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11:20
0
Q: is there a way to overload extraction operator , inside a class and not as a friend of class?

HosseinI am trying to overload << operator , so that when i use my class object in std::cout , it prints out the data members which is supposed to get printed . i know i have to define a friend functions signature inside of a class , and then outside of the class i define two friend functions doi...

WTF with this clusterfuck:
So many downvotes.
I downvoted half the answers, then someone else downvoted the other half.
Where are "header files" for languages other than C and C++ typically kept in the FHS?
What other languages have header files?
11:26
What are "other languages" ?
Header files, module files. Anything that would be included or imported. Hence the quotation marks.
^ North Indian chicken wraps!
Should C++ modules be called "packages" (like Ada and Java) or "units" (like Pascal) or "modules" (like Modula-2)?
$ pacman -Ql ghc | grep "hi$" | head -n 1
ghc /usr/lib/ghc-7.4.1/Cabal-1.14.0/Distribution/Compat/CopyFile.dyn_hi
$
@Maxpm does that answer your question?
I think "package" is best, because who wouldn't want a package? As opposed to, say, a unit. Who on Earth would be flamboyantly happy about getting a unit?
@CheersandhthAlf I vote for "things". Everyone wants things.
11:31
Good point!
18
A: Why is size_t unsigned?

Cheers and hth. - Alfsize_t is unsigned for historical reasons. On an architecture with 16 bit pointers, such as the "small" model DOS programming, it would be impractical to limit strings to 32 KB. For this reason, the C standard requires (via required ranges) ptrdiff_t, the signed counterpart to size_t and the re...

^ A person made a comment!
Why am I not surprised to see that whole "iterating backwards" thing there.
@CheersandhthAlf D calls them modules, with groups of modules being called packages.
Packages, units, whatever ... all wrong really. Let's call them: "Neat things you don't have to worry about all that much." (We could possibly use an acronym for that to look even smarter.)
import std.stdio; // std is a package; stdio is a module.
@Maxpm Oh. The only thing I remembered was Mr. Booch (one of the founders of UML), who wrote a book where the physical distribution of code was called "package". IIRC.
11:34
Let's not listen to people behind UML.
Iterating with old-style for loops is silly anyway.
Python calls distributions distributions.
Range-based for for the win.
Distributions have packages, packages have modules.
Also, who cares how it's named.
@CheersandhthAlf could you explain the "several disadvantages" to me?
11:37
Standard can call them thingamabobs for all I care. Just implement them already, dammit!
@bamboon first and foremost, that implicit conversions I referred to, where string( "Bamboon" ).length() < -3. Then you the guaranteed wraparound in non-negative range (difficult to detect). And in practice perhaps worst, but it is very non-obvious, an extreme waste of time by people trying to use the best-fit unsigned type around, which comes from the same misguided idea as just using unsigned int.
list<Member*>::iterator *it_me = new list<Member*>::iterator[size];

it_me[size-1] = temp->members.begin();

