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15:00
huh, when I was last using VS I found it supported C# way better then C++
IS false positiving errors is a common thing.
more or less every feature for C++ was better when used in C#
But still crappy.
cockles
forgot to include the Lua built libraries as well as just the headers
@RMartinhoFernandes absolutely, yes; relatively, no
@DeadMG see here
15:02
Is there any chance of building a project going bonkers because of both inclusion guards usage and #pragma once usage ? (Some of the files using one and some of the files the other.)
@CatPlusPlus Shute. I forgot to explicitely mention build settings (^^)
@DeadMG yet another English word I learned today. I like this chat, it's so useful.
it's not really a word
@ScarletAmaranth Only if your compiler doesn't support #pragma once
15:03
@CatPlusPlus In reference to the earlier
@Collin It supports #pragma more than once :)
@ScarletAmaranth always a chance, but it should be fine to do that. though not everything supports #prama once, so stick to the classic #ifdef #def etc.
sbi
sbi
@ScarletAmaranth For a version or two, they used EDG's frontend for Intellisense. (They now switched back to using their own compiler.) This made Intellisense correctly accept code that the compiler (incorrectly) refused to acknowledge.
@DeadMG actually, it is :P
@sehe #pragma twice //limit errors on multiple includes
15:05
can't recall what they are, but cockles are a thing
#pragma tic
Cockle is the common name for a group of (mostly) small, edible, saltwater clams, marine bivalve molluscs in the family Cardiidae. Various species of cockles live in sandy sheltered beaches throughout the world. The distinctive rounded shells of cockles are symmetrical and oddly shaped, and are heart-shaped when viewed from the end of the world. In most but not all genera there are numerous radial ribs. For an exception, see the genus Laevicardium, the egg cockles, which have very smooth shells. The mantle has three apertures (inhalant, exhalant, and pedal) for siphoning water and...
@thecoshman True. But not in that usage.
@DeadMG what usage? you just proclaimed a noun. By you logic just saying "Turnip" is not a word
Actually, the standard requires conforming compilers to fail the parse with a diagnostic (syntax error) when encountering #prama outside of comments / string literals
15:06
Qt is now configured for building. Just run mingw32-make.
To reconfigure, run mingw32-make confclean and configure.


