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22:00
I think the important bit was requiring that it stays with the first owner in shared_ptr constructors
Wait what, clang says it can't find shared_from_this(), but it finds it when I fully qualify it. I have an eerie feeling there's something deeply wrong with this piece of code I'm working on...
@Griwes Dependent base?
Oooooooh.
I think it's one of those dumb cases where the standard is retarded and GCC does the right thing doing the wrong thing.
Thanks :D
49 mins ago, by Puppy
C++ is pretty easy
22:05
@Puppy lol
sup lounge
@Zoidberg Do you know Java puzzlers? I'm doing my own set of them tomorrow :)
^ first, mega-simple "puzzler"
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's funny, but also pretty scary, considering that it's basically forced bodily intrusion.
C++ was easy when I first learned it during college, now a days C++ has so many things
Most of the new things make the terrible old things obsolete.
user1804599
22:10
@fredoverflow neat
@fredoverflow It's -2 in Scala, so I suspect it's a cte in Java
@fredoverflow I'd expect a compiler error
@набиячлэвэлиь -2 is correct
Knowing it's Java I wouldn't be surprised if that was an RTE.
22:11
@набиячлэвэлиь correct
@Griwes Java's integers are pretty sane
Right, char is basically an unsigned short in Java.
./include/reaver/future.h:473:109: internal compiler error: in lambda_expr_this_capture, at cp/lambda.c:753
                         sched()->push([sched, task = std::move(pair.packaged_task), state = shared_from_this()](){ task(sched()); });
                                                                                                             ^
UGHHHHHHHHHHHH
Are you fucking serious GCC
@Griwes "internal compiler error" is not a choice on any of my puzzlers :(
22:13
it should be
at least when they start including some C++.
I think I have seen weird recursive Generics that cause a stack overflow in the Java compiler.
But fucking hell, it's the second GCC ICE related to lambdas I found in the past few days.
I don't even want to file them.
Have you tried clang?
Trying to do that could reveal that litb filed them 4 years ago or something.
> When compiled with MSVC, this piece of code will: ☐ not compile due to compiler limitations, ☐ not compile due to stdlib bugs, ☐ compile, but behave erroneously, ☐ ICE
22:14
Yeah, clang works, but I want to also support GCC 5.x :X
I'll try to reduce the problem though.
I'm curious how much borken it is.
@Griwes Oh, I've had those too. Mostly resolved them by moving some external (fn-scope) verbols into lambda capture
@Griwes v
@набиячлэвэлиь Yeah :/
that's not me.. one of my friend took a photo with their new cat
22:17
Doesn't matter, still a selfie
@набиячлэвэлиь This is the last big thing I had to do to get GCC not error out on my code :/
At least that wasn't an ICE, just a dumb unimplemented thing.
Reported by litb in like 2011. Or was it 2012?
Oh wait, C++ also uses this :)
That was what I was doing the last time I was cursing GCC, by the way.
22:20
lol fullscreen installers
lol GCC
lol software
Okay, can't reproduce easily. :/
Also what the heck is up with my spurious enters today?
Thank you Ubisoft for confirming my new high-end setup is good enough to play a game from 2008
> Sound card installed yes
golf clap gj me
^ This is a classic puzzler that I borrowed from Bloch et. al.
user1804599
22:26
1
Wouldn't that be too obvious? ;)
user1804599
😭
user1804599
I give up.
No autoboxing? My bet is on CTE
Or 1, if Java has autoboxing
Why no autoboxing? Java has autoboxing.
Both answers are wrong ;)
This is probably going to be more fun than I expected :)
user1804599
22:30
What is the answer?
user1804599
I have no Java on this machine.
user1804599
WHY
+: 98

+: 98 99
-: 99

+: 99 100
-: 100

+: 100 101
-: 101
Because you add shorts but remove ints.
user1804599
22:31
XD
user1804599
That is so awesome.
That doesn't seem right
user1804599
Why does remove take Object and not T?
Probably backward compatibility?
user1804599
😭
22:32
@набиячлэвэлиь Java. Right. Choose at most one.
This is fucking ridiculous
But I see why now
@набиячлэвэлиь Yeah, pulling it into the scope the lambda is created in worked.
Funnily enough, when the base is actually dependent, it didn't quite ICE; instead, it got deeply confused and told me that... there's no object to call shared_from_this on.
Let's see if it still works with Clang. (Thankfully it does.)
"Annoyingly"? Come on. No one forces you to use that library. If you can do better, by all means. Don't annoy yourself. — sehe 12 secs ago
user1804599
@fredoverflow what does the following print in C++?
22:37
That's a whole new level of victim/entitled
user1804599
#include <iostream>

