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user457812
06:10
Hoo boy, my toes were not supposed to bend that way
LOL I come back to see that?
Does anyone know a good algorithm for detecting if a new edge added to a DAG introduces a cycle ?
ironically, I was just about to suggest such an algorithm
but I realized that it wouldn't work
I don't know one
06:26
@DeadMG I can think of one and it will work, I'm just nor sure if its the most efficient way to do it !
I have an O(n) answer
you?
@DeadMG Sadly , I'm really bad at analysis of Algorithms :D
no, wait, that won't work either
lols
@angryInsomniac Do a check if it is acyclic after insertion?
I figure that it shouldn't be too hard
start at the root node and give it an index, e.g., 1
then every node linked from the root is 2, etc
06:28
Checking if it is acyclic or not can be done using a topological sort iirc, and that can be done in O(n)
@KillianDS Damn. I knew there was a real term for what I was thinking about! :P
Here's what I'm thinking of doing , if a link is from a -> b ! check all of b's dependencies if a is in them don't add the link , if not then check the dependencies of each one in turn recursively , until you are left with nowhere to go ! This ensures that you dont traverse the whole graph for adding a link between some random nodes
where a->b means b is a dependency of a
@angryInsomniac Just wikipedia topsort, it's got an easy, simple algorithm for you that runs in O(n)
@DeadMG will check
@DeadMG I think that the system I propose may run in less than O(n) in a best case scenario
and O(inf) debugging time, etc, for may run in less than O(n)?
@ScottW As involvement of PHP in your life goes up, the tendency towards suicide approaches 1
06:34
@ScottW: The level of suicidal behavior is proportional to the number of $ used in the PHP code
@angryInsomniac What is "each one" in that sentence?
@ScottW: Sorry about that.
It looks like you're doing a BFS in B for A, which can worse case take longer than O(n)
@KillianDS check dependencies of b , suppose they were [ d e f ] so , no a here , then you check the dependency of [d] , [e] and [f]
@ScottW: Ouch, my estimate might actually be too high then. :-)
spit-take The hell that's concatenation?
That's news to me
06:37
@angryInsomniac yeah, you're doing a BFS starting from B, that would work too
@KillianDS yup , I think thats pretty much it, I think I see how you are saying that something might take longer than O(n) , is it because something might be visited twice in this scheme ?
@angryInsomniac Yeah, I was wrong, I thought topsort could be done in O(V), with V nr of vertices, but a quick look tells me it's O(V+E), which is also your worst case performance for BFS
@ScottW: Whatever happened to using something like, I dunno, the plus sign?
@KillianDS Suddenly I feel sad about my abysmal Analysis of algo skills !
Hm, no, I'm wrong, BFS can be worse than O(V+E)in this case, unless you mark visited nodes
06:40
@KillianDS Yeah , that , I noticed that I would have to do
@KillianDS I dont think anything would be revisited in a graph that is already a DAG (I dont think I'll have to mark visited nodes)
Of course you would Revisit, just suppose you have B pointing to C and D, Then suppose you have C pointing to D. This is still a DAG, but you will visit D twice in a plain BFS/DFS search. This will lower your performance
@KillianDS :D yup yup ! my bad :)
07:16
I can live with most of Qt, but QThread makes me weep
@ScottW perl, php and vim script, AFAIK
Oracle PL-SQL uses 'string1' || 'string2'
and VBasic uses "this" & "that"...
@Insilico Many 'smart' (i.e. either very 'pure' or very 'untyped') languages don't use '+' as '+' ;is for arithmetic operations, meaning that strings will be interpreted as numbers.
That is a feature too.
07:45
@Insilico I always found + a bad choice. + is for adding two things, not concatenation. "5"+"4" resulting in "54" is weird. When handling strings I prefer verbosity. Anything like concat("5","4"), "5".append("4"), format("%s%s","5","4") is much more natural and clear than "5"+"4".
@sehe: It's better than using a freaking period to mean string concatenation
@ScottW Agreed :)
I don't find "5"+"4" resulting in "54" as weird. If I wanted addition I would use 5 + 4, not "5"+"4".
