’s not a perfect solution either.)
19:22
guis are hard and there are too many options for implementation
3
user784668
@Morwenn Like UNIX permissions on NTFS. Hell, even modern unix-like filesystems have ACLs.
What I think is interesting is what the application of templates and generic programming would look like for guis
It would look like a nightmare.
@Fanael « Don't you understand? It worked for years! » :D
Almost nobody uses ACLs on *nix filesystems
19:23
ACL... Access Control List?
They're actually useful only in very small number of cases
Like I was writing a ListView class awhile ago which displays data from a model as a list of items. So you could have it templated on ListView<Model<ItemType>,Delegate<ItemType>> where the delegate is the widget you draw for each individual item.
Its pretty flexible but pretty ugly
user784668
@CatPlusPlus Must be why Linux fs people are actively working on introducing Windows-like ACLs.
The civil time and timezone proposals could come in handy.
@Prismatic just like your mom
19:25
@Morwenn I saw Howard comment on it: he likes it!
@Fanael To what?
@ThePhD Good thing I guess. His own libraries looked pretty neat.
user784668
@CatPlusPlus To ext4, XFS, btrfs, you know, the usual actively-developed Linux filesystems.
Hinnant's time library is amazing.
"Actively working"?
These filesystems supported ACLs for years
19:25
omg the react conference is starting soon ahhhhhhh
And still almost nobody uses them
what will they reinvent this time
If there's one C++ developer I want to meet ad talk with its Howard Hinnant.
STL is also amazing.
Stepanov :( if he didn't retire :(
When the fuck am I gonna finish with school so I can meet with these guys at standard meetings.
user784668
19:26
@CatPlusPlus POSIX ACLs, yes. NTFS-style finely-grained ACLs, no.
user784668
And I'm talking about the latter.
@ThePhD Meet me instead.
Is there some thread about this
Also just because they're working on it doesn't mean they're actually necessary (and I wouldn't be surprised if it was systemd initiative)
Unix permissions are really just fine for most things
@ThePhD One day I'll make you present my papers :D
If I ever write papers again that is.
user784668
@CatPlusPlus Also, strictly speaking, they never supported ACLs.
Ell
Ell
19:29
I prefer ACLs
user784668
They support xattrs, which the VFS uses to implement ACLs in a reasonably filesystem-independent manner.
Ell
Ell
Idk the difference between NTFS and POSIX ACLs though
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus ...at least for people who don't care about security (at all). If you care even a little bit about security, there's essentially no chance at all they'll be even close to adequate.
user784668
@JerryCoffin Unixes are secure, it's only Windows that sucks
19:32
omg facebook presentation starting
@Fanael Unixes are secure and MongoDB is webscale. Is that enough of throwing around meaningless phrases for a while, or do you insist on more?
user784668
@JerryCoffin Whoosh.
memes in presentations
The number of memes in your presentation is directly proportional to how cool and hip you are irl
@Ell The main difference is in what permissions you can set. POSIX ACLs basically just let you specify multiple sets of RWX permission sets. That is, where the default file permissions only apply to you, your group, and the world, ACLs let you specify permissions specifically for other users and/or other groups--but you still only control RWX for them.
19:38
@Morwenn Any news on your original?
@Nooble Sure, we can coordinate and meet up with @jaggedSpire too, and maybe @набиячлэвэлиь can come too.
@ThePhD I sent the slides today.
@ThePhD Mhmm.
Maybe even @WGhost
Scott is in Michigan.
Rapptz is there too, Jerry is... somewhere on the West Coast (Colorado...? or New Mexico or something) and Mysticial is somewhere in the midwest right now, but currently in flux of moving.
@ThePhD I used to live in Colorado, but moved to San Diego, CA about 2 years ago.
@JerryCoffin Ooh, got it.
Telkitty's in Australia, and I think almost everyone else is in or near Europe, and like... all over the place.
Germany, UK, Netherlands, Poland...
And we can't forget Montreal, Canada for Etienne.
Domagoj is in the Czech republic.
If I ever get enough money I'm going to go visit every single lounger. It'll be a trip arund the world.
IIRC the lurker Nican is in Washington, near Bellevue.
melak is with sbi in Germany...
No idea where Millenium bug is.
Oh, and Italy with Jefffrey (Shoe).
19:47
@ThePhD Honestly, I've had enough of the optional/variant/expected discussions -____-
@Morwenn Hehehe.
This one muddies the water with something that alays returns its error message, but optionally includes the value too.
I like a lot of the simple proposals.
"Fix this thing that should be fixed with the standard library."
A lot of those are good, decent proposals that get things done.
Yeah, also the one that makes switch and strongy-typed enums play well together.
@ThePhD yesss
> const INheritance
wut
@ElimGarak Send help, he's doing more complex PDEs.
@ThePhD That one was fun.
19:53
@Morwenn This one?
@Prismatic The fewer the memes, the more cool and hip.
@ThePhD Yes.
@Nooble is tppi shippable yet?
> Hexadecimal floating literals for C++
huwat
Inflation in Zimbabwe. Shiny.
@ThePhD Well, just like in C99. Useful for exact representation apparently.
19:57
@Morwenn Apparently.
@ThePhD Yeah, don't you remember Herb's talk from 2 years ago, and uh that graphic lib
the one that was annoyingly frameworky
Tinder? i forget what the name of it but it was fire related
Xeo
Xeo
Cinder
@Borgleader That was cairo based: this one is different.
Also note that the inflation is in fucking log scale /o/
I don't remember Herb doing one on... Cinder?
19:58
Yeah Cinder
that thing
Xeo
Xeo
@Morwenn I still want C99 designated inits :(
Either way, graphics proposals in C++ are doomed to fail because at the end of the day all the C++ committee is going to do is import the same grumbling battle that's happening in Khronos over to the C++ domain.
@Xeo Same. It's one of the only C99 features I want.
Instead we're more likely to get the C11 standard library.
It's not worth doing until Khronos manages to wrangle all of the graphics developers.
@Xeo What are designated inits?

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