int main() {
std::cout << R"s(\u00
41)s" << std::endl;
return 0;
}
Isn't using C++ for puzzlers kinda pointless? I mean, pretty much everything beyond "hello world" is too obscure to be certain ;)
disagree
@Zoidberg I don't know raw strings :(
@fredoverflow Well now, even with that, I wonder what ADL tricks you could pull.
22:38
@Zoidberg tokens cannot contain newline
user1804599
Raw string liberals can.
@Puppy it already does that.
@Zoidberg But not in a token. \u0041 should be
no, I meant, something more obscure than that.
user1804599
But this puzzle is extremely obscure.
I guess it prints a NUL and then the characters 4 and 1?
22:39
@fredoverflow New video? :)
@Puppy Then it's "something beyond hello world" as Fred said
user1804599
It is UB. If the removal of a newline would yield a valid universal character sequence, the behavior is undefined.
@Borgleader New video from 2007 featuring Joshua Bloch? :)
@Zoidberg nice
@fredoverflow lol
@Zoidberg prezoise
@fredoverflow I didnt click it, but you did make a java puzzler video recently so i thought it might be a follow up
22:41
@Borgleader I will probably make a followup this weekend!
sweet :)
user1804599
I don't know of many other obscure C++ behaviors.
@Zoidberg pretty much everything?!?
no?!?!?!?!
user1804599
Callability of objects that can be implicitly converted to function pointers is quite obscure.
22:44
It is
std::cout << "WTF??!";   // What does it print?
@fredoverflow Nice, but wrong. If token concatenation produces something that looks like a UCN, then you get UB. As it stands, it's entirely legitimate with an unambiguous meaning.
user1804599
WTF|
@Zoidberg correct
@JerryCoffin See, we can't even agree whether a simple print statement is UB or not :)
@fredoverflow In what version of C++? (trigraphs have been removed).
user1804599
22:47
Fuck
@JerryCoffin Have they been removed from the C++ standard or just from the major compilers?
@fredoverflow The standard.
@fredoverflow depends on the compiler, language version and whether you use sane flags. TYVM
user1804599
// what does this print??/
std::cout << 42;
22:48
> simple
@fredoverflow both
@Zoidberg nothing? (going along with the likely joke)
user1804599
🙂🙃🙂🙃🙂
evenin'
user1804599
The print statement is part of the comment due to the trigraph expanding into a backslash.
for (int i = 0; i <= 10; i += 2);
{
    std::cout << '.';
}
// How many dots are printed?
user1804599
6
22:50
wrong
@Zoidberg Not in C++17.
@fredoverflow roughly 4, the same is rediculous in java or python
4 is also wrong
user1804599
7
22:50
wrong
@fredoverflow I bet. I can't be arsed to count them
@fredoverflow Why? It should print for 0,2,4,6,8,10.
@fredoverflow 1
user1804599
1 lol
@fredoverflow Would only be meaningful if everybody involved actually know the language reasonably well. There mere fact that zoidberg doesn't know the language as well as he thinks doesn't mean a whole lot of anything.
22:51
oh, semicolon.
user1804599
Semicolon
1 is correct
yeah just saw it
that's a dumb quiz.
yeah.
22:51
I just made it up on the spot, sorry :(
> the same is rediculous in [any other language]
int i; for (i = 0; 3 == i; ++i) { fork(); } // how many processes are created?
implementation defined/undefined
inf
user1804599
22:51
Compile error in my setup; clang -W{all,extra,error}
An actual exam question I had.
@Borgleader :D
The loop condition is false, so the loop is never entered.
Yes.
good one actually
I carn't into keyboards today
22:52
It would be, had it been an "intro to programming" course or something like that.
(It was "networked operating systems".)
Why the Yoda condition?
@fredoverflow Mildly interesting from a historical perspective (Fortran executed every loop at least once, even if the condition was false before entering).
@JerryCoffin Why?!?
@fredoverflow That snippet appeared before on the same exam.
what why
22:53
And a version with 3 = i was known.
It actually fooled some people learning the answers instead of the questions.
user1804599
$x = 1; array_map(function($y) { $x = $y; }, [1, 2, 3]); echo $x; what does this print? array_map arguments are in correct order, and array_map loops from front to back.
/cc @thecoshman :P
Also, from the same exam: "737 is: 1) ... 2) the permissions of the root directory 3) ... 4) a plane produced by Boeing".
@Griwes 4 was my first instinct :)
22:55
I can't remember the other two answers, they were even more nonsensical than (2).