(I wouldn't use it though, often if I need to concatenate strings I would use something more sophisticated)
@sehe I don't consider that to be a feature
If I want to treat a string as a number I want to be explicit about it
As long as you're clear what you're working with, that's all good and well. But If I'm writing a generic function I'd rather have it failing at compile or runtime because of calling an invalid function/operator than accidentally using strings without an error with my generic math library
@Insilico `"5"+"4"=="54" isn't weird. The problem is, neither are the other possible interpretations. It doesn't have a single universally expected meaning
07:55
@jalf: True, which is why I rarely use it that way
the + sign means addition. Concatenation is a different operation.
@jalf Maybe weird wasn't the correct word to use there. Ambiguous may be a better choice.
Using another operator (say, a dot) for concatenation might not be intuitive, but at least it makes it clear that what's happening is not addition
I think that enough languages have used + for string concatenation that by now it probably won't break the user mode to use it
I'm working with the wonderful HighCharts JavaScript graphing library, and it stores certain numbers as strings if you're not careful, and yes it's a pain when you get "numbers" that don't obey addition.
07:56
I'd rather use << for concatenation
@DeadMG but an equal number of languages have used + for addition of the numbers contained in the string
If I'm concatenating things together it's likely (in my experience) that I would also need to format numbers and stuff
which is why it does break a lot of users' expectations
@Insilico yep, that is often the case
@jalf Lua, and PHP?
trying to think of any others
@DeadMG TCL
07:58
Gah, don't remind me of TCL!
it's even worse than PHP but it's used heavily in the telecom world
It's the worst language I've ever seen, it's often used in CAD.
TCL?
This thing?
@DeadMG well, in case you weren't aware, there are a lot of PHP programmers around, or programmers who have been exposed to PHP. That means they know that sometimes, + means addition, even when applied to strings
Tcl (originally from "Tool Command Language", but conventionally spelled "Tcl" rather than "TCL"; pronounced as "" or "tee-see-ell") is a scripting language created by John Ousterhout. Originally "born out of frustration", according to the author, with programmers devising their own languages intended to be embedded into applications, Tcl gained acceptance on its own. It is commonly used for rapid prototyping, scripted applications, GUIs and testing. Tcl is used on embedded systems platforms, both in its full form and in several other small-footprint versions. The combination of Tcl and...
07:59
Yes, I'm talking about microelectronic CAD
but any suite of fiddly tools can fall victim to that curse, and many kinds of CAD fit the bill
using + for concatenation is operator overload abuse. A cute trick to reuse one clearly defined operator for something that's similar, but not quite the same, and which introduces ambiguity
4
besides, where I can use +, I expect to be able to use - as well. What is the meaning of "54" - "4"?
That issue is overrated. It looks reasonable and it has the right precedence. Go with it.
"54" - "4" looks as meaningless as it is. Harmless.
If you choose &, then there's |. Choose << and there's >>. Many operators have duals. By that logic, , would be the best choice, and then the precedence is ridiculous.
@Potatoswatter I didn't realize we were talking about "which existing C++ operator should be used to implement string concatenation"
I stay with my previous statement that you don't need an operator, what's wrong with calling a function?
@jalf Very true, was just thinking.
08:05
I was talking about the syntax in general. As far as I'm concerned, the solution could be to add a new operator.
@jalf Lua uses ..
@jalf Dunno, somebody mentioned it. Lack of any operator would make many users unhappy.
@jalf There are a lot of operator tokens already…
adding more won't kill anyone
@Potatoswatter true about the duals. But I think there's a difference. + and - are universally known, something everyone have known since they were kids. & and | are a lot more specialized, and not as known. And in many languages only one exists, or both exist without being duals
it's not like making new keywords, where you break existing people who used it as an identifier
08:07
@Potatoswatter Once again, I'm not talking about C++
I'm talking about whether the + operator is suitable to use for string concatenation
@jalf And there's precedence with & being used with * for pointers and references
@jalf Okay, then.
