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00:00
This week four more got started at that place.
I also have this really clever guy. I feel like his talent is wasted.
user1804599
Disgusting nail
Excellent
user1804599
If you don't want to clean your nails then at least paint them so people don't have to vomit when they see them
Sehe you'd love this dude. He wrote the most amazing
00:10
That's amazing.
I enjoy that the image I am using to read this book page is reproducing the content thanking the reader for not reproducing the content
and that is a train wreck of a sentence
Oompah-loompahs are down the hall, to the right. (Or up and out)
Must be because you didn't buy smarties
Aaaaan gone.
has that guy been bothering Lounge
00:12
We had Willy Wonka for his daily blah.
or are you snarking for fun
@jaggedSpire No. First time I saw that guy
@jaggedSpire I'm snarking for sorrowful mourning
@sehe u_u
@CaptainGiraffe It's almost as if he gets programming thn
@jaggedSpire :D
00:14
@sehe It was quite beautiful
I'm happy you can still appreciate the beauty of good code. It's a sense sorely missed by many
I'm the first to say code is beautiul
In academia surely
I do not want to be in a producing part of the world
I have written a whole lot though =)
Yeah sehe I have jobs
Hmm?
00:20
Sweden is a lovely place
Not tempted :|
Sweden doesn't completely convince me and there's the family
@ScarletAmaranth wow that’s nice so early in the league, I want that
Am I correct to think that gcc's behavior here is a bug since it doesn't comply with [dcl.init.list]/3?
I looked for for dcl.init.list on the gcc bug tracker and it turns up a two results, one saying it implements standard issue 1467
since it's the issue responsible for adding the copy-initialization and direct-initialization behaviors of list-initialization, I'd think that implementing the issue means gcc should have the copy and list initialization.
I'm sort of hesitant to assume it is a bug though, since it seems like a pretty obvious one so I can't have actually been the first to encounter it
and yet there are only two bugs listed as mentioning that section of the standard
but clang has the expected behavior :V
00:46
welp that was a roomkiller
.-.
01:09
@jaggedSpire Care to be a bit more explicit about which initialization and which specific part of those ~2 pages you mean?
certainly. the first bullet.
> If T is a class type and the initializer list has a single element of type cv U, where U is T or a class derived from T, the object is initialized from that element (by copy-initialization for copy-list-initialization, or by direct-initialization for direct-list-initialization).
unless it's not counted as being of type cv because it's an rvalue...
nope, even explicitly making it a const lvalue gcc does the initializer list constructor
@jaggedSpire No--value category is orthogonal to type (well, mostly, anyway).
@JerryCoffin hm
@jaggedSpire Looking things over, I think you're right. I'd pare the demonstration down to the minimum to demonstrate it though: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/2b3dc424541bb203
yeah, I went a bit constructor-happy there
...and I forgot to remove the typeinfo from messing around with other things. Whoops.
Thanks for the feedback. :)
I have reservations at a restaurant, but when I get back I'll try to do an exhaustive search through the gcc bug database to be sure I've not missed anything and then I guess I'll figure out how to report a bug.
01:24
@jaggedSpire Then there's VC++, which (even with optimization disabled) optimizes it to a single default ctor, with no copy, move, or anything else...
oh, VC++
thanks again. :)
@jaggedSpire I'd have to look, but I'm not at all sure copy elision is prohibited there. Anyway, have a nice dinner.
This is a C++ chat room, right?
Yeah it is... ok.
Has anyone here used QT and C++?
@SirJames I think it's just you and I for the moment. I have used Qt, but mostly long enough ago that it doesn't really mean much any more (as in: it's been pretty thoroughly rewritten since then).
Dang.
@jer
oops
@JerryCoffin, it might still be applicable, my question... I'm trying to pass a string between two .cpp files. I've got it labeled out in my header file that it's an external string... But it's not working.
01:35
@SirJames You're trying to create a global, or you're trying to actually pass the string (e.g., as a parameter to a function).
@JerryCoffin, literally just pass it (parameter to a function). The intention is to have a file passed after an elapsed amount of time from the main.cpp to file.cpp.
The string passed will have file location + the file name itself. Each file passed after x-time will be different, so a global will not work.
@SirJames In that case, you shouldn't need any declaration of the string in the header (but you will need a declaration of the function in a header).
