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00:00
luc why don't you come and visit
IIRC there's one way you can run multiple executables in both windows and linux...
@ThePhD a && b && c ... ?
@Rapptz there would be no point
@AndreasPapadopoulos Oh, that'sit. I used & like a pleb. :B
Albeit it seems to not work with Ninja...
&& is conditional chained execution thouh so maybe not what you want
Maybe because it's taking the entire command parameter and turning it into one big string.
Shit. How do I make it split it up.
& executes in parallel
00:08
time to miss the bus, brb
Thanks for having different behavior on 2 different platforms, ninja.
an example of an expanded executor API that leads to less stupidity is one which exposes a list of continuations to which you could append the next one, allowing for work stealing (although I don’t know much about this topic so take with a grain of salt)
my future state owns the continuation
hm
(I'm not using std::future)
you can have get() block and then run all the appended continuations, yeah
it’s not very async though
00:41
I thought you needed typename to disambiguate even for non-type params in takes_an_alias</* typename */ make_me_an_alias<BoundArgs>::template apply> but apparently I misremembered
01:08
@Charlie that's what you get for not running unit testing
c++ for x-games 2017?
if it doesnt compile you get a headache
01:23
> internal compiler error: in non_atomic_constraint_p, at cp/logic.cc:315
repro, looks like a regression
> Just wanted to give a shoutout to GW2 and Arenanet for being awesome. For those who do not know, Black Desert Online went Pay to Win. You are now able to buy stuff off the "gem store" and post it on the trading post for real gold. The problem is that bdo has a gear treadmill, where money = power. It's not a problem in gw2 because for the most part, money = fashion.
sounds grim
(gotta read the most boring stuff ever while compiling GCC)
> He's wrong about one thing though:
> > It's not a problem in gw2 because for the most part, money = fashion.
> In GW2 fashion = win.
lol
> Fixed a bug that caused the Bloodstone Visage to have audio effects.
@AndreasPapadopoulos turns out it’s not supposed to come with the obnoxious noise
oh good after compiling now I have more regressions
and the GCC bugzilla is now filling even faster with spam
01:59
> error: invalid initialization of reference of type 'auto&' from expression of type 'const annex::variants::functors::product_with_as<long unsigned int>'
that’s a really weird one ._.
error on line 99: redundant reclaration of function; then GCC helpfully points out that the previous declaration was on line 99
02:23
@Xeo Holy shit, you were right to check. old-sol is faster in some places.... ?!?!
Though, it may be because old-sol doesn't SUPPORT some features, I had to use more low-level primitives to get the job done, thusly ensuring the performance would be better...? Time to see how much the difference in used abstractions cost, since the code isn't exactly identical...
GCC’s concepts don’t handle taking addresses of constrained functions just yet
03:27
mmh something I hadn’t considered before is that variable templates and SFINAE is tricky, unlike the good ol’ foo<whatevs>::value way of doing things
I wish I could delete variable templates
03:43
QMutex looks faster than std::mutex, woboq.com/blog/qreadwritelock-gets-faster-in-qt57.html
> Currently they are preparing the 2nd expansion.
> They want to shorten the time between expansions.
 
2 hours later…
06:15
Pfffffffffff.
P F F F F the performance.
I'm just gonna keep this graph to mahself. :B
06:40
Wazzat?
@ThePhD ...you've already shared it. :D
@ThePhD lol, "Due to many of the competitors not supporting this feature, we've decided not to generate a graph as that would be unfair"
nwp
nwp
07:11
Documentation is so broke, and mixing it with SO reputation was so wrong that I stopped contributing to Q&A as well. Documentation should be something like Tag wiki's or community wiki posts that people creates voluntarily. — T J 2 days ago
I hope not everyone does that.
that's what we all said about your face
@ThePhD That is what build systems are for. :)
07:33
@ThePhD If you use VS2015, you're screwed.
Well, VS.
> One prime example is Boost, likely the #1 used C++ library, with bad official documentation and only one example in Stack Overflow Documentation.
Why are boost docs bad?
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes on doc.so or on boost.org?