@fredoverflow It was marginally more efficient to generate code that only tested the condition at the bottom of the loop, and they (apparently) judged that it was acceptable for the sake of smaller code that ran a little faster.
@JerryCoffin Wait, so all Fortran loops are do-whiles?
No wonder only crazy scientists use it.
user1804599
The $x in the lambda is local. To access the other $x you have to explicitly capture it. :D
@Griwes Oh, I think its while loop is now a proper while loop. It's only the original do loop that worked this way. A normal loop looked like do 10 i = 1, 10, if you changed that to do 10 i = 10, 1, it'd still execute one iteration. The Fortran I wrote predated those new-fangled "while" loops and such though.
22:58
@JerryCoffin Oh, is that why it's called do while in C and friends? The do keyword was inherited from Fortran?
> For any bit of paper, after the first fold, it doubles in thickness. Another fold, and it quadruples in thickness. By the seventh fold, it would have become 128 times thicker than it was originally. This is known as exponential growth, and explains why a piece of ordinary paper folded 23 times would be a kilometer (0.62 miles) thick. Forty-two folds will stretch out to the Moon, and 103 folds will expand beyond the observable universe.
@fredoverflow At least indirectly, it probably was. Less certain whether it was direct or not though--for example, PL/I also used do as a keyword, and many of the guys who invented UNIX had just previously been working on MULTICS, which was written in PL/I (the name UNIX was a play on words, invented as being the opposite of MULTICS in both name and character).
23:11
@Mysticial Came across this today thought maybe you'd be interested?
@Borgleader But those seem to be C++, and you know he doesn't even know C!
Oh, and of course the only way to learn C++ is to first learn C!
Welcome to Costco Memes 'R us. I love you.
@JerryCoffin <3
likely repost:
I spotted the mistake!! “Get ready to patch #Git – nasty-looking bugs surface http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/03/16/git_server_client_patch_now/ ” https://t.co/vNn5H5KScg
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait, are you in the same reorg bind as the ape?
23:26
@sehe reorg bind?
a bind: tricky situation with (mostly) bad options
reorg: organizational restructuring ("re-organization")
oh, that sounds like job loss :(
I'll not explain the lazy question mark.
@Borgleader Follow my arrow
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's... really bad luck I guess.
@sehe nice expl
expl: explanation
@R.MartinhoFernandes If you wanna come to The Hague...
@LucDanton :)
I've finally learned to be more brief. And it's working too well sometimes
23:29
@sehe I really don't.
I didn't think so. Just saying... I'd do a lot :)
Nothing against The Hague, though.
So, it's just me then :(
I kid
Do you have your mind set on something else (specific)?
23:33
Well, I want to stay in Berlin.
I have a few targets. I'll send applications this weekend.
I would too. Sounds like a good place for a guy like you or me
There's... people here.
That too! I'd almost forget
Amsterdam or Eindhoven are where it's at in the Netherlands, but I'm quite tied to the family and not willing to relocate
Eindhoven's that place with the cool bike overpass right? (Hovenring)
Well. Best of luck with the unsollicted "exciting" times ahead. I hope you find something that makes you happy
For now, I'm off to bed
23:35
@sehe night
@Borgleader There's a lot of those. Holland is kind of bycicle paradise, remember
@sehe night
Ok. I'll go! Night
@sehe Oh quite possibly, but I read about that specific one in a magazine 2 days ago :)
I think I'm gonna take a nap.
ttyl
23:44
@sehe G'night.
@jaggedSpire Sleep well.
23:58
TIL there is a term for this:
Bebugging (or fault seeding or error seeding) is a popular software engineering technique used in the 1970s to measure test coverage. Known bugs are randomly added to a program source code and the programmer is tasked to find them. The percentage of the known bugs not found gives an indication of the real bugs that remain. The term "bebugging" was first mentioned in The Psychology of Computer Programming (1970), where Gerald M. Weinberg described the use of the method as a way of training, motivating, and evaluating programmers, not as a measure of faults remaining in a program. The approach was...

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