@JerryCoffin, huh. I guess I didn't realize that. I'll give it a go and see where it lands me.
@JerryCoffin Soooo close. This has been a reoccurring issue, but it's on the QT side of things. My only error is that it cannot convert argument 1 from 'std::string' to 'QObject *'. I think I'll browse around on the internet for a solution. Thank you so much!
the declaration of the function worked perfectly!
@SirJames Oh, cool. Glad to help.
02:08
fyi, you want QString::fromStdString(), although I've learned the hard way that most of the time you should use wstrings or something similar, especially for file paths.
02:23
@JerryCoffin thanks! It was quite nice.
02:45
@JerryCoffin welp, searching "list initialization copy" turns up 13 c++ results, and one of them looks like a match
03:03
I guess I didn't search quite thoroughly enough the first time :\
03:35
@jaggedSpire Ah well, such is life.
and here I was all set to make an account with my real name and everything :P
04:23
@Telkitty that tortoise looks pretty horrified. Where'd you find him?
on the internet :p
really? What is this internet you speak of? :P
04:43
www
weirdos world wide
>_<
I am searching for the difference between eagles, kites & buzzards
what have you found?
a lot of info, but I still can't tell which one is which one ...
Was hoping to sight a wedge-tailed eagle - one of largest birds of prey while in the middle Australia
But instead, I saw this:
bird of prey size of a pigeon!
that does not appear to be one of the largest birds of prey in a continent
04:50
I know, right?
05:19
I found this picture, but now I'm re-examining everything I thought beaks were:
Sometimes I forget how different bird anatomy is @.@
05:33
Yeah birds are cool :P
@JerryCoffin working through Programming Pearls. Trying to come up with my own algorithm for rotate from scratch and it is hard.
05:55
@Borgleader Speaking of which, I just bumped into a study on beaks. They established that bird embryos have similar beaks to adults, identified a gene that is related to beak development, inhibited the gene, examined changes in beak development, and compared the observed beak shapes to birds, dinosaurs, and other theropod descendants.
Aviary<C++>
Haha, do you think it counts as on topic if they used a computer algorithm?
This room diverges off topic with great frequency
I wouldn't worry about it
06:35
as long as you talk about off topic subjects professionally, it's ok for this chat
3
If I replace my branches with bitwise & and | then the asm is full of stuff like: andl, cmpl, cmpq, orb, orl, orq, sete, shlq, testl, testw, xorw, etc..
I wonder how that affects performance.
Compare the assembled code before you make the entire project like that. Hopefully your compiler already makes those changes
06:51
camelFace
it appears to be suffering a case of pareidolia.
the camera, that is.
It's more common in cv because the rules learned are significantly less complex and coherent than the ones our brains learn.
07:21
@caps no it is not
07:41
it's Ell! Hi @Ell!
Well, you have to be on enough for people to remember you @cat
nah he can totally pull off a Lenin
without dying, even
08:23
@sehe sehe.punny
@набиячлэвэлиь What was the cause of that :/?
08:39
Chirp.
nwp
nwp
<rant>
ld reports an undefined reference to `llvm::cl::OptionCategory::registerCategory()`.
My libfinder found the symbol in `/usr/lib/llvm-3.8/lib/libLLVM.so`.
Linking with -LLLVM apparently has ld finding a lib, but the undefined symbol persists, so I'm wondering what ld is linking to. Looking up the helps I find out you can say `--verbose` to ld to get a ton of output and `-z` to clang/gcc to pass arguments directly to the linker, so `-z --verbose` should give me a ton of output, but I get nothing.
inb4 SO understands the <rant/> tag and interprets it as text size 0
expression simplify( const expression & exp ) {
  return inspect( exp ) {
           sum {*(literal 0),         *rhs} => simplify(rhs)
           sum {*lhs        , *(literal 0)} => simplify(lhs)
           _ => exp
         };
}
^ proposed in the latest mailing
Bjarne is not going to like it :P
I thought Bjarne was interested in pattern matching.
Sure, but he's interested in his pattern matching.
And this is David Sankel's.
Bjarne's not going to get research money for David Sankel's proposal!
08:48
I dont know, the author of the recent paper was encouraged to analyze a language-based pattern matching by the committee.