I guess the answer is the same: boost.org docs are pretty bad, so the copy/pasta for doc.so is bad too
The official ones.
nwp
nwp
I mostly messed with boost::program_args and it is mostly undocumented
you mostly take the example and try to guess what changes would fit in your case instead of having a list of features to choose from
but then again I even think Qt docs are bad, and those are usually considered to be the best docs ever
"undocumented"
I don't know what you're talking about.
nwp
nwp
the best doc I've seen is the winapi doc, it is the only doc I know of that at least attempts to cover corner cases and also has very useful links to similar functions so you only need to be sort of right
@R.MartinhoFernandes how is that a documentation? There is the desc.add_options() ("help", "produce help message"); example in the getting started section. Now, try to find what parameters go into the parens and what they mean.
All you get is that the first string is probably the parameter and the second one is the message
then you learn you can do things like "h,help" (I think) which has a special meaning
and you can have other stuff in there
and none of that is documented, you just try to collect it from the examples
07:50
> Calls to that operator actually declare options. The parameters are option name, information about value, and option description.
Jesus fuck.
I'm quoting from the very next paragraph.
@nwp lolwut
I'm calling PICNIC.
You really suck at this "reading the fucking manual" thing, man.
nwp
nwp
I suppose so
I am more of those JIT learners
nwp
nwp
07:52
maybe my expectation that they list what things can go in there and what they mean is unjustified
@nwp No, it's not.
learning optimization - less time spent on learning for building the same thing
But your expectation to find that listing without reading that listing is unjustified.
It's right there on the first paragraph following the example.
A paragraph which also includes a link to relevant reference section, where you can find all the detail you could ever want.
There's also a whole section on that same page dedicated to explaining this exact thing.
Seriously, are you trolling?
(Terrible fragment ids)
So, basically, you can find what you asked for in three different forms without having to google for any other page but the one you linked.
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, I can seriously not find the string format description. I know it is in there somewhere, at least in an example because I remember it.
@nwp It's in the very first paragraph following the example.
07:58
@nwp "string format"?
Then again in the following section. And then again in the reference linked.
I've never used the boost program options library. One day I should try it out.
Three different levels of detail and three different points in the narrative/reference spectrum.
nwp
nwp
@Griwes the part of the doc that says "a regular string is the parameter name, a string with [letter],[string] has the short form, a string with [string];[string] gives 2 names that are alternatives". Something like that.
> The "include-path" option is an example of the only case where the interface of the options_description class serves only one source -- the command line. Users typically like to use short option names for common options, and the "include-path,I" name specifies that short option name is "I". So, both "--include-path" and "-I" can be used.
08:00
(Oh, you didn't actually link the Getting Started page, merely referenced it; same thing)
Literally under the fucking example that uses it.
nwp
nwp
cool, found the example using it. Still my idea of a documentation is not a list of examples explaining the examples but an actual complete succinct list of the format that is supported.
...
nwp
nwp
here is the trick question: besides the ,[letter] thing, what other formats are supported?
you can't know without reading everything there
and you have to do that for everything
what I expect is a section that says "A parameter string has the format [...]", and after you found the parameter string documentation you know everything there is to know about parameter strings. The lack of that is what makes me say it is not a real documentation.
@nwp What.
You mean a reference section?
THAT ALSO EXISTS
AND IT'S ALSO LINKED FROM THE FUCKING PARAGRAPH THAT FOLLOWS THE EXAMPLE.
nwp
nwp
08:07
well, not by clicking the obvious options_description link, or maybe it is another case of cannot read
You're being way too obtuse.
@nwp The description of add_options() refers you to the constructor of option_description, which has all the details.
nwp
nwp
for example from the options_description I see that the parameter string is called caption. Cool. But they don't write anything about what goes in the caption, not even the comma thing.
@nwp JESUS FUCK
> Creates the instance. The 'caption' parameter gives the name of this 'options_description' instance. Primarily useful for output. The 'description_length' specifies the number of columns that should be reserved for the description text; if the option text encroaches into this, then the description will start on the next line.
This is the whole description of that constructor. HOW CAN YOU MISS THAT.
You cannot expect whatever you are currently looking for to be in the title of the page.
nwp
nwp
I read that and it doesn't have what I want. There is no description whatsoever about the format of that string.
@nwp It's a name.
08:12
...
That's the description of the format.
It's not fancy.
It's a name. Used for output.
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes it is not a name, it is a format string with special meanings for various characters.
@nwp It's a name.
It says so right there.
It has no special meaning.
nwp
nwp
well either they are lying or we got to the wrong part of the documentation, because a ',' has special meaning and it is not just a name
No, we didn't.