I get a access violation, is that because i try to change it_me outside of its size?
The implicit conversion are the "usual arithmetic conversions" + "promotions", which most people just call "promotion"
Why are you using new?
Also you get waste of time and/or undetected bugs due to sillywarnings about comparing signed and unsigned.
11:41
to make an array of iterators
std::vector<std::list<>::iterator>.
The code shown doesn't have any obvious cause for access violations.
Whenever you're using pointers, you're probably doing it wrong.
And what the cat said.
oh my it's been a long time since I listened to Bay City Rollers
11:42
@CheersandhthAlf ok, thanks
you're welcome
there's much more but my head isn't fully cooperating with my will today.
slow & sluggish
alright, thanks for help
oh, while we/I on the topic, there is one special case where unsigned is very good for numbers
it is the range checking:
assert( unsigned( x ) < maxValue );
that assert triggers if x < 0, and it triggers if x >= maxValue. very neato
:)
Very hacky too.
11:47
Not hacky… an underflow is equally invalid as anything else.
oh, it's hacky if you cast to unsigned inside the assert like that.
Meh, let's just use bigints everywhere.
unsigned and unsigned int are the same right?
@bamboon exact same.
11:49
@CatPlusPlus but none of them work - I won't actually do your suggestions for fixing them though and yell at you instead
Let's all start using signed.
Also, when you're feeling disgruntled, signed is a synonym for int.
typedef unsiged signed
Okay, poor joke.
What is that?
needs to be the other way around.
11:51
A typo. To make code more fun.
"Poor"? That's a contender for understatement of the year.
I just had an UML test, so shush.
My brain is offline.
would that work?
ugghhh UML
lol
I think he meant using unsiged = signed;
I don't remember how typedefs work.
11:54
Screw typedefs. using FTW.
What is it with people and converting string to other containers.
@CatPlusPlus You mean serialization?
why can't auto deduce this properly?
I have a letter recogniser to write for Thursday.
11:59
A what?
An OCR for hand-written letters.
@bamboon Because you're compiling in C++03 mode. ideone.com/JFWsc
Well, kind of. It's supposed to be an example of probability models and all that.
@CatPlusPlus Using whom's handwritting?
I'm thinking of embarking on a quest of making a GUI in Haskell.
Whomever's.
12:02
Sounds impossible.
You train it, then give it another letter and it's supposed to guess with some probability.
Ah.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Expect ridicule if your code uses new and/or delete. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
@RMartinhoFernandes ah crap sorry for that, but the signed/ unsigned error persists if you compile it with -Werror
It's all probability and statistics.
Oh.
You're asking why auto deduces int?
Because 0 has type int.
If you want unsigned, use 0u.
12:04
@RMartinhoFernandes ah ok thanks, that was the question
In any case, iterators are the superior option.
Three-legged for is awkward.
@RMartinhoFernandes sure but I was just wondering that
Three-legged for is invalid.
You can't appreciate how puntastic that was.
12:06
Oh. Now I need to understand it.
I just got the brilliant idea to write by gluing strings to paper. Add corn flakes for "cerealization."
When I have kids they're gonna love me…
constexpr bool operator "" i( unsigned long long ) { return true; }
bool yes = 0ui;
Why? Reserved yes, but invalid…
12:11
While a nice code pun, not compiling kinda detracts from its quality.
I still can't compile such things since GCC 4.8 failed to install properly :v(
4.7 supports UDLs.
Ah, yes, only the decimal string is parsed separately from the suffix. It should be operator "" ui and u is always implicit.
Guess what I tried to install 4.8 over ;v)
Lol.
cabal: dependencies conflict: ghc-7.0.4 requires bytestring ==0.9.1.10 however
bytestring-0.9.1.10 was excluded because ghc-7.0.4 requires bytestring
==0.9.2.1
Whyyyyyyyyy.
Also wat.
12:19
No, really, wat. How is that even possible.
Broken your system is.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yoda like your typing is
You can't deny that those dependencies conflict!
I think it's obvious: because they're evil.
@ScottW Keeps me in shape
12:21
potatoes got'a be swatted
sure they are, but still got to be swated
Huh, winghci. I've never seen that.
They're edible, in any case.
Now where the hell GHC keeps package registry.
I'm converting a application from QNX to Linux and i'm having issues finding an equivalent to lfbs.rwth-aachen.de/~stefan/qnx/qnx/qname_at.html which is from QNX's sys/name.h
and i'll just throw out there that i'm not an experienced c++ programmer, more of a c# windows guy so i'm pretty much just flying by the seat of my pants
12:24
oh sure, got'a swat C++
@rlemon Far as I know, Linux processes only have numbers, not names.
You would have to implement your own name registry, which shouldn't be too hard.
@Potatoswatter ok cool, then I will stop looking :P and start reading up on how to do that.
just sucks when I know so little about the topic I don't even know what to search for.
std::map comes to mind.
Oops, I just read all the things that actually does. Maybe it would be hard.
Don't mind me.
Haha, now I've really broken everything.
12:28
@CatPlusPlus curious where you :P
he's in a box, but we don't know if he's alive or dead until we open the box.
@thecoshman Sense that sentence doesn't make.
I'm here.
Also, for the future: unregistering bytestring breaks every installed package.
Thanks. But I don't think I need a warning for that.
Just saying.
Also, GHC binary is 35MB big.
Neat.
@RMartinhoFernandes fucks I give not