For the purposes of this discussion, you could remove every other operator from the language. And then hey, there are plenty of available operator tokens ;)
I'm actually more partial to the dot or juxtaposition, if we're not talking C++.
juxtaposition?
08:09
Just put the strings next to each other.
ah yeah, was just thinking of that
any significant downsides to that?
That's more appropriate for streaming I/O than forming objects, though.
@jalf I think it makes parsing a lot harder in many languages
I think the downside is the same as with an explicit operator… you end up overloading something that may be desirable for another meaning in the same context.
I think that overloading whitespace is probably a bad idea
08:10
Didn't Bjarne Strostrup initially thought up of a way to overload whitespace?
yeah
but it was rejected by the Committee
As an April Fool's joke
that was an aprils fool joke
It was something to support multiplication like x = y z
oh, lols :D
08:11
Yes I know that.
I didn't say he thought it up as a serious proposal. :-P
@DeadMG well, it wouldn't have to be generalized overloading. Assuming the language has a built-in string type, it'd could built into the parsing rules explicitly
@jalf That's very true. But conversely, then you'd have to build in the string type into the language, which is not something I generally consider to be a smart move.
> Finally, work is underway to extend the character set, language syntax, and overloading rules to take
advantage of 3D display devices. This will allow us to naturally represent multiplication, addition, and
exponentiation as spatial displacements along three different axis. Because this project relies of the ability
to fool the brain into accepting a projected image as 3D and because we don't take delivery of the 3D
projection device until next spring, this project is usually referred to as "Project April Fool."
oh, wouldn't that make the grammar context-sensitive?
@DeadMG I think it's a major design flaw not to have strings as a built-in type :)
08:13
in a fairly major way
@jalf it would break languages where you do parameter passing something like this myfunc foo bar. Is this calling myfunc with 1 parameter or 2?
@DeadMG Not sure, but I don't think so
template<typename T> void f(T x, T y) { g(x y); // Illegal or valid? }
@jalf Then again, the fact that std::string works pretty well without compiler magic is pretty cool
I like solutions that involves only writing a library
Strings are too complicated to be built in. And serious text processing inevitably requires a custom string class which needs to work just like the builtin one.
08:14
@KillianDS true, but that could be resolved through the precedence rules (and afaik in most languages that use a syntax like that, it's based on currying, so the function takes 1 param)
I hate waiting for new compiler versions
@Insilico Does it work well? How come I can't do something as simple as "foo".length() then?
How many newbie questions have been asked about C++ because string literals aren't strings?
@jalf: I didn't say "perfectly well"
@jalf IMO, that's more a failing of the fact that you can't, as a library, turn "foo" into std::string("foo") seamlessly
@jalf In C++11 you can do std::string operator "" _s( char const *in ) { return in; } and "foo"_s.length();
08:16
Hi all :)
@Insilico yeah, but I'd say it's basically the #1 use case: being able to use a string literal as.... a string
If your language can't do that, then its string handling does not work "very well"
Someone here skilled in image capturing on ios ?
@Potatoswatter Shouldn't that be "foo"_s.length()?
@Potatoswatter: I think you meant "foo"_s.length()
have a bug that turns my cola blue and my brain to mush
08:17
@NilsMunch See a neurologist.
@DeadMG how would that be implemented? Search through all known types for any with a length() member function, and which can be constructed from a string literal?
@jalf: Can you come up with a way to make "foo" actually a std::string("foo") without breaking lots of code?
