« first day (554 days earlier)      last day (4621 days later) » 

18:03
@CatPlusPlus It's only about 150 LOC, and most of it is easy, it's just a weird one-off error.
What kind of error?
It's about 145 LOC too much.
Runtime error? Compile error? Memory leak?
If it's Java then it's 150 LOC too much.
can anyone think of a way to get around this memory constraint
a way to (perhaps iteratively) get tau for all n without needing to re-use the values
@classdaknokt NumberFormatException error, meh.
I can catch the error, but I have no clue what's throwing it.
18:05
Look at the stack trace?
And look at the detail message?
@JohnSmith Ok, asking us over and over is probably not going to get you any better ideas
Woah. I post an answer, go fetch some reference links to add, and when I come back, it's been accepted already. Less than 2 minutes after I posted it.
it is a different question.
@JohnSmith I guess maybe we need some more detail on what you've done, they're very abstract
18:09
basically trying to get the number of distinct primes for all numbers within a very large range
efficiently
right now i am trying a sieve approach
start with 2, stick "2" in every 2nd number, start with 3, stick "3" in every 3rd number, etc
@JohnSmith find prime method, vector.push_back(method(i))?
Lol people upvote that Google style guide answer.
Despite now being completely unrelated to the question.
What problem is this?
> @CatPlusPlus thanks for a relatively unhelpful comment... In your opinion their guide is not a good "modern" C++ guide. However it is actually quite good, and at least they took the time to create one as comprehensive as it is. Perhaps by providing an alternative to it you might actually be contributing positively. As a new member to Stack, and a very commercially experienced programmer I don't exactly get the feeling that opinions are welcomed. – Scottymac 49 secs ago
I don't even know how to answer that.
from where is that?
18:12
> a very commercially experienced programmer
That's the problem.
@CatPlusPlus thanks for a relatively unhelpful comment... In your opinion their guide is not a good "modern" C++ guide. However it is actually quite good, and at least they took the time to create one as comprehensive as it is. Perhaps by providing an alternative to it you might actually be contributing positively. As a new member to Stack, and a very commercially experienced programmer I don't exactly get the feeling that opinions are welcomed. — Scottymac 4 mins ago
@classdaknok_t thanks
@CatPlusPlus you didn't link to the Lounge in your comment, and since Scottymac is new here he probably doesn't know about it.
If he gets one more down vote he can't even chat here. xD
> I'm a professional C++ developer and I recently started working in Java. As a hobby I also play around with PHP, JavaScript, JQuery and others.
We've basically taken the style guide and ripped out all the dumb restrictions and started using it
How can such a thing even happen? D:
Yes Scottymac is new here... and clearly getting a warm welcome... thx !
18:20
@Scottymac Not liking an answer doesn't mean we don't like you
We're very practical
@Scottymac oh hai scotty
yeah.. I wouldn't take downvotes personally, if I were you. These things happen.
We make fun of everything.
sure feels like I'm being blasted here for being a "commercial" programmer... and for liking the completely antiquated google guide.... I just think it has a lot of good points in it for newbie programmers...
no
that's the problem
it's full of horrific points for everyone
We can go point by point.
18:23
Google's style guide sums up as "At Google, we can't be bothered to separate out our massively legacy codebase, so we crippled our new language so that it can play nicer with our old codebase."
that's Google's guide.
there's nothing else to it
First two are okay (although I hate include guards with passion and couldn't live without #pragma once).
It's perfectly fine for them, but there's no reason to stick to it when writing new code
I prefer #pragma once over include guards, but I can live with include guards.
Inline function size, meh. It's a matter of necessity.
Compiler inlines on its own discretion anyway.
I prefer include guards; they are more portable.
18:24
inline or not is about ODR violations
2
@classdaknok_t I was surprised just now to learn how supported it is: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pragma_once
there's little connection between the necessary size of the function and whether or not it should be inlined
Recommending namespaces and discouraging using is good.
@Collin meh still. I don't really like it.
their include order is wrong, though
you should in the opposite order
else you can have a header which is missing a dependency but you don't find out because you always happen to include the dependency yourself anyway in the calling file
18:27
I usually do system headers, third party headers, my headers.
wtf, is Wikipedia's background light blue all of a sudden for you guys too?
But that's rather subjective.
And not all that important.
@Collin Seems fine to me.
agreed
huh, wonder what I hit...
Ah, classes. Here's where bad things happen.
18:27
what's wrong is when you start getting to classes, exceptions, and stuff like that
Init methods should never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever be used.
a class should be good to go for all it's functions as soon as the constructor is done
> There is no easy way for constructors to signal errors, short of using exceptions (which are forbidden).
This is why they use that, and this is why this is considered guide for legacy Google code.
Because their codebases aren't exception safe.
The only easy way without exceptions is using a non-const pointer as argument.
@classdaknok_t and that's just gross
18:30
so you are you pro/con exceptions ?
> Use only approved libraries and language extensions from C++11 (formerly known as C++0x). Currently, none are approved.
epic, epic fail
@Scottymac pro
@Scottymac What do you mean, pro/con?
@Scottymac definitely use exceptions
Use exceptions.
18:30
that makes it sound like there is any rational argument whatsoever for not using exceptions
which there isn't
was worries for a minute
yay... so we can agree on one thing !
> Use a struct only for passive objects that carry data; everything else is a class.
unless you're Google, who can't keep their legacy C code safe
18:30
That's just silly and Google.
Composition over inheritance is good.
@DeadMG maybe in some real-time systems that may not fail or require to be extremely fast, like an air-bag system in a car.
Or a jet.
If a failure can result in death.
@classdaknok_t If they can't fail, then why do you need exceptions?
@classdaknok_t But they're a great way of making your code robust
> Do not overload operators except in rare, special circumstances.
Another silly one.
At least you can handle the error properly and more easily if you do exceptions correctly