You seem to stop reading at the fold and assume there's nothing else.
08:15
> The "include-path" option is an example of the only case where the interface of the options_description class serves only one source -- the command line. Users typically like to use short option names for common options, and the "include-path,I" name specifies that short option name is "I". So, both "--include-path" and "-I" can be used.
Mind you, I'm quoting that again.
That's in the add_options bit.
Why you decided to look in the constructor of options_description first is beyond me.
The doc says that it's just a label for human consumption. A name. It looks like commas just delimit multiple names that might be relevant.
nwp
nwp
@Griwes and I would say again that this is 1 example of the many features that we happen to stumble upon. That is not sufficient. I want to know what the other special characters do, if there is one. What happens if I do "include-path,I,J". Is that illegal? Has it another meaning? What does a ';' do? It doesn't say!
@nwp Is there ANY REASON WHATSOEVER that leads to think that there's ANYTHING else than just , for the command-line case?
7 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@nwp The description of add_options() refers you to the constructor of option_description, which has all the details.
user6438653
08:17
Hi, this is about C++ right.
@nwp Then it indicates that it may be considered include_path, I, and J, which indicate the same object.
nwp
nwp
@Aaron3468 it does say that, but it is a lie
Now shut up.
@nwp It isn't.
@nwp caption is an argument to the constructor of options_description.
That's irrelevant for what add_options does because add_options creates option_description objects.
> The 'name' parameter is interpreted by the following rules:
* if there's no "," character in 'name', it specifies long name
* otherwise, the part before "," specifies long name and the part after \-- short name.
Fuck you, @nwp.
Granted, the two names are confusing.
08:19
It's exactly documented.
But that's an issue with the design, not the docs.
No they aren't, if you actually read the docs for both.
The docs are fine.
> Note: it would be nice to make the second parameter auto_ptr, to explicitly pass ownership.
...this part of the docs seems to be somewhat outdated, lol.
user6438653
Where could i find the Windows Window source code, like for dmw.exe Desktop Window Mangager.
9
08:21
@shad0wk Easy, just apply for a job at Microsoft!
Oh cool, Google Inbox now bundles Github notifications, and it seems it does so by repo.
This is really neat.
@shad0wk Why? If you're trying to hack, it would be easier to write your own dmw.exe, or just rename dmw.exe and use your own code to launch it after doing whatever you want it to do. Otherwise I don't see a reason to know the source code
@ThePhD Wield that wontfix hammer!
user6438653
I'm not trying to hack it, I just want the source to create my own dmw.exe.
08:24
Well, Microsoft Windows is not an open source operating system.
@fredoverflow Somewhat reminds me of... this.
@shad0wk ...Windows isn't really a system you want to be hacking on. (And here I use the word "hack" in its proper original meaning, not yet melded together with "cracking".)
user6438653
Dammit.
user6438653
Well thanks for your help, bye.
@shad0wk It may be worth noting that dwm.exe is windows, but dmw.exe is not
user6438653
@Aaron3468 Oh yeah sorry, yeah dwm.exe My fault.
08:29
so hard to shuck oysters
@shad0wk Cool. For future reference windows is not friendly for OS hacks (though a few like WindowBlinds exist). Linux is much better for that.
Hello people, I cant get my head around of what is a proper way to return or pass Objects to and from a DLL. For example what is a proper way to return string from dll? 1. To allocate memory in dll and return a *char? To pass a reference to std::string void getString(std::string &myString) ?
nwp
nwp
@nwp I should revise that. All the information is in the docs. I am just unable to find it. (which is probably my fault).
user6438653
@Aaron3468 Linuz is better for that, I wasn't hacking it, just getting the source.
Hacking, messing around with it to make it better/more interesting. Pretty much the same thing tbh
user6438653
08:31
@fredoverflow Yeah, that would work.
user6438653
Working for microsoft.
I used a hammer in the end, smashed 3 :/
@shad0wk Aside from Non-disclosure Agreements, you might be onto something for personal use ^^;
user6438653
They might bug my computer, then i use something similar and sued! For 15 trillion.
Another dumb question? Is this a bad place to ask specific programming questions?
user6438653
08:35
Hi @ArnasAmbrasas.
@shad0wk hello.
user6438653
What a load of shit. I installed C++ in VS and it doesn't say 'Visual C++' it says VC, two There is onlu a shared project option, i click it, then it says it's not supported! What the fuk is wrong with it.
user6438653
@ArnasAmbrasas Hello.
user6438653
I'm sorry i cant help you.