@DeadMG: what's wrong with foreach? programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/141854/…
Besides, you shouldn't be doing "foo".length() anyway
@Insilico No. And that's why I'm saying that C++'s string handling doesn't work "very well". It works as well as it can under the circumstances, but it suffers by not having goddamn strings built in
08:18
You should do it like length("foo") or something
@Insilico It was an example. I almost did "foo" + "bar", but given our discussion of concatenation operators, I thought that'd lead to trouble ;)
@Potatoswatter considered... but i fear he will turn me into something... normal
point is, I can't treat a string literal like a string
@jalf No. I would say, more accurately, that "foo" is always a std::string, unless you override it for a given source file to be your other favourite string type
of course, C++ doesn't contain any such mechanism
@DeadMG: Of course, we have this thing called reality
Which prevents us from being able to do that due to breaking changes
08:19
@DeadMG ah, interesting idea
@jalf See, Wide will succeed! mwaahahahahahaha
I still think just adding a string type to the language is simpler and cleaner, but yeah, there are other ways it could be solved
Mat
Mat
Sort of related to current debate... Do you guys think C++ is trying to keep too much compatibility with C?
@DeadMG I didn't say good, I said interesting ;)
@jalf I dislike that idea because, fundamentally, there is more than one useful string type.
08:21
You could use a macro S() to define an object of whatever type the name string locally refers to.
@Potatoswatter: Macros, yuck.
and I find it a violation of coupling for the language to arbitrarily choose one
But yeah, really tying the user to a particular string type is a really bad idea.
Well yeah, and there's more than one useful size for int.
@Mat: Not really
08:22
@jalf But several kinds of notation for the various kinds of integer.
@Mat: There's lots of C code that isn't valid C++ code
you can have 0LL, for example
also, the integer handling in C++ is equally bad
@jalf And if you overflow the default size, a larger one is automatically chosen without the need for L suffixes.
@DeadMG Well, I think the point in using a programming language is that it makes decisions for me. If it didn't, it wouldn't be worth using
Strings types are more difficult to select and convert between.
08:23
@Potatoswatter for literals, sure. Not for ints in general
that's true
but the language should not make decisions for you that you cannot override, except where absolutely necessary
easy things should be quick, and hard things should also be possible
@jalf pretty much illustrates how type selection isn't a problem for the language to solve completely.
I disagree. :)
@Potatoswatter Yup. And there's no reason why you can't build your own string types as well, just like std::string is a pure library solution. I'm just saying that the language needs some built-in handling of strings. A string literal must be a string, and strings must have some sane, reasonable functionality
like Unicode /grump
Unicode just needs to work
08:25
lol
@jalf In C++ a string literal has a sizeof, type information specifying the character encoding (if you follow the rules), and its contents. That's not really so bad.
@Potatoswatter Again, it doesn't behave like a string. Strings can be concatenated with other strings. String literals can't
@Potatoswatter Yes, it really is so bad.
The std::string class has too much functionality. It's more OO than the rest of the library.
Yes, you can get the size of a string literal, but a string is supposed to offer more functionality than that
08:27
@Potatoswatter Yes, std::string sucks. that doesn't make const char(&)[N] any better
@jalf Runtime catenation can't be done without a memory manager, and at the level C++ works, you don't want strings to depend on the free store.
most of the C++ Standard library needs an upgrade, and std::string is no exception
@Potatoswatter It offers too much functionality, but also leaves out a lot of fundamentally important functionality. But that's not the issue, as @DeadMG says. It's not about whether std::string is a good string class, but whether string literals are
@jalf: Much of std::string's functionality depends on the free store. I don't like memory allocations that happen behind my back
@Insilico Look at the LLVM system. They don't need it for string literals.
08:28
And once again, I don't give a flying fuck about C++. My claim was that a reasonable programming language should have a string type built in. The reasons why a langauge designed 30 years ago doesn't is irrelevant
@Insilico So you don't use std::vector either?
concatenation requires the result to be on the heap- not the source operands
Once again, I don't care about the implementation, and I don't care about C++. But if you're designing a language today, it needs to be able to do more with string literals than get their size in bytes
@jalf Absolutely agreed.
@jalf Yes, but because I can see std::vector and std::string I know there's going to be free store usage
@DeadMG So what? If the result is the same type as the sources, the sources still need to know whether they own their contents, and hence have a notion of the free store.