By the committee doesn't automatically mean Bjarne ;P
Oh, as long as we get sexy pattern matching, I don't think I really care whether Bjarne likes it or not.
I fully agree.
"Bjarne won't like it" is a running joke for a while.
There's a saying that if he doesn't like your proposal and yell at you for it, there's a very high chance your paper is right.
On the other hand, Bjarne's latest proposals are decent.
:O Which one?
08:51
Operator dot, structured bindings, automatically generated comparison operator (with removal of slicing), and unified functions calls.
Both operator dot and unified call syntax are miserable, especially together.
He's also partly credited for the latest contracts proposal.
Structured bindings are... meh.
@Griwes You just don't like it when proposals complexify overload resolution even more x)
Ell
Ell
what are structured bindings?
08:53
The latest contracts proposal is an attempt to save an array_ref proposal that's being beaten to death by Bryce Lelbach and H. Carter Edwards' one, if I remember correctly how it went at Jacksonville.
@Ell auto [index, element] = enumerate(range);
(I might be slightly wrong about the details, I've been discussing it a while back.)
The structural bindings one is wrong for two reasons.
First, it doesn't go nearly far enough.
Second... it uses std::tuple as the customization interface.
That is just a miserable way to do this.
There is a proposal to change that too.
but that one isn't from Bjarne, is it
The fact that it doesn't go too far right now isn't a problem since they keep the design space open.
@Griwes It isn't, but for sure it will be discussed. Many people seem interested in structured bindings.
08:55
Sure it will be discussed, but with an opposition from Bjarne (and probably Gabriel), because it changes the perfect little proposal they had!
@Griwes I have to admit I don't know how those proposals relate .____.
@Morwenn There's been an array_ref-ish (I never remember which proposal proposed which name) proposal from Microsoft that was shown to be very bad because it assumed that very costly things were free.
@Griwes Hey, that's not always the case. And there are points good enough for people to care, like the fact that freestanding implementations would be required to include <utility> for structured bindings to work :p
(Again, I might be wrong about the fine details.)
So, the conclusion from MS was... "okay, so we'll just introduce contracts to the language".
That's why the contracts proposal exists right now.
@Griwes I didn't really follow that proposal. I guess I liked Bryce's one more.
08:58
Well for starters Bryce's doesn't need contracts xD
It does need one additional thingy to be fully operational though...
(I mean it works without it, but not... conveniently.)
@Griwes Yeah, and it seems like people don't like the additional thingy, but it made the proposal so much more sexy :/
This additional thingy has much less impact on the standard than introducing contracts to the language.
Remember why fold expressions exist in the language? :D
Ell
Ell
Is microsoft invested in c++?
Yup. Contracts don't look bad in their latest iteration though. I'd like to have them and Bryce's array stuff.
Ell
Ell
I wonder if they'll come up with a language like swift
I guess they have .net & co though
09:01
@Ell Well, they do maintain isocpp.org and have invested a considerable amount of money in C++.
Is there anything in the proposal about whether they interact with the type system at all?
I'm too lazy to read it in detail to find out.
nwp
nwp
`ld --help` -> -H, --dereference-command-line follow symbolic links listed on the command line
`ld -H` -> ld: unrecognized option '-H'
`ld --dereference-command-line` -> ld: unrecognized option '--dereference-command-line'
@Griwes They do.
nwp
nwp
how is it possible to get anything done like that?
Oh, they do.
Okay.
I deeply dislike the syntax though.
09:03
A bit like noexcept does in C++17.
I like the syntax more than all the previously proposed syntaxes.
It suggests they are attributes.
Attributes don't exist in the type system though.
Well, attributes are interpreted as "if you ignore them, everything works".
That's probably the only thing on which they managed to settle.
I like the bits iterator proposal too.
I have to read the one about immutable_list again.
nwp
nwp
> For a list of libraries to link, look at one of the tools’ Makefiles (for example clang-check/Makefile).
-> 404 -.-
09:31
It is Saturday.
What do I do today?
Watch YT videos and masturbate?
Or do I do something else?
Am I going to waste the whole day or waste it differently than usually?
user1804599
@wilx learn a programming language
@rightfold No motivation. :(
user1804599
do it anyway
nwp
nwp
@Morwenn I feel more like ASP today
user1804599
ASP.NET
Truly I feel like listening to more Ligeti but people generally don't like it.