18:32
ok... i am seeing your points
Overload operators when they improve the client code.
> You're not really going to define a macro, are you? If you do, they're like this: MY_MACRO_THAT_SCARES_SMALL_CHILDREN.
@CatPlusPlus And make intuitive sense (which of course is sometimes subjective)
> The assignment operator (operator=), in particular, is insidious and should be avoided.
let's face it: I can't blame any children for being afraid of macros
18:33
@DeadMG That's a good one
Many classes can be safely made assignable.
@CatPlusPlus Yes, proper copy semantics are insidious.
operator= is best implemented using copy-and-swap.
> Make data members private, and provide access to them through accessor functions as needed (for technical reasons, we allow data members of a test fixture class to be protected when using Google Test). Typically a variable would be called foo_ and the accessor function foo(). You may also want a mutator function set_foo(). Exception: static const data members (typically called kFoo) need not be private.
Setters and getters are bad.
agreed
but it does say "as needed"
@CatPlusPlus Pairs of them are dumb, depending on the class
18:35
pardon my ignorance... but why are getters/setters bad ?
"Setters and getters are bad." ?
What ?
Why are they bad again ?
@ScarletAmaranth If you can both set and get the variable, why is it private? Plus, you're probably exposing implementation details the client doesn't need to know
sbi
sbi
18:36
@CatPlusPlus Hey, you stole my link! I was just googling for this!
Declaration order, subjective and not important. Short, focused functions is good.
sbi
sbi
@ScarletAmaranth Read that article the @Cat linked to.
Smart pointers, they don't say, but you should never have owning pointer that's dumb. And yes, std::unique_ptr is the one you'll be using most, std::shared_ptr very rarely and std::auto_ptr never.
But this being in "Google-specific magic" is... I don't know, silly.
I'm still confused what to do when I have a model object. Without getters and setters and without public data members, how am I going to mutate a model object?
hy, how to use destructor in inherited class if im using private instead of protected attributes in abstract class ?
18:39
@classdaknok_t If the entire object is meant to just hold data, make data members public.
Moving on.
> All parameters passed by reference must be labeled const.
@CatPlusPlus Good point. Never thought of that. :)
Thanks.
Silly. Non-const references are just fine.
@CatPlusPlus actually isn't so bad in presence of move semantics... but not really universal
ostreams for instance
although they ban streams for stupid reasons too
Meh a const stream. That's fucking useless.
They use pointers for mutable arguments for some reason, but you should never use pointers if they cannot be safely nullptr.
So, an optional mutable argument — a pointer. A required mutable argument — a reference.
18:41
If you want an argument to be optional, pass a (const) boost::optional&.
Why not nullptr?
> We do not allow default function parameters, except in a few uncommon situations explained below.
Silly.
Use when they make sense.
> We do not allow variable-length arrays or alloca().
@CatPlusPlus Are you talking about Google? The reason the use pointers for that is to, when you call the function, you have to use the & operator when passing an argument. This makes "output arguments" stand out.
@CatPlusPlus I like that one
That actually is good, but because it's not standard. If you want VLA, use std::vector.
@PaulManta Yes, it's silly.
18:43
Eh, vector isn't very good of a replacement for VLA
I don't like output arguments at all, but making code error-prone so they "stand out", meh.
@Pubby Why not? It's safe, VLAs are not safe.
VLAs are as safe as ordinary arrays. But they're not C++.
So you can't use them, simple as that.
@classdaknokt Well there's much more overhead with vector.
> We do not use C++ exceptions.
Stupid.
For 99% applications.
18:44
agreed
@CatPlusPlus You're on fire today.
> We do not use Run Time Type Information (RTTI).
Eh, not very useful, but not harmful either.
Casts are good.
Cats* FTFY
Both printf and streams suck, but streams suck less except for formatting.
18:46
@CatPlusPlus That seems to be because of legacy code.
@RMartinhoFernandes Fuck the rules, I do what I want!
@PaulManta I know.
Use streams and Boost.Format/FastFormat.
So i read the article and it kinda makes sense. Except for it doesn't prove that "getters and setters" are baaad in general.
@CatPlusPlus you reminded me of enough of the things that i don't like about their style guide... I will refrain from recommending it from this point forward
That's the best combination.
Hey a bird! :D
I'll finish and we'll bookmark this, so it doesn't have to be reiterated ever again.
Preincrement, well, good.
Const correctness, good.
@ScarletAmaranth I'd agree with you. They can be overused, but that doesn't mean they should be forbidden.
I don't think any coding standard really works well for C++. Too many corner cases.
You need to find the right design for you interface.
18:48
0 and NULL, use nullptr instead of NULL.
I'm dead serious, you can't discard the whole concept because it doesn't fit in a particular place.
@CatPlusPlus Stroustrup uses the stand out arguments, but I agree, I'd rather have the safety: www2.research.att.com/~bs/bs_faq2.html#call-by-reference
Boost, use. Use. Use.
Everything.
C++11, too.
Naming, commenting, formatting all subjective and project-specific.
So, I guess that's it.
boost is great
@CatPlusPlus Compilers are moving plenty fast to start using C++11 right away (some embedded platforms are going to be behind, but that's pretty specialized)
18:50
Why are embedded platforms always behind?
Embedded platforms are always behind.
I d
@Collin There's also VS.
Because majority of people doesn't care about embedded platforms.
What, I can't edit that? :S
18:50
@CatPlusPlus stupid VxWorks is still on gcc 4.2 or something
Even if they work their asses off and catch up, people with stick to VS10 because of the XP thing.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah, they screwed that up
What happened to the edit button? And the remove buton?
So, the compiler may be up-to-date, but no one will use it.
Soon we'll have fully working Clang on Windows, and VS will die.
Harhar.
18:51
@Pubby Under the little arrow next to your post?
@CatPlusPlus I've compiled it in MinGW, but it's kinda slow to start up
All I see is "flag for moderator"
@Pubby I always press up.
@Pubby On your own posts?
@Pubby then it's more than (two?) minutes old.
Up doesn't work either refresh fixed
18:52
Then refresh.
99% of problems can be solved by restart/refresh :)
And the other 99% can be solved by creating a folder named "007" on your desktop.
@Collin I really like stand out arguments. And I don't think there's much of a safety issue.