C:\dev\libs\Qt\4.8.1>mingw32-make
cd src\tools\bootstrap\ && mingw32-make -f Makefile
mingw32-make[1]: Entering directory `C:/dev/libs/Qt/4.8.1/src/tools/bootstrap'
mingw32-make -f Makefile.Release
mingw32-make[2]: Entering directory `C:/dev/libs/Qt/4.8.1/src/tools/bootstrap'
Makefile.Release:156: *** missing separator.  Stop.
Great.
@DeadMG please don't post a picture here
@CatPlusPlus Did you edit the makefile? Converted tabs to spaces? Tabs are significant in Makefiles
No kidding.
WTF
I have never ever seen a project property in Visual C++ called "Librarian"
No, I think I have wrong QMAKESPEC messing things up.
15:10
Where has @CheersandhthAlf been recently? not seen him for a while
is he on strike?
Hey
does anyone know if it is possible to compare query results from one to another? Example. I do a query now, then again in 30 seconds, if the results changed, then do something, otherwise, not.
@Neal Query of what?
What query results?
Query of a mysql db
Then... compare the results?
15:14
well, if the results changed, then do something, otherwise, do nothing. I am putting rests into a vector, and I do not want to repopulate it every 30 seconds
just realized
need to build LLVM for {debug, release} and {x86, x64} with the right settings
I think I built it wrong before
@Neal you will need to cache the results of one query, and compare the results of the new query with the most recent (or only) cached result
our you could add a time stamp to you DB record
@thecoshman how would I do that? (I am not up on my c++... I ahvent done it in a while...)
then you just need check if the time stamp has been updated since it was last checked
@Neal use the arrow on the right hand side of a post so you can target your response, press up to edit, right now I don't know which statement you really want me to expand on
@thecoshman please don't do that, keep your db clean. Unless you are making an authoring system or something similar that really requires that data, don't do it. Your DB is for persisting data, not for hacking in some runtime optimizations
15:20
@KillianDS yeah I probably wouldn't use a time stamp like that my self, but it is an option, it may not be a good one
Oh gawd, database purist, run for the hills!
most data records would make use a time stamp any way
@thecoshman this one
If you need timestamp, add timestamp. Duh.
Hmmm, i see now that there is a timestamp feild in the db, i might make use of that.
15:21
Beh, INCLUDE variable was messing this up, too.
So on startup get everything, then every other time only get what is new
@Neal well, I have no idea how you are getting your results, but presumably it is some sort object?
w00t
@CatPlusPlus yes, if you need it, you add it. He doesn't need it, he needs some comparison for a likely useless optimization
Apparently qmake traverses it, and adds every found header to the dependency list.
15:22
@thecoshman I am using QSqlObject
@Neal yeah, if there is already a time stamp there to use it, use it :P but make sure you know what that time stamp field is time stmaping
Yay, Qt finally builds.
@Neal I suppose Mysql 5+ should support storedprocedures. That way, you could hack a stored proc that just 'check whether things have changed' - never leaving the database layer. Heck, in worst case you could have it return a checksum of the raw data
But now I see I can use the timestamp, stupid me...
thanks.
@CatPlusPlus I am just using the qt creator... is that bad of me not using qmake, make, etc?
I wouldn't be surprised if stored procedures in MySQL actually don't work properly.
After all, it's not a database.
Databases are supposed to hold ACID principles.
15:24
@CatPlusPlus go on...
Now an hour to build Qt.
I have to finish this project in 24 hours and I still haven't even started.
Stupid tools.
night all
any way, time for me to run home :D
@thecoshman Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability. I know that MySQL doesn't give a fuck about at least the C.
In computer science, ACID (atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability) is a set of properties that guarantee that database transactions are processed reliably. In the context of databases, a single logical operation on the data is called a transaction. For example, a transfer of funds from one bank account to another, even though that might involve multiple changes (such as debiting one account and crediting another), is a single transaction. Jim Gray defined these properties of a reliable transaction system in the late 1970s and developed technologies to automatically achieve them...
@RMartinhoFernandes yes it does
It fails at 'I', too.
15:25
InnoDB is completely ACID-capable afaik
I don't trust people who thought MyISAM was a good idea.
@CatPlusPlus Meh. Who uses MyISAM anyway
@CatPlusPlus heh, I agree to that
Especially that there's choice. PostgreSQL FTW.
@sehe Most people, because it's the default.
@CatPlusPlus I think it hasn't been the default since 4.0
15:27
Also InnoDB didn't support FTS last time I checked.
@sehe InnoDB is only the default since 5.5, I don't think there was any in between
Dunno, I had enough troubles with MySQL to not trust anything they do.
@CatPlusPlus Oh well
@KillianDS Oh, I see. So they actually decided to stop dicking around.
PostgreSQL FTW.
15:29
I don't like MySQL, but I don't like any of the competition (Prostgres, Berkeley, Oracle, MSSQL)
Y u no like Postgres.
BDB is more of a key-value store, isn't it?
@CatPlusPlus Because it's a database. It hurts to use it
@CatPlusPlus Nope, not in my memory
> Key/value API
> SQL API by incorporating SQLite
15:31
I prefer not dicking with RDBMS stuff, it hurts portability and it is mostly red-tape. It should be simple. Postgress never appeared to be much simpler than mysql, when I tried it (years ago)
What portability?
Note to self: before installing packages check which machine you are on. That will avoid later complaints like "what? I already installed this!"
man
if I put my built LLVM codes into my repo, it's gonna become 99999 MB
Why would you do that?
I asked some time ago how best to handle unit tests in C++ which should fail compilation, e.g. to test whether a compile-time assertion correctly catches wrong usage
15:33
because my machine at home would take 999999 hours to build LLVM
I’ve now come up with the following shell script which works fairly well … just in case somebody has the same problem …
let alone in ALL THE CONFIGURATIONS
That doesn't mean you have to version the binaries.
@DeadMG Oh it doesn't take that long.. maybe an hour or two on my old D820
besides, how else am I going to build my projects except with the appropriate LLVM libraries?
15:34
@CatPlusPlus Lighten up. Portability. You know, as in: portability. Regardless, it was really a lightheareted quip, much in the way people usually say "I hate web programming". Well, I dislike databases and GUI programming. And Web programming. I love programming. Go figure
@CatPlusPlus Where would I put them except in my repository?
On an USB stick?
@DeadMG Network share?
Eww, binaries in the repo.
@CatPlusPlus what Python framework do you use for web development?
15:43
Django, most often.
Or Flask.
and you can do everything in it?
Sadly it has limited ability to make tea.
lol
I'm just thinking I probably need to expand my skills to include some web dev stuff, cause just C or C++ or whatever isn't gonna cut it
but I don't want to deal with PHP or plain HTML
You're gonna deal with HTML anyway.
And static webpages is not webdev.
I'm not talking about static webpages
15:47
Well, "plain HTML" is static webpages. :P
Cat Plus Plus : 1
Tony The Lion : 0
^^
@CatPlusPlus oh I'm sorry
@ScarletAmaranth damn you for pointing that out :P
you're right
the built binaries should probably go somewhere else that isn't in the repo
does emplace_back somehow need the assignment operator?
15:53
Hey guys, quick question. int b = a*a++; undefined? or only unspecified?
UB in C++03
don't remember for C++11
unspecified ?= undefined?
no
UB != unspecified
oh god, internet has damaged me ... (" UB AFAIK ") is just wrong
15:55
so UB is specified to be undefined?
Linking QtGuid — 1.5GB RAM and counting.
cpx
cpx
I used to remember these things about a few months ago lol
@rubenvb Yes. Unspecified behaviour is where one small portion of the behaviour is undefined.
I can smell the friction on the swap file.
so for example, if the Standard said "int c = a, b, it is unspecified if c is a or b"
that's unspecified behaviour, but not UB
UB is where the Standard goes "Well, any old shit can happen, anything at all."
not just "Could be X, Y, or Z" or something like that
Xeo
Xeo
15:57
Unspecified means the implementation has to document the exact behaviour IIRC
@DeadMG Huh? int c = a,b; == int c = a;
that's implementation-defined behaviour
@BenjaminLindley "for example, if"?
it was a simple example
I know that the comma operator is well-defined
Xeo
Xeo
@BenjaminLindley It was just an example.
aaah... I love deleting code
delete ALL THE CODES
15:58
Copydog.
@CatPlusPlus oh yes. That one's fun. It should go well over 3.
It better not.
Although it's better than before.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Implementation-defined says the implementation has full control over what happens there. Unspecified says the rough outline of what happens and leaves the rest to the impl. As far as I understand it, anyways.
It used to go over 4 and crash ld.
15:59
Ha, it's done.
Result has 242MB.
See, told you it's better.
242MB DLL.
Qt is awesome.
It beats even Haskell.
wut? That's all debug info FYI.
@Xeo As far as I understand, implementation-defined means that, well, the implementation has to clearly define the behaviour, whereas unspecified means that it doesn't.
16:00
GCC QtGui4.dll is ~12 MB.
Xeo
Xeo
58
A: Undefined, unspecified and implementation-defined behavior

