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23:04
@sehe How do create a new project, how to import project, how to export project, how to run the unit tests, how to format code, how to rename identifiers, how to extract method, how to show type hierarchy...
erm. okaaay
The unit test makes a modicum of sense (although I believe Junit comes with it's spring based runner)
> export project
I don't even know what that would mean.
You mean, like build a jar or something?
Not sure if I need to make it atomic tho.
Seriously, why would compiler-generated RTTI be more expensive than cheap manual RTTI? Isn't the compiler supposed to be smarter than us?
23:12
@Lalaland Here's it in action (log fucked up after "<, but...
@ThePhD It's compile-time, obviously
@Morwenn +1 - Meet the phantom derpstorm
@набиячлэвэлиь Not with his approach
Yup.
@sehe There's a way of doing that on compile-time
But it's a hack.
23:14
Inb4 link to Filip "refp" Roséen article
It depends on the runtime order of instantiation of id_for
@Morwenn The compiler doesn't know if I intentionally misspelled "Helo World".
@CaptainGiraffe The compiler is smart, but apparently you're only trying to be a smartass :o
@Morwenn Part of my job description.
This way, the same type may have different IDs on different runs :/
23:15
inb4 compiler-ensured typolessness of strings
It's a detail class, so. vOv
@melak47 Yes, you get a cookie
jeez nab
If someone's using it they suck.
I don't play that silly game
23:16
Neither do I
@CaptainGiraffe what do you mean?
@набиячлэвэлиь That's the IDE's job.
@ItachiUchiha By what? I have made quite a few silly statements this last hour.
@CaptainGiraffe I missed both these "facts"
@sehe Why is it so hard to believe that a course would teach some basics of using a particular IDE?
23:18
@CaptainGiraffe Just check your message( to which my last message was a reply )
@sehe The MS Open source love I just read about on /. . The IntelliJ has happened for about a year.
By the way, GCC 6 uses Levensthein distance to suggest alternative identifiers when there is a typo.
Okay, I just wasted an hour researching how to use proguard with sbt to create a runnable jar. It doesn't seem possible.
fuck build tools, especially sbt
Of course, IntelliJ+Gradle+Scala also doesn't work.
23:20
@fredoverflow It shouldn't
Why should it not work? Many devs want it.
you need to use SBT with scala.
I thought Scala support in Gradle was excellent?
Gradle has a plugin but I am not sure as to how good it is.
@CaptainGiraffe ty
Is std::getline a good example of a function with an output parameter? disqus.com/home/discussion/elibenderskyswebsite/…
23:33
no.
or, well.
@sehe No, out parameters is quite different from a pointer or an alias. c++ does not use out parameters in any meaningful fashion.
it is an example of a function with an output parameter, but that doesn't make it actually good in any way.
@sehe boost::sort::spreadsort::detail::is_sorted_or_find_extremes is a good example of output parameters.
@Morwenn does it use output iterators to receive the output?
@CaptainGiraffe How are they different?
23:35
@sehe It uses references to iterators to store the output.
@CaptainGiraffe A good example would be gethostname from POSIX in C
And returns a bool.
or recv from POSIX C.
Many functions returning a boolean use output parameters so that they can easily be put in conditions.
@fredoverflow I guess I'm oversensitive. I feel it shrouds the topic of teaching Java. If it's about refactoring, unit testing etc. I'd hope the course would not be called "Java with Eclipse".
23:36
@Morwenn Ugh
If it's some kind of holistic practicum (kudos!) then why call it "teaching Java with Eclipse", instead of "Hands-on development: Project X in two Sprints with Agile practices" or something that covers the intent
@VermillionAzure See GCC's __builtin_add_overflow intrinsic and friends.
@Puppy A result gathered from a function parameter in c++ is a reference or a pointer or a similar construct. Given by the function interface. So we have no idea of determining if it is read/written or not. An out parameter is given by the function interface as: this is where I will place my result.
@CaptainGiraffe Well, in the case of std::getline, you can trivially determine that by say, reading a one-line description of what it does.
23:40
@Morwenn yeah
@sehe In an ideal world, every student would pick his own IDE and programming language. But that's not the world we're living in.
@Puppy Yes, but it is not described in the function declaration. The type system doesn't allow an out only parameter.
@fredoverflow Naming is important. We all know that it's far more important how we learn things than what we learn (see: bad C courses). If people think they have learned "Java" when in reality they learned software development practices, they might not take the experience with them along the way.