Why Google style guide sucks, roughly.

32 mins ago, 26 minutes total – 150 messages, 11 users, 0 stars

Bookmarked 13 secs ago by Cat Plus Plus

3
Did C++11 make pragma once standard?
18:56
@CatPlusPlus thx for the link
@Pubby No.
import will be idempotent, so it won't be necessary. </wishful thinking>
I was going to say it took me some time to create GTK+ code equivalent to posting `WM_CLOSe' in Windows, but now when I hit Shift-e the fucking ASUS web storage window pops up
how do I get rid of that shit?
how could it even attach itself to shift-e?
sry about the language
@RMartinhoFernandes Worth noting that you might have to wait around a decade for it to come out.
Yeah, hence the "wishful thinking" bit :(
18:58
@Pubby There's more corporate inertia behind embedded platforms too, they're less agile to change
Ah, shift e works in Notepad!
Pragmas are always implementation-defined.
@Pubby pragmas are never standard, right?
Ah, yes
Well it seemed like an obvious thing to standardize
Well, they could make it #once.
The name is not important.
19:00
I'd rather have them working on modules rather than patching up headers.
It's not like spec-ing #once is difficult.
And it's already implemented all over.
But, yeah, modules.
@CatPlusPlus I don't like most of their style guide. I would, however, like to have a way to make output arguments stand out.
Make them return values.
Return a tuple.
The only serious problem I find with it is that there might be a lot of people confused by the convention.
19:01
Standing out or not, I find output arguments clunky anyway.
    void onCmClose(
        GtkWidget*      widget,
        gpointer        data
        )
    {
        // 'gtk_widget_destroy()' destroys unconditionally, ungood:
        // gtk_widget_destroy( GTK_WIDGET( topLevelWindowFor( widget ) ) );