@shad0wk np
08:38
user image
9
user6438653
@fredoverflow WTF
user6438653
What's the difference between this room and the C++ room?
The C++ room is about C++.
^ that
user6438653
Yeah but this one is lounge C++
08:40
@ChemiCalChems It's alright to have update functions in player classes, etc. After all, the different subsystems of a game engine don't need to know the details of a player; they should just know that a player needs to be updated each frame. If you're concerned about modularity and not performance, make a class to manage updating so you can instantly switch behaviour of a player by passing a new class to it.
@shad0wk Lounge<C++> is for people who need to relax and take a break from C++.
user6438653
Ohhh okay, welll bye guys.
@Aaron3468 i made a struct so that i can inherit from it, it contains an update function
@fredoverflow ...until they start a flame war about some C++ feature. :P
similar to drawable
but with updatable
08:41
@ChemiCalChems Is the update function virtual?
@fredoverflow yes
Awesome, then you're all set. I usually have render for the graphics subsystem, and a shared update for the physics, input, and logic/ai subsystems, but that's because I haven't made bigger engines yet
@Aaron3468 i see
physics are gonna be tough
i'm gonna have to manage orbits, which isn't that hard, but i fear that the orbit won't be circular but a spiral, either inward or outward because of the delta time between updates to change the velocity
They're not too difficult. A lot of it is just having fields for mass, acceleration, velocity, direction, etc and then updating on a fixed time-step
@Aaron3468 i know that, but orbiting can't be easy
08:49
@ChemiCalChems The best explanation I found: The types of Game loops
i mean, i know the physics, but i fear that the orbit will be unstable
If you have the correct equations and a fixed time-step, there isn't a whole lot to go wrong aside from floating-point error (which isn't too massive for small projects)
@Aaron3468 well, now that i think of it,it's similar to integration
you get very close to the actual result with very little deltas
so i shouldn't have to worry, you are right
i'm gonna have some fun mixing my 3 favorite areas of knowledge together
That's exactly what it is (without summing). Good luck!
@Aaron3468 thanks
09:00
I've got to email amazon because it seems that two of my orders were lost in the postal system T.T
@ArnasAmbrasas It depends on how much ABI compatibility between releases you want to achieve. Using plain C types makes it easier to use DLLs compiled by different compiler from DLL using application. If you however control both and/or release both at once then you can just use C++ types all the time.
09:24
@R.MartinhoFernandes They aren't
nwp
nwp
unless you suck at reading
@shad0wk i'd love to know
I'd like to see more examples on CMake docs, but I don't think I can edit them because they aren't wikis
09:43
There's a point where the idea of being able to define primitive types in a language seems helpful. Somebody save me.
I've been writing too much C and assembly lately
nwp
nwp
@Aaron3468 Depends on the difference between primitive and custom types. In C++ there really isn't much difference, in Java there is.
Adding custom primitives to Java could get around the forced heap allocation at the cost of not supporting interfaces. Or something like that.
@Aaron3468 C++'s main feature is that user defined types and built-in ones aren't that different
Java is the worst offender; Byte was a stupid idea. C++ has really good typing support and the option of wrapping bit-shifts. And almost standard fixed-width types
Also the C# one, but they achieve this in another way
I think the most often, I wish every language had standard fixed-width integer types and binary types; you can build any hardware-level type from those. And it makes communication protocols soo much easier.
time to hop on a train and test my (old) new app again!
Also my favourite Boost.Endian
Also, "you can build any hardware-level type from those" does not follow. You need at least arbitrary bit-width types.
In computer architecture, 18-bit integers, memory addresses, or other data units are those that are at most 18 bits (2.25 octets) wide. Also, 18-bit CPU and ALU architectures are those that are based on registers, address buses, or data buses of that size. 18 binary digits have 7005262144000000000♠262144 (1000000 octal, 40000 hexadecimal) distinct combinations. 18 bits was a common word size for smaller computers in the 1960s, when large computers often used 36 bit words and 6-bit character sets were the norm. == Example computer architectures == Possibly the most well-known 18-bit comput...
Like std_logic_vector(n downto 0) from VHDL
Little-known fact: GCC lets you define a 33-bit integer type https://t.co/kLwr7AEfk7
4
Relevant.