FredOverflowUndefined behavior is one of those aspects of the C++ language that can be surprising to programmers coming from other languages. Basically, it is possible to write C++ programs that do not behave in a predictable way, even though many C++ compilers will not report any errors in the program! Le...

Yeah, I remembered incorrectly there.
My bad.
@DeadMG I don't see the difference. In both cases you don't know what happens.
and the implementation is not under any obligation to say what it does
@rubenvb In one of them, the implementation has to tell you what happens, and you can rely on their definitions. The whole purpose of implementation-defined behaviour is that the implementation does have an obligation to say what it does.
so unspecified is implementation defined?
but unspecified, it does not have an obligation.
16:03
@rubenvb: undefined means anything can happen. unspecified means there are limited possibilities. For example, the order of evaluation of arguments to a function is unspecified. But they still have to all be evaluated.
ugh. Stupid difference
Both are evil in my book.
Unspecified is fine.
there's nothing wrong with either of them as long as they're applied correctly
UB? How can that be portably applied?
(where the U is either)
implementation-defined and unspecified are NOT UB
jesus fucking christ, ruben
read the question
16:05
Undefined behaviour means anything can happen.
but unspecified can differ between compiler?
@rubenvb Not everything has to be portable.
58
A: Undefined, unspecified and implementation-defined behavior

FredOverflowUndefined behavior is one of those aspects of the C++ language that can be surprising to programmers coming from other languages. Basically, it is possible to write C++ programs that do not behave in a predictable way, even though many C++ compilers will not report any errors in the program! Le...