        GtkWindow* const    window      = topLevelWindowFor( widget );
        GdkWindow* const    gdkWindow   = gtk_widget_get_window( GTK_WIDGET( window ) );

        GdkEvent    ev;
        ev.type = GDK_DELETE;
        ev.any.window = gdkWindow;

        gtk_main_do_event( &ev );
Output arguments are so C.
^ Is that OK, or very wrong? It apparently works, generating both "delete" and "destroy" events.
std::tuple + std::tie
It uses GTK, so of course it's very wrong.
@CatPlusPlus std::swap, although they are in/out
@CatPlusPlus what should use?
swap is a sad necessity, that doesn't make output arguments good.
Again with the good/bad thing?
I could go down to GDK level, which I think is like pure X11?, but I got impression that GTK is more portable
GTK is as portable as GDK.
GDK is just low-level.
std::tie(b, a) = std::make_tuple(a, b);.
Yeah, swap is efficient and all, but output arguments are ugly anyway.
It's just a pity that that requires default construction :(
But then, output arguments also require that.
@CatPlusPlus You'd use that instead of std::swap?
19:08
Probably not.
It doesn't quite work like swap.
I think it should work.
Yeah, it does.
But it makes four copies, no?
Yeah, probably.
Only two, I think.
Two copies into the tuple, and two copy assignments.
19:11
Oh, right.
I rarely use swap outside of operator=/move ctors.
Or maybe the assignments are moves.
It's manageable ugliness.
@CatPlusPlus You rarely use swap outside of when it's needed. :P
It's just yet another implementation detail.
19:28
I just saw enum class pointer_safety here: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/memory/gc/pointer_safety
What's enum class? I haven't seen it before. (And I can't find anything either.)
C++11, also formerly known as C++0x, is the name of the most recent iteration of the C++ programming language, approved by ISO as of 12 August 2011, replacing C++03. The name is derived from the tradition of naming language versions by the year of the specification's publication. C++11 includes several additions to the core language and extends the C++ standard library, incorporating most of the C++ Technical Report 1 (TR1) libraries — with the exception of the library of mathematical special functions. C++11 was published as ISO/IEC 14882:2011 in September 2011 and is available for a fee....
@classdaknok_t Oh, that. I never realized there was a different declaration for it. I thought they just "fixed" the old enums.
I guess it makes sense, you wouldn't want to break old code.
any one have any suggestions to learning how to make a ide from ground up? (eg compiler and linking engines, etc)
Use libclang for code completion, live diagnostics and syntax highlighting.
Please.
Happy Earth Day everyone!
19:38
Good news, everyone.
Good news?
Why would I need to use alignas in this example?
alignas(float) unsigned char c[sizeof(float)]
Why isn't unsigned char c[sizeof(float)] correct?
You don't need it, but aligning can increase or decrease performance depending on how you align it.
But alignas(float) unsigned char c[sizeof(float)] seems like you want to do nasty things (storing an integer in an unsigned char array).
alignas(float) unsigned char c[sizeof(float)], do my eyes deceive me or am i seeing this for real ?
e.g. memcpy(c, &somefloat, sizeof(float)).
19:45
It's from the Wikipedia article on new C++11 features.
You rarely need it in normal C++ code.
@classdaknok_t You need it. You only get slow performance instead crazy stuffs in an architecture like x86, and even then not always.
Because there are architectures that crash when things are aligned wrongly?
Yes.
Or just plain old UB.
I heard most RISC can't deal with unaligned
19:48
I think some of the SIMD instructions work exclusively on aligned stuff but i have never used it in practice.
For example, one architecture could simply ignore the lower two bits of the address when reading something that must be aligned to 4 bytes. This would cause all kinds of havoc, without a fault.
Yeah, SSE needs aligned
I dislike Metro.
The odd versions good, the even bad. It's like reverse Star Trek
Windows 2000 wasn't that bad IIRC.
Microsoft needs to act normal and ship some devtools with Windows, especially a decent terminal emulator, bash/ksh/zsh, Subversion, Git and Mercurial. And something to mount disk images, and a decent, secure file system.
19:57
Speaking of Star Trek, only 47 days until Prometheus!
@classdaknok_t What's wrong with NTFS?
@RMartinhoFernandes With filesystem I meant the way Windows handles files, i.e. drive-letters, permissions etc.