I tried to extend the idea of a reflective factory a bit. However I still get errors I don't understand. Like cannot access protected members from the derived Factory and if I make everything public I get linker errors :(
What is that ugly machinery for?
It's not ugly.
12:36
@Nils friends?
You should be minimising inheritance and virtual dispatch, not inventing generic machinery to make more of it.
You can register classes and a string for them in the derived Factory.
Has #define => is ugly.
it's undefined again
but feel free to improve it
@Potatoswatter is it? (tries to compile unsigned signed x = 3)
12:37
@Nils You only forgot the argument to AbstractFactory< Base >. And AbstractFactory wasn't abstract because = 0 is missing. codepad.org/VNkuw1Un
Oh, I'm not saying it's not usable, working, or anything. Ugly is transversal to all that.
Sometimes you have to stick with the uglies.
@thecoshman Why friends? I thought protected is suitable here..
Why is that factory abstract, or a class?
@sehe A type synonym, not a literal synonym.
12:38
@CatPlusPlus because you have to derive it to tell it which classes you want to be able to create..
@Potatoswatter good point, forgot that
@Nils What is a reflective factory?
Oh no.
A factory which creates objects, given their class name as string.
Oh, I see, it uses strings as keys to get the types.
Something like reflection, therefore the name.
m_map["DerivedA"] = &AbstractFactory::createInstance<DerivedA>; I get here the error that it cannot access the protected method createInstance ??
12:40
@nils Ah, my edits still don't work because you're calling a pure virtual function from a constructor. That's not supported by C++.
so make it non-pure
Arent there better, templatey ways to go around?
@Nils No, it's a conceptual problem.
so what do you suggest?
I had it working for just one kind of classes derived from a given base.
I want it for any class derived from any base.
@Potatoswatter no
Calling virtual functions on constructors is generally a bad idea, both with C++ semantics and with C# semantics.
12:42
Hi there!
@Potatoswatter There's a known base class.
@Potatoswatter oh yes you can if you specify a common base
I need a counter example for last of threads synchronization.
Basically, simplified version of our code:
... taps fingers
while(!m_closing)
{
    //wait the main thread start lauching the applyptf utility
    while (!m_applyptfstarted)
    {
        if (m_closing)
            return 0;
        ::Sleep(500);
    }
}
12:43
@Nils I didn't really look at your problem :P
Both variables can be modified outside the loop by other thread.
@wilx use a semphore?
Unfortunately, it work on Intel/Windows.
MSVC.
Windows has semaphores, no?
What is the question? It works. That is not a question. You want a simplified version?
12:44
@sehe: Sure, I would probably use some Interlocked*(). But I need to convince somebody else than myself. :)
@RMartinhoFernandes Absolutely
If the variables are modified in another thread, it sounds like the code is thoroughly broken.
@wilx What is the question?
Aka. you need to convince somebody else of what?
@sehe "I need a counter example for lack of threads synchronization."
12:45
@wilx That doesn't parse.
Lack of.
Sweet. Finally
Well this works: codepad.org/VRnDPQ33
but why can't I make the members protected?!
I don't understand this.
@wilx you forgot two f in that phrase?
12:46
Anyway, that whole silly factory shenanigans can be minimised into std::map<std::string, std::function<Base*()>>, basically.
@wilx So you want to describe a case where it would fail/not be reliable?
@sehe: That would be nice :)
Also template <typename T, typename... Args> T* make(Args&&...) { ... } to bind, or lambdas.
I tried to look at assembler that MSVC generates but it faithfully reloads the variables because of the intervening Sleep() call.
@wilx Without further information, you'd need to assume that m_applyptfstarted and m_closing can be changed independently
@wilx That doesn't matter. As long as the variables aren't volatile, the compiler is allowed to make assumption, IIRC
12:49
@CatPlusPlus yes kittie I don't have std::function right now..
@sehe: Yes, I know that. But I need to convince people less, well, knowledgeable about compiler technologies.
boost::function, then.
Also, since there is no (specified) synchronization relation between m_applyptfstarted and m_closing, you can not claim any behaviour of the above code.
So perhaps you should start by asking what the code snippet is supposed to do
@Nils It works?
Do you mean "it compiles"?
Because you're still calling a virtual function from a base constructor.
yes but only with everything public in the "abstract" base
12:52
@Nils std::tr1::function ?
No he doesn't.
Oh, don't mind me, I was looking at the wrong code.
Where do you see that?
(Though I still find that whole thing silly.)
Especially that it uses term "abstract factory".
So much Java.
And now that I've reinstalled Platform, I get "cabal: cannot configure ghc-mod-1.10.15. It requires ghc -any"
Yay.
12:53
ah vs 2008 has std::tr1::function
wow
@RMartinhoFernandes No I don't..
@Nils VS has std::function...
At least VS2010 and the VS11 Beta
@CatPlusPlus haskell is so cool.
and its tools are teh awesome
Okay, ghc-pkg says everything is still broken.
12:56
As long as you don't go poking around looking for ways to break it.
I did something wrong.
I see a discord
Where's that damn registry.
@rubenvb Awesome != unbreakable.
@CatPlusPlus Nuke it and reinstall from zero?
I did.
But the package cache is kept somewhere I didn't look. :.
AppData\ghc, FTR. It works now!
I still do not understand why it does not work when createInstance() is protected.
I have no virtual methods anymore.
The compiler tells you this code is a bad idea.

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