MAKE ALL THE THINGS PORTABLE
But if something has an unspecified value only that value is unspecified.
16:07
@rubenvb That's impossible.
If std::vector<int> x(std::move(v)); leaves v in an unspecified state it doesn't mean it can order pizza.
It can only pick a valid state for v to be in. Everything else has to go according to plan.
But, if i++ + i++ has undefined behaviour it means it can actually order pizza.
That's a big difference.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, OK. That's not what I was thinking of in "unspecified".
K k.
argh
LLVM, y u not include all dependent classes in ur headers?
@RMartinhoFernandes One of these days I'm gonna modify GCC to actually log into my Dominoes account and do that.
Good luck modifying GCC to do anything.
16:17
lol
this is strange
why isVisual Studio convinced that my project is in a totally different location to it's actual location?
To make your life less boring.
it worked fine in a different source file in the exact same project
Making decent relocatable VS project files is an art.
maybe it's just Visual Studio on PMS
16:25
@rubenvb Go straight for the XML.
@RMartinhoFernandes I'll take Cmake, thank you.
aaaand llvm's headers are not working correctly
I hate header files with all my heart
16:41
say
how do you create a hardlink or symlink on Windows?
win
Using mklink on NTFS.
An NTFS symbolic link (symlink) is a filesystem object in the NTFS filesystem that points to another filesystem object. The object being pointed to is called the target. Symbolic links should be transparent to users; the links appear as normal files or directories, and can be acted upon by the user or application in exactly the same manner. Symbolic links are designed to aid in migration and application compatibility with POSIX operating systems, and were introduced with the modifications made to the NTFS file system with Windows Vista. Unlike an NTFS junction point (available since Window...
apparently, for GCC or Clang or something, then #include "" is relative to the project root
Yeah, it's an NTFS feature.
but on Windows it's relative to that file
so all the LLVM headers are #include "llvm/shit.h" when they need to be #include "shit.h"
so I just mklink /J llvm ..\llvm
I would expect the llvm build system to take care of this.
16:45
I expected it to produce all the damn files
but apparently it missed some header, which was still missing and produced as a .h.in file, whatever that is
Morning everbody.
fortunately in Wide there are no headers so you don't need to know the filepaths of your fellow code files to succeed
The guy who designed Windows' file handling was drunk and high when he designed it.
.in smells like automake.
their docs say you can use CMake and I did
now I just ... need to deal with the fact that ... some of my project source files randomly refuse to recognize my include directory settings
16:49
In this situation I delete everything and restart the process from scratch. Checkout, etc.. Following all the build instructions by the letter. When I encounter the first error I google it. Usually I end up on some nabble forum where I may or may not find the solution to my problem.
Sorry if that is not very hopeful :)
what irritates me most is that in general, if you just copy and paste the headers and stuff everywhere, then it usually works
it's mostly if you want to do something useful like share code between projects
Can Boost.Filesystem do file locking?
I've spent lot's of time trying to compile my code on Clang as well. Actually I have made several attempts in the last few months. Every time there is something that doesn't work.
Is file "locking" a platform independent concept?
You mean making the file read-only?
@StackedCrooked I'm not sure. I want to lock a file to prevent other processes from opening it.
@StackedCrooked Yes, I'm pretty sure it is.
16:57
On Mac file locking and file permissions are two different things.
I just want to make sure that a file is only opened by one process at a time.
Doesn't matter which user tries to open it.
Rename it before using it? This way the other processes won't find it.
scoped_rename :p
That's not a really bad idea, actually.
I'm working in a directory with a special format anyway (compare with .git), so renaming the lock file should do the job.
17:16
Something like this? ideone.com/K2ps2
I mean this, obviously.
C11 supports that.
fopen with x... mode.
Unfortunately Fortunately, I'm not using C.
0
Q: My compiled C++ program is too small. How can I make it larger?

Dustin CowlesI have a C++ program that compiles to 9.5k. I would like it to be over 1MB. I did the following to pad it up to about 18k, but doing this all the way to 1MB would be hard. The code is unreachable, but due to compiler optimizations I had to make it appear reachable, hence the bool changes. #incl...