08:30
I can't know that from "foo" + "bar"
@Insilico I don't know about you, but last I checked, I could see string literals too
@Insilico You know that if the language says that string literals are strings. Then you know exactly what will happen in that expression
It sounds like the same nonsensical argument that C programmers trot out to say C++ is evil
Unfortunately in C++ memory allocation is slow as shit
Except that they say "if I don't know the types, I can't predict what an operator will do". You're saying "even if I know the types, and even if the behavior of the operator is written into the language specification, I don't know what it'll do"
A sensible string class doesn't need to use dynamic allocation for holding string literals
@Insilico How exactly is that relevant?
08:31
So I actually do care about memory allocations
^ Since I've implemented that.
On the other hand, C++ does allow us to define template< std::size_t lhs_len, std::size_t rhs_len > constexpr char *catenate( char (&lhs)[ lhs_len ], char (&rhs)[ rhs_len )
@CheersandhthAlf: How do you deal with concatenations?
@Potatoswatter Who says it has to be the same type?
@Insilico Sorry, I thought we were talking about the string functionality that a language should support. Clearly you were in a completely different discussion. Don't let me disturb you then. </sarcasm>
08:32
I forget if you can return a reference to array, I think you can't which is unfortunate.
@Insilico For run time concatenations you need, in general, dynamic allocation. Except where small buffer optimization can deal with it, and is used.
Really, it scares me that this is so controversial. You guys need to get out more, and use languages other than C++ for a day or two
4
@jalf: It's one thing to get the interface down. It's another to actually put it into practice
@Insilico yes, and 99% of all languages have put it into practice
C and C++ haven't
@jalf: The disagreement seems to be whether strings need compiler magic to be not stupid
08:33
I'm pretty sure it is possible for a language to implement a string type
@jalf with C++11 user defined literals it's just a library issue, no longer a language issue.
@jalf: So if I can make a library-only solution to strings that work just as well as a built-in solution, would you accept that?
@jalf You mean C? :-P
@Insilico Well, I have two requirements: (1) string literals must behave like strings. And (2) strings must be interoperable. I don't want to have to convert between 14 different string classes because no one can agree on what type "foo" should be, or which string class to use
08:35
@Mysticial Or Makefile and shell scripting?
If library X returns a string, I want to be able to pass it to library Y
@StackedCrooked I know more assembly then either of those... kinda sad... lol
C++ fails at (1) for technical reasons, and (2) for historical ones
but again, I'm not talking about C++, but about strings. The language doesn't matter
All I'm saying is that I don't think you need to make strings a built-in type to make it work well
If the language allows for such generality
C++ comes close, but fails on some key points (like your string literal example)
@Mysticial I actually want to learn some assembly. I think I need this knowledge in order to understand where and why the compiler can make certain optimizations. Or how memory fences work. Etc..
08:37
@Insilico well, a moment ago, all you were saying was that you didn't want memory allocations, or that you couldn't know from "foo" + "bar" what it would do
but sure, a sufficiently general language could do anything as a library-only solution
@jalf: Yes, because I actually care whether the crap I come up with is actually realizable and implementable within my lifetime
@Insilico Again, you need to get out more. The "crap we've come up with" was solved 30 years ago
The "crap" has been done by every other language than C and C++. I'm pretty sure that makes it technically feasible
@jalf: You act as though I don't need to deal with and interface with old code written by people who were obviously not as smart as us.
@Insilico err, again, are we discussing the same thing here?
I am not talking about implementing a string type in C++, if that's what you're thinking
08:41
@Insilico Legacy interoperation is a special case for a general-purpose language, IMO.
@jalf: No, what I'm saying is that the Greatest String Type in the world is completely fucking useless to me if I can't use it
@StackedCrooked Assembly is actually very straight-forward. There's nothing hidden, you get what you see. In fact it's so straight-forward that it's well... not very readable...
@Insilico Why wouldn't you be able to use it?
@ScottW Man, those things are bitches to cut :D
Can't you use strings in Python? C# strings? Java strings?
08:41
@jalf: I'm not willing to completely switch languages just so I can use the next awesome string type
Lisp strings
@Insilico aaaargghh
1 min ago, by jalf
I am not talking about implementing a string type in C++, if that's what you're thinking
talking about a hypothetical future language, not C++
Which part of "I am not talking about strings in C++" did you miss those 8 times I said it?