Worst case, they might mistakenly conclude that programming in a programming language is mostly about clicking around in a GUI (I've seen way too many people with such apparent subconcious conclusions)
@fredoverflow Note that is not /at all/ the thing I'm arguing for.
@CaptainGiraffe That does not make it not an out parameter. It merely means that you have to write that in your documentation instead of inline in the function declaration.
@sehe The course is called "Software development 2".
23:41
@fredoverflow Ah. Could have said so immediately :)
as for out only, you could most certainly say, pass a callback to receive the value CPS-style.
@fredoverflow Given that it's Java, the numbering should run from about -10 to -6 (or so).
@Puppy In my humble opinion. To describe a parameter as an out parameter, the language type system has to support it. An alias is not an out parameter.
@Puppy Output iterators come close (pretty damn close, really)
Indeed, output iterators comes close.
23:42
@CaptainGiraffe To describe a parameter as an out parameter, the parameter must be writable. Then the function writes to it. That's it.
defining that at a language level or documentation level or whatever is completely immaterial and irrelevant.
@CaptainGiraffe Unless you tag it as OUT through an external system
you're saying exactly the same thing just in different places.
Good ol' C with classes writeonly.
@Puppy But it matters where you do say it, though. In the code, the compiler can use it. Outside...
@Puppy Assignable in local scope. returned to the calling scope. Yes. This is different from a ref or a pointer.
23:44
@CaptainGiraffe Not in the slightest. They are writable in local scope, you write to them, job done.
@CaptainGiraffe can you explain it in place/value or lvalue/rvalue semantics?
What is an out parameter?
@VermillionAzure No, I can't. An out parameter doesn't lend itself to be described in the c++ type system.
@CaptainGiraffe Everything should be able to be described in terms of containers and values
Doesn't matter what language you are, even assembly.
From what I understand, an out parameter is a place to hold a value that can be written to from inside the function, right?
@VermillionAzure Ok, yes.
23:48
What's the game thing called
where you focus on the style of the art
rather than the realism of the art
having more than one brain cell?
int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) {
    if (argc > 1) {
      return parse_input(vector<string>(&argv[1], &argv[argc + !argc]));
    }
    return 1;
}
Whoa, what on earth is this. So close and yet so far off
@ThePhD Romanticism?
@ThePhD like, when people refer to the games look as "stylized"?
@sehe Where do you find this !gold?
23:50
Spirit mailing list
@melak47 Yeah.
@sehe That explains a few things
Now. That's low
@sehe what... what does it even
vector<string>(&argv[1], &argv[argc + !argc]) o.O
23:52
@sehe ?
doesn't {true, false} => {1, 0} ?
@VermillionAzure It's pretty simple really. No clue about what argc + !argc really means. But I assume it's really just {argv, argv+argc}
@Columbo Don't equate spirit with bad coding
@sehe So, zero => false and non-zero => true
@sehe I was referring to your superhuman abilities when it comes to Boost :-)
So he's going to add 0 if it's non-zero and add 1 if it's 0... Why?...
23:53
@Columbo ? You think I contracted it from the mailing list?
fyi I started following the mailing list years late
You assume "But I assume it's really just {argv, argv+argc}". But there are like 3+ contradictory stuff in there. You have to be a kind soul.
@VermillionAzure argc > 1 is given by the if. so it's always argc + false
@melak47 I mean wtf seriously is this code
@sehe No, but I equate following the mailing list with lurking in the unknown and insightful corners of expert discussion
@CaptainGiraffe The only thing I can deduce to half make sense would either be inviting out of bounds or require (very) specific inputs
23:54
Which generally leads to profound understanding at some point
@CaptainGiraffe And of course I meant {argv+1, argv+argc}, sorry
@Columbo I can assure you SO is much better for that.
I do occasionally take away a little gem from the mailing list. But the vast majority comes from SO. W.r.t. Spirit it's mostly cv_and_he (formerly known as llonesmith)
@sehe I can assure you that it isn't, at least for C++. For the latter, std-discussion + SG mailing lists + DR discussions are excellent sources; SO just very occasionally.
(Well, std-discussion also only occasionally, to some extent)
@Columbo Yeah, that's another biscuit. I'm not big on language-lawyering kind of knowledge. I probably should
@Columbo yes. He's the best in boost
He just posts 80% of answers in comments and CW's the rest
23:59
@sehe Such selflessness
I think we should give him a bounty or two
I think he has mild issues. But he's still the best :)

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