 
1 hour later…
Ven
Ven
10:57
@Ell they've had f# for a while now
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn why "*"? expression's members are int*?
@Griwes why would you want contracts to impact the type system? :o
Xeo
Xeo
11:14
@nwp ASP is goood
Only saw them live once, unfortunately
but that was really good
user1804599
11:45
I am bored.
Most racist language-related thing I've seen in a while. takimag.com/article/the_best_and_worst_languages_in_the_world/…
@Luc why did you introduce me to /r/badlinguistics? I hate you
@Ven If my function has a contract that its argument is not 0, then I'd like that to propagate around.
For example I want the function pointer to it to also reflect that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
11:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why is that racist? I do not see any mention of race, so far.
nwp
nwp
@rightfold Take all the things that are wrong with C++ and fix them. Should keep you busy for a while.
user1804599
Already exists: rust-lang.org
user1804599
oh they redesigned haskell.org again
nwp
nwp
is your game playable yet?
@wilx xenophobic if you want. It's hard to tell what exactly they're targetting.
user1804599
11:57
No, and I don't want to work on it anymore.
But "racism" does not require race.
It's become synonymous with ethnic discrimination and prejudice, which this is full of.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It seems to me it is supposed to be a satire.
Poe's law
I think there's too much work put into it for satire
@R.MartinhoFernandes go wind down at /r/badhistory
It's edited by some paleoconservative. Sounds like a den of bigotry masquerading under a veil of edgy political incorrectness.
12:08
> We believe the best stories are smart, cheeky, and culturally relevant. We take our politics like we take life—lightly.
You are still using the word racist wrong in this case.
nwp
nwp
does anyone ever use <locale>?
@ScarletAmaranth sound issues under investigation looks like
nwp
nwp
as in setting decimal separator and so on, not as in using isdigit
@arnoldrenderer Cycles scalability test: 2 x Xeon E5-2699 v4 CPUs @ 2.20GHz (44 physical cores, 88 threads) #b3d https://t.co/GvnYhhyXGv
/cc @Mysticial
@wilx why?
You're the one ignoring the fact that the word has left its roots and acquired a broader meaning.
user1804599
12:20
yay I can compute antiderivative of polynomials
user1804599
And in any case, I already offered a correction.
It's dishonest to ignore it.
user1804599
www.khanacademy.org is great
Ell
Ell
it is v good
@R.MartinhoFernandes You are using the word xenophobic wrong, too. The article manifests no fear of strange or foreign nor is it arguing for some sort of purity.
It is simply a satire.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, it is not. I choose to ignore gender-fluid bullshit, too.
12:25
@wilx it may have phobos in its root, but it doesn't mean fear.
You're just bringing up more badling :(
People try to insert more meanings into to words like racism so that they can then equivocate and mark whole groups of people with different opinions as racists when previously they would not fit into the tighter definition of the word.
nwp
nwp
discussing semantics, wooo!
@R.MartinhoFernandes You have use Wikipedia before, so try and do the same for xenophobia.
nwp
nwp
someone make a github repository for a list of meanings of words valid in the lounge
@wilx ah, failure to read past the first sentence.
Typical.
> Xenophobia can also be exhibited in the form of an "uncritical exaltation of another culture" in which a culture is ascribed "an unreal, stereotyped and exotic quality"
That is totally everything in the page I linked.
Plus, you can simply visit a dictionary to find more meanings.
Words don't work the way you think they do.
12:30
@R.MartinhoFernandes What failure? If you look at what I wrote you should clearly see I read more than the first sentence, FFS.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol, that applies to you as well, apparently.
Xeophobia
3
@wilx I'm not the one trying to reject the intended (and common) meanings of other people's words.
I didn't claim you used any word wrong. The word I used doesn't mean fear. It means dislike or hatred.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked whaaa
And I didn't make that up. It's in common usage, and your refusal to accept it only hurts your ability to communicate with others.
Who the fuck thought overloading words would be a good language feature? :P
12:37
@Borgleader context provides a namespace-like mechanism :P
@StackedCrooked dat url indicates youre on the wrong side of the internet :P not clicking that.