08:42
@jalf: Talking about hypothetical future languages is useless to me, because by definition I can't fucking use it
@Insilico Well, big surprise, we are not talking about "how can we give @Insilico a nice string class"
then why are you in the conversation?
We are talking about the string support that a language should have
@DeadMG I'm pretty sure that by any reasonable definition, he isn't
08:43
what variant of Unicode should it be?
@jalf: Right. And I'm saying I don't think it needs to be a built-in type.
8, 16, 32?
Being "in the conversation" usually implies that you're talking about the same thing
I'd rather have this future language be general enough that I can do it without compiler magic
@Insilico I'd rather simply give the compiler magic to the programmer.
08:45
@DeadMG: Even better.
@DeadMG UTF-8
@Insilico Wait, a moment ago, hypothetical future languages were useless to you
@jalf: Fine. I reverse my position.
A string class doesn't need any one specific encoding. It should be serializable to the encoding you need, and it should be able to contain all the code points defined in Unicode. But which internal encoding it uses is irrelevant
@jalf I've come increasingly to that conclusion as well.
@jalf: That's the strategy that my tiny string handling library uses
08:48
well, knowing the internal encoding is useful if you want to determine the fastest way to serialize the string, but other than that, it's just a string
Since operating systems nowadays can't agree on a single encoding
The encoding should be whatever the operating systems use
Since I'm expecting the application to communicate with the OS quite a bit
not necessarily
you might expect that as a reasonable implementation default, but I'd see no reason to enforce it
@DeadMG: Of course, not necessarily. But assuming I'm going to make OS calls all the time, I would probably already be working with the OS's encoding
Converting back and forth all the time is stupid
Serialization, on the other hand, is something I don't expect to happen often
So I don't mind having to convert from the OS's encoding to the proper format
you'd have to convert the string literals in the source file as well, then#
@DeadMG: Yeah, I haven't quite figured out the best way to deal with that
08:51
eh
conversion between UTFs is lossless and transparent
I wouldn't have a problem with it
It's a bit clunky, seems to require newer GCC, and it's missing the internal guts, but C++ does appear to support compile-time catenation of char array string literals: ideone.com/VL0RL
@DeadMG: True, but has O(n) complexity
Have string literals be compile-time lists (in the functional sense, so like std::tuple really) of character types :v So u8"foobar" is <u8'f', u8'o', u8'o', u8'b', u8'a', u8'r'>.
@Insilico But you only have to do it once.
@LucDanton Great, then I can't even get the length of a string ;)
08:52
@LucDanton We already have that. Constexpr arrays have compile-time size and member access.
easy enough to pool string expressions
The goal was to make string handling better, not worse ;)
lol
I just want a string literal to behave like a string. It scares me that some of the best C++ programmers on the planet have so much trouble with the concept
@Potatoswatter String literals cannot be used as template parameters, so no we don't have that.
08:54
@jalf: I understand the concept perfectly well. My assertion is that it doesn't have to be a built-in part of the language.
@jalf Why not?
(Assuming that the language allows for such magic)
@LucDanton Only because they don't have external linkage. They can be constexpr arguments and manipulated at compile time.
You can't use the identity of a string literal to determine a type, but do you really want that?
@LucDanton well, not as a constant-time operation, anyway.
@Potatoswatter Untrue (the very first point). There's no requirement for external linkage anymore. String literals are just crippled, there's no way around it.
08:57
@LucDanton I predict that you will reach 10k today :)
@LucDanton "No way around it"? Are you a Real C++ Hacker?
Hell, I bet you can put a constexpr member access into the template arguments of a trailing-return-type, and determine a type from the contents of the literal — just not the identity.
@Potatoswatter Hacking around a deficiency doesn't remove the deficiency, i.e. "there's no way around it" means "there's no way around [them being crippled]", not "there's no way around [literals]". Are you a Real English Speaker?

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