That I can write to C:\Windows when I'm not a superuser is a bad thing, for example.
Which was the last Windows version you used?
You can't write to C:\Windows without elevation.
Seriously?
I can write to it at school; Windows 7.
Seriously.
@classdaknok_t Maybe you are an admin?
@RMartinhoFernandes Nope, if I try to open the command line it tells me only admins can use it.
20:01
Well, someone fucked up somewhere.
A default setup requires elevation for that.
Even for C:\.
C:\AARRRGG doesn't appear in This Computer, at least. fuck markdown
In fact, not being able to write to C:\ is often used as a justification for disabling UAC.
You mean C:∖?
yeah
without the space, cheater.
The school's computers are fucked up anyway. They are full of crap.
I'm happy that I never need to use any of those again. Tomorrow begins my last school week.
20:06
Last ever, or last in that school?
Last in that school.
And after that week we have a week vacation followed by the final exams.
Dutch, English, chemistry, physics, biology and maths.
Piece of cake.
@classdaknok_t Windows 2000?
@CheersandhthAlf what's on?
i just think it's missing in the figure
nt 4 is ok missing, it wasn't that mainstream. i used it though
If it wasn't missing, the image wouldn't make sense. :P
I only ever used Windows 95, 98, XP and 7.
Though I pirated and used Windows 95 recently only for playing The Neverhood.
The Neverhood didn't run on 98 and higher, stupid game.
I prefer Unix-like systems. I find them easier to use and less distractive.
20:45
Hello everyone
óI?
I'm novice in C++. I read tutorial from cplusplus.com and I have some little questions.I think these questions are so tiny, that they don't deserve to be ask on SO site. So I'd like to ask them here ;)
Xeo
Xeo
@Innuendo Answer to question 0: don't use cplusplus.com
Yeah, there's a few errors here and there on that site.
20:48
Answer to question 1: don't ask if you can ask questions :)
Actually you didn't really ask :(
@Xeo but what tutorial do you recommend?
@Innuendo The reference there is not bad, but the tutorials are terrible
about pointers: `int x; int arr[]; int* p1; int* p2; p1 = &x; p1 = arr;`
Why with simple int we use &, but with arrays - no?
Error: Unable to find site's URL to redirect to.
Xeo
Xeo
20:49
There.
Don't use pointers.
Until you know what you're doing.
Don't use pointers when you don't need to
If you're a novice, then you obviously don't.
@EtiennedeMartel Not normally, but it's good to understand what's going on
Well you need them if you want to learn about them, don't have to do that early on though
20:50
@Collin If you want to understand what's going on, learn an assembly language.
@Innuendo The reason is that arrays decay to pointers to the first element automatically, but you have to get the address of the integer
I should really get working on that damn tutorial.
I'm not absolutely novice. I program in other language, and haven't program in C++ early. But now I have a task in university, so I learn C++ in short time. Here is my code: github.com/maslennikov/FeatureTracker . My professor asked to rewrite some parts, to use pointers. So I've decided to read about pointers from very beginning
For reference use cppreference.com. For learning, a book.
Ok, question#1 that I asked - I understood. thanks @Collin
@RMartinhoFernandes thnx, I'll read
question#2... What the main differ from pointers vars and simple vars? for example: `int v; int * p; int a = 5`
I can use `p = &a` and can use `v = &a`. I know the difference that i can use `p = &a` with int* p variable even if a is not assigned with a value. Is this the only difference?
20:55
You can't do v = &a.
@Innuendo The only difference between the two are their type. You should get a warning (something like "assignment of pointer to integer with out a cast") if you do v = &a. Pointer variables are variables for holding pointers to something, variables are the something
@Collin In C++, it's an error, not a warning.
@RMartinhoFernandes Ah.. last time I accidently did that must have been in C
@EtiennedeMartel, oh, sorry, yeap. I can't do that. Now I understand. Now I understand why cplusplus.com tuts suck ;))) They are explained so, that I understood that I could do that
cplusplus.com teaches C with Classes, not C++.
20:59
I thaught that &a returns address, so I can keep it in a simple integer
integers != addresses
it's a super-bad idea to put addresses in integers

« first day (554 days earlier)      last day (4621 days later) »