@StackedCrooked Except no one bothered to publish an official set of namespaces, did someone file a defect report yet?
people have tried
@R.MartinhoFernandes Says you. Other sources claim something different and include the fear. Also, stop cherry picking, I have not said it was only the fear.
but nobody cared
@R.MartinhoFernandes People are stupid and use words wrong all the time. The meanings can shift but there is not reason to accept any schmucks definition.
12:41
@wilx then how is my use wrong?
@wilx it's not any schmuck's definition. It's in common usage.
@StackedCrooked lol, nice.
It's even the only such definition in the OED.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have pointed that out already. I am not going to repeat myself.
@wilx you said it was wrong because there's no fear expressed.
That only applies if I used a word that meant fear.
Come on, now it's not just badling but bad logic.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I said more than just about fear, you are cherrypicking again.
12:43
Satire?
It's xenophobic satire. There's such a thing.
There's no exclusivity.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked I found a nice dark joke yesterday:
user1804599
> What part of a plant is inedible?
The wheelchair.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You are obvious set to be offended. Enjoy your offence. Have a nice day.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I’m momentarily jealous
12:47
@wilx well, now I am offended. This is a dick move.
@R.MartinhoFernandes My dick did not move a bit. Did yours?
You could just say you're not interested in continuing the debate. Instead you chose to blame me for your leave.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought it was obvious when I said I was not going to repeat myself, yet you kept on going.
user1804599
What does an infinity symbol with a tilde above it mean?
But you were right. I should have been offended when it became clear you were not willing to accept my intended meaning for the words I used and wanted to interpret my words as your own.
12:54
@rightfold Complex infinity?
> my intended meaning for the words
FFS.
That is the whole fucking problem here.
user1804599
user1804599
Like this.
12:56
Using words with multiple meanings to mean only one of them?
@wilx did you use the word "fucking" wrong here?
user1804599
ah cool
user1804599
thanks
Because no one was talking about sex.
12:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes I do not know but I know you are dying to tell me.
Are you just trying to troll me now?
@rightfold I will be your Google any time! ~_^
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does it matter if I say no? :)
I wonder if this is what Trump meant he said he has the best words.
lol, am I now the Lounge equivalent of Donald Trump? :D
Not really. You didn't say anything about Mexicans and all the other shit he spews. Nothing wrong with having something in common with horrible people.
13:02
> C++ is the best language, all those other languages are losers. But seriously though, and I should know, they are really crappy.
I've quoted Hitler on things I agreed with before.
Is that a reverse Godwin?
Godloss
Actually, now that I think about it, I don't think "racism" acquired any new meanings directly.
It was the meaning of "race" that became vaguer, less specific.
Blame biologists.
Though since this was about people speaking foreign languages, I was actually using the original, pre-17th century meaning of "race".
@набиячлэвэлиь It looks like my Saturday is going to be like this after all.
> First used to refer to speakers of a common language and then to denote national affiliations
TIL
Also, I feel prescriptivistically vindicated.
13:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes sociologically there is no such thing as 'race' only 'tribes' e.g. distinct culture groups
The 10 percent of the brain myth is the widely perpetuated urban legend that most or all humans only make use of 10 percent (or some other small percentage) of their brains. It has been misattributed to many people, including Albert Einstein. By extrapolation, it is suggested that a person may harness this unused potential and increase intelligence. Changes in grey and white matter following new experiences and learning have been shown, but it has not yet been proven what the changes are. The popular notion that large parts of the brain remain unused, and could subsequently be "activated", rests...
why do I always think that this is a hoax?
@Telkitty Because you actually use only 10 % of your brain?
@Telkitty (I am sorry, this was too easy!) :)
I mean, if this is true, then maybe dumb people are not dumb, they are only using 8% of the brain instead of 12%
Apparently, Norway reached an agreement to for introducing a ban on gas and diesel powered cars.
Only electric will be allowed.
I should buy stocks in stocks in battery technology.
Norway has enough solar and wind power?
user1804599
13:22
Will owners of gas and diesel powered cars be compensated?
13:51
@Griwes I, for one, am very happy Microsoft joined the fight around the contracts. Without them, Bloomberg would've destroyed the DbC opposition and we'd have their five levels of resumable asserts already in WP.
That's nonsense.

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