(31-bit won't work)
09:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes Those are my babies and I use them all the time, they've moved into standard (but not every compiler has). Rather, given any fixed-width type, you can emulate any other fixed-width type of arbitrary size by wrapping 1 or more instances together and validating operations on the wrapped type
@Aaron3468 But that won't use hardware types.
Also, what you describe doesn't require the fixed-width types.
Fair point, now we are discussing semantics
("Fixed-width types" is a terrible misnomer, but I think we both mean the [u]int{n}_t stuff)
@Aaron3468 Not for the last remark.
Emulating types of arbitrary size by wrapping the built-in ones can be done regardless of having types with standardized sizes.
char has CHAR_BIT bits.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was in the process of typing this: It would at least require the ability to reason about the position of the most significant digit of a number. In retrospect, this can be done with any code which runs on a platform with resolvable bases for its integer representation
10:04
@Aaron3468 wat
All you need is types where all bits are required to be part of the value representation.
Any unsigned type in C++ will do.
And none of this needs to know anything about the "platform's integer representation"
It works on a binary machine as well as it does on a ternary one.
To emulate a 5 bit number for example, you must be able to resolve how many bits are currently in a given number represented by the language - so that you can clamp the value or overflow as part of the arithmetic behaviour. Where words are not consistent width, you must be able to determine the largest value of 5-bits to perform this behaviour. Where binary is used this is a trivial task so fixed-width isn't necessary
@Aaron3468 Binary doesn't matter.
Determining the largest 5-bit value is trivial on any platform.
It's something you can do with the C++ abstract machine.
It's (1u << 5) - 1.
That works everywhere.
And it works for any unsigned type (... that can fit a 5-bit value, obviously).
If the code operates on multiple platforms of different n-ary representations, it would matter. I see that my concept of bit-shifts is incorrect because I always imagined it as binary shifting.
@Aaron3468 No, it wouldn't matter.
10:11
> Where words are not consistent width, you must be able to determine the largest value of 5-bits
> It's (1u << 5) - 1.
I understand the topic well but I'm not communicating clearly. I'll leave the topic be because it's not of any practical significance
I think that you have some fundamental misconception instead.
@Aaron3468 Mapping between an C++ abstract machine and an implementation may be non-trivial and non-obvious
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of what? What you say is what I'm saying. The only difference is that you cite specific examples while I'm explaining the implementation-agnostic aspects of the problem (of representing arbitrary-width types using platform words)
lol zigamorph<Align>()
10:26
@Aaron3468 My example is easy to make generic.
sigh Did I say it was impossible? I listed the constraints and in most language machines they are met, therefore it is possible.
No.
You said that fixed-width types enabled this.
They don't.
This has been feasible in standard C++ before the fixed-width types were introduced.
> It would at least require the ability to reason about the position of the most significant digit of a number. [and therefore I agree that it does not require fixed-width types]
I don't see why we've been arguing when it's already been agreed
Because then you changed it to something about "resolvable bases" and then "platform representation".
Both of which are entirely irrelevant.
My terminology is the inconsistency, not my understanding. Terminology being the means of expression in English that I use. English being my learned grammar, vocabulary, and figures of speech. Learned grammar being.... [combinatorial explosion of definitions to get the semantic arguments out of the way and reach the understanding that we both agree]
10:35
@Aaron3468 So what did you mean by "platform"?
A broad term for everything between the language and the electrical signals that represent a number. Like a terrible car design, some virtual machines don't implement the equivalent of a brake pedal even when the hardware has the brakes attached to the wheels. It can be difficult to use binary in some high level languages because of this.
> Bitte antworten Sie auf diese E-Mail sofort für eine große Geschäftsidee von 18 Millionen US-Dollar
Spam is less imaginative these days
No nigerian princes want me now
@Aaron3468 Then, yes, you're misunderstanding the fundamental fact that it doesn't matter because C++'s operators are not defined to do "what the platform does".
They behave (mostly, there are few corner cases like overflows) the same everywhere.
And the same is true for any other mainstream language, I'd say.
But I'm not talking about C++ but about languages in general. Python 2.7 and Java only just have enough support to pass, but not necessarily enough to make it anything but a PITA.
> x << y
Returns x with the bits shifted to the left by y places (and new bits on the right-hand-side are zeros). This is the same as multiplying x by 2**y.
Python's bitshift definition is pretty much the same as C++'s.