I'm speechless.
> #BLOAT allows the creation of artificially bloated program files on disk, in order to match or exceed that generated by competing "BloatWare" compilers. #BLOAT does not affect the memory image size (running size) of a compiled program.
@Anthales - it is being used to test a system that disregards small files. — Dustin Cowles 4 mins ago
What kind of system is that???
17:26
I want real list comps in C++. :<
one that disregards small files obviously
Alternatively, a working GUI library for Haskell.
@CatPlusPlus I've wanted that since I've first learned about list comps
@CatPlusPlus let's make one, for lulz
Luc had a list comp hack working a while back.
Well, I have to bite the bullet for this project, don't have time for anything.
17:27
Plenty of emphasis on hack.
@+7 upvotes this has to be one of the strangest: stackoverflow.com/questions/10214516/…
@RMartinhoFernandes That's why I added 'real'.
12 upvotes now, the f?
Someone should capture the progress of this question and post it somewhere safe.
Are we being 4chan/b or reddited?
These answers.
I just. Gah.
17:32
I +1'd it because I think it's an interesting question.
@StackedCrooked +1 and close, not a real question :/
Without a close vote I'd go for -1.
The question is answerable. As long as it's not a dupe I don't see the problem.
user50049
Well, twitter had a bit to do with the up votes, which is how I just found it.
@StackedCrooked Yes force to link in libraries, pad with zeroes, the options are limitless but not related to programming.
@TimPost link?
user50049
Whoever said that C++ bloats executables? Apparently it is not enough. http://stackoverflow.com/q/10214516/46642
17:37
I didn't do it!
user50049
And I saw the vote counter climb once the page loaded
Also, I have like 27 followers.
Is it a smurf?
user50049
I'm about to close it as too localized, unless there's a reason why it isn't?
@TimPost I might get twitter just for gems like "Please don't ask to borrow my computer 'real quick'. That's like asking to borrow the underwear I'm wearing for 'a few minutes'." +1
17:39
I have no idea.
It might be usable to other people in the future who want to do the same thing?
user50049
It is a real question, it is answerable, but I can't think of any situation where it would be applicable beyond the question.
@classdaknok_t We are not a suicide pact, we try to keep it useful here
user50049
I dropped in to check, just in case I might have overlooked something?
17:41
@TimPost It's more a file manipulation question cat file.exe /dev/random >> big_file.exe
@TimPost I don't see that much of a reason to close it, it also has information about what things get optimized out and what stay in the binary, whether someone is specifically looking to enlarge their binary size or not
Assuming PowerShell++ is installed.
@Collin Not searchable!
@CaptainGiraffe that file would get infinitely big. :P
@classdaknok_t OP would be happy
17:44
Does it make sense from an encryption standpoint too? (I'm not sure this is true) but isn't it better to encrypt larger pieces of data than smaller ones, even if some of it is padding?
user50049
@Collin If it were asked in that context .. true. But right now it's a well articulated (and brilliant) joke. I'll re-open if it becomes a serious question.
Yes but that is a consideration for the encryption libraries, not for the author of a c++ app.
@Collin not necessarily, for some attacks, the more data you have the better the attack works (this is for example how most popular WEP cracking methods work). Aside from that, padding is an excellent place for virusses to hide in
wut? no one use file viruses in 2012, nearly every file have either digital signature or known hash
18:15
@DeadMG wut?
@DeadMG Even with #include "" it should still look in the include directories.. is are they not added on the compile line?
LLVM's build stuff should add the necessary directories to let it build itself
If you didn't do #include "llvm/blabla.h" and you should have, that's your problem, and you should fix it in your code.
Could someone on Linux please post the contents of his /usr directory?
@Maxpm why would you want that? It's highly distro dependent...
@rubenvb I'm trying to figure out if /usr/libexec is an OS X thing or if it's on Linux too.
18:24
@Maxpm it's a Unix thing.
Thanks.
It's not in the FHS, though....
@Maxpm It's actually GNU.
not Unix.
hmm... I just asked a question on meta with more votes than my question on SO... that can't be good...
@Mysticial repent now! save your soul
18:32
@StackedCrooked Can't link to embed the animated gif here, obviously
That might work..
@sehe lol
16
Q: My compiled C++ program is too small. How can I make it larger?

Dustin CowlesI have a C++ program that compiles to 9.5k. I would like it to be over 1MB. I did the following to pad it up to about 18k, but doing this all the way to 1MB would be hard. The code is unreachable, but due to compiler optimizations I had to make it appear reachable, hence the bool changes. #incl...

wtf?!?!
Haha, yeah.
18:47
aww... locked? I wanted to upboat it... :(
> closed as too localized by Captain Giraffe, Tim Post♦ 1 hour ago
It's horrible that a question can be closed by just two people, even when one of them is a ♦ mod.
ahem... Tim Post is a mod.
nvm
@classdaknok_t Mod votes are always binding, even if alone.
That makes it even more horrible. xD
Yeah, it was such a useful questino. He could at least have checked with the Lounge...

Oh wait, he did
1 hour ago, by Tim Post
I dropped in to check, just in case I might have overlooked something?
18:50
"My compiled C++ program is too small. How can I make it larger?"
"Our security auditor is an idiot, how do I give him the information he wants?"

oh the parallels...
"My brain is the size of a peanut, how do I pretend it's not?"
You can't. Pretending requires at least orange-sized brains.
But you can have very small oranges.
Just like you can have very small peanuts.
Or very large ones…
18:52
@classdaknok_t Some of them have very small melons lemons, even
Oh, no need to question the size of my nuts. It was a hypothetical question
You're a tree?
An inmate at large usually looks orange
I see there's a rather sophisticated discussion goin' on here :)

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