@Aaron3468 None of that is related to the platform.
Speaking generally: there's no platform-specific functionality that needs to be exposed for this to work.
10:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes cost of using the said library to create a base and derived class description in Lua, constructing a derived during setup, and the measuring the cost of derived:base_func(); without explicitly adding base_func() to the derived class description (e.g., what public inheritance buys you in C++).
The goal is that people expect class descriptions of derived types to just "automatically connect" to all base classes.
This measures the efficiency of the glue that the framework hands you.
Granted, right now I have it documented that I don't support such a feature. This is the benchmark for my initial crack at it, and Pffffffffffffffffffffffff boy does it suuuuck.
Gee, Hermannplatz closed off due to "suspicious suitcase", which, as always, turns out to have been, well, a suitcase. FFS.
Damn, old-sol is faster for many of its basic function invocations
That doesn't look so hot. :<
lol
But it's so close in some places.... buh.
BUH.
will just update graphs and leave as is
11:16
Let the sadness flow through your keyboard.
oh google news.... for want of a comma:
> Canadian Banned From Contacting ISIS Dead After Police Operation
I guess he should put away the Ouija board
Where do you put the comma?
it should be between ISIS and Dead
but I read it as being after dead
I don't think so
But that's slightly different.
(Canadian Banned From Contacting ISIS) Dead After Police Operation
11:28
which is a lot funnier
I blame it being unparseable due to A Titlecase Clickbait Title
oh of course.. but still funny
If you put the comma there, it becomes two clauses separated by a comma-that-should-be-a-semicolon.
I speak english... this means my written grammar is horrible because I never actually bothered to learn it
The comma would be ok-ish if it was actually reporting on the ban as well, and if the death was a direct consequence of the ban.
11:38
another ripost: "Where we're going we don't need no stink'n grammar!"
eh... at least to me the semi-colon is the cleanest. The best choice is just to reformulate the headline all together
@Mgetz Yeah, hence the "ok-ish".
@Mgetz I get the feeling many journalists these days suffer from the same.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's because the vast majority of them are not journalists, but rather psych students that found out you can't get a non-retail job with a psych degree.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes in England at least, we never get taught how to use semicolons properly
It seems as though nobody knows :V
' or "
Ell
Ell
"Use a semicolon if the sentences could survive on their own but you want them together with a pause"
11:46
hardly ever taught when to use what
the semi-colon is the B-Train trailer hitch of the english language: the two clauses could be separate, but are easier to transport together.
I speak English as well. There are a few standard definitions as to what correct punctuation and grammar are, but nobody can seem to agree on which standard to follow; a fuzzy interpretation seems the only compromise. Of course, standardized terminology like 'platform' usually implies that the general term 'platform' cannot also be used.
Ell
Ell
@Telkitty semicolons
@Ell Ugh. This pause thing is so misleading.
Stay away from people who seem to think punctuation is determined by pauses.
12:00
Those people should use Morse dits and dats for punctuation.
> A tension between the two systems is inevitable — and healthy; it keeps us thinking about what we’re saying and writing.
I'm triggered!
:) don't get me wrong, I agree that clarity and unambiguity are important. However at that point you should not be using English - with it's history of being ad-hoc - and I don't approve of pedantry in any language older than a century or two.
Speaking of, you'll never be more grammatically self-conscious than when you express your opinions about language use
It's just the interaction between the em dash and the semicolon that weirds me out.
Mmn. I made my examples a lot better.
And now that compile / run with my tests.
So I can't break them anymore.
Hot, kinky, spicy examples.
Most of them are just ripped right outta my docs, though. ;;
At least I know the docs code works.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'll never unsee that now. I hope you're happy.
@ThePhD You can turn them into tests themselves by sprinkling asserts.
Makes them self-documenting as well.
12:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes Some of them have asserts, some don't.
I should, like. Change all my comments of // result.x == 20, result.y == 60 into asserts though.
12:21
fucking wam
deditated wam
12:56
...
@R.MartinhoFernandes ich weiß, was du meinst
How fucking stupid is VC++?
const char* ptr = "bark\0bark";
std::size_t sz = 9;
std::string s(ptr, sz);
s.size(); // 9
s[5] == /* Garbage */
Everything after the insert \0 is garbage.
WTF, VC++?
@ThePhD sounds like a bug
No SHIT it's a bug.

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