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08:10
good morning all
another lovely course for me, Eclipse RCP ¬_¬
so what's the recommended way to do call backs in C++ these days? I'm used to the old pointer to class the implements an interface
std::function and/or Boost.Signals
Let me be more comprehensive: std::function to store callbacks (e.g. being asynchronous). Otherwise (synchronous callbacks like in std::transform), nothing is needed.
so my class that wants to make the callback has std::function onPressCallThis and presumably a function void setOnPress(std::function functionToCall) and lets say I have another class with the function myClass.iWantThisCalled()
If the callback is set once and for all for all of the object lifetime then you can make the type a template.
08:46
I don't follow
Well it becomes auto foo = make_foo(callback);, and foo will store a copy of callback. No std::function involved.
so... how would my class store what function to call?
Works much like auto foo = make_pair(42, "blah"); works.
make_foo would return a foo<Callback>.
hm...
me thinks I should just look up this std::function :P
You've used std::make_pair before right? Maybe std::make_tuple, too? Or the Boost one?
08:51
I think I have used them indirectly, through std::map
So for instance I can do auto t = std::make_tuple([] {}); and then std::get<0>(t)() 'invokes' the callback, in a sense.
I've not done much C++ for a while
But be careful because that's a limited meaning of 'callback' since you can't later change that.
I.e. std::get<0>(t) = [] { bar(); }; doesn't make sense.
The point is: std::function is not a silver bullet.
The best advice you can have regarding that is that std::function should probably not appear in your function declarations.
hmm...
I'll keep that in mind
Also you're probably already familiar with that but things like std::bind and std::mem_fn are nice when it comes to callbacks, but that's on the client side of things (i.e. things a client may use when passing in a callback). Or the Boost versions (Using bind from Boost.Phoenix though).
08:58
are these new C++11 things?
yeah, more or less anything C++11 is new to me :P
Well, that's why I mentioned the Boost versions.
made shamefully little use of boost
mostly because uni where not set up for it, so it was a pain to make use of it
I.e. copy a few headers over?
09:03
> std::vector<std::string> v = { "xyzzy", "plugh", "abracadabra" };
¬_¬ could of done with knowing you can do that a while ago
I kid, I kid. But really.
@thecoshman Even works for maps! std::map<std::string, int> map = { { "42", 42 }, { "eleventy", 110 } };
yeah, I've seen it used in maps, I just didn't know I was using it :P
Ooh, badge.
A shiny beam of light for you
09:20
hi
10:07
considering I only slept 1 hour last night, I'm fairly conscious :P
that's plenty of sleep :P
> zzzz
ftfy
care for a Big Bang Theory reference?
damn that plink! Why is it not an account setting
10:14
yellow..
what you smoking?
I quit smoking
I meant that a 72con aka the person who I want to flag as spam
@thecoshman what the hell does that mean. Can you flag 'a person' as spam?
@sehe I wish :P
10:20
yesterday, by IntermediateHacker
@soandos Rule of Three: If you have one of the following, you probably have the other two : Wife , Empty Bank Account , Anger .
^ In my view, "anger" has been a poor general predictor for marriage, really
-1
Q: C++ and self teaching and what seems to be a long and hard journey

Hank ScorpioFirst and foremost I apologize if any of my questions come off as "Foolish" I've been into computers and VIDEO GAMES for as long as I could remember, I am now 21 and working at a datacenter as a System administrator for Linux based servers (I also do network configurations and a variety of other ...

Meh
boy, I've let my inbox build up too much. It feels nice to clear out
Anyone know of suitable tools for rdp'ing high framerate applications (to a number of clients)? Doesn't matter if it's proprietary.
platform?
10:27
windows
why not RDP?
rdp moves the whole desktop, I would like to move just a single app window
oh, like forwarding X11?
or, multiple application windows' contents to multiple clients
maybe, not really familiar with X11
Xeo
Xeo
-1
A: Integrate type name in static_assert output?

Aditya KumarThis might help you #include<type_info> template <typename T> inline std::string typestr(T const&) { return typestr<T>(); } you can capture the return type and concatenate with your error message. And i think you'd be good to go. when you try please comment if it worked ...

Mind purging this answer?
10:29
well, X11 is the linux windowing system, and you can ssh into a server, forward the X11 to your machine you are connecting from and then start an application. It runs on the server, but the GUI is forwarded to you
I'm not sure if you can let many people see the same instance of the application though
ok..
I don't think there is an equivalent on windows
sounds like what I need; each client should get access to different windows
k..
though I know you can get programs to let you forward X11 to windows, xming is free, exceed is good (I've a few problems with xming)
so your connecting to a windows server?
Yes, that's the plan - Windows server 2008.
10:31
does it have to be Windows server?
yes :)
Doesn't look good I guess.
yeah, not sure if you can do what you are trying to do. Though, you could always set up your server to reduce the quality of the connection
RemoteFX stuff looks promising but that's still in the future.
set my server to reduce the quality of the connection?
yeah, rather then trust the clients to only connect at say, reduced colours, you can set the server to force it to say 256
or resolution etc
@thecoshman Doesn't bode well. Looks like you are setting yourself up for failure (because it feels to well to fix the problem afterwards) >: ?
10:35
On windows 8 I'm not sure if you will be able to do that..
it's a server setting
I am sure you can do it, I don't see why they would remove that functionality
@sehe teh fucks?
Ok, I'll look into it. Thanks for the hint. Anyhow, I'm still wondering if I'll have to roll out my own rdp stuff to move the images from individual windows, rather than the full desktop?
@thecoshman "It feels great to clean out that inbox" might be a reasonable explanation for your inbox getting out of hand in the first place. It psychology 101, basically
@sehe nah, just got lazy and also started hording the emails
@thecoshman I hoard all mail (besides spam). I never throw any away. That doesn't mean my inbox has to grow out of hand. An inbox is just that: in-box
10:39
@sehe yeah, I've been leaving stuff in the inbox rather then moving it on
and I get a lot of mailing lists, so I just delete them once I've read them
Note Apps that you design to target Windows 8 Consumer Preview and later can no longer query or set display modes that are less than 32 bits per pixel (bpp); these operations will fail. These apps have a compatibility manifest that targets Windows 8. Windows 8 still supports 8-bit and 16-bit color modes for desktop apps that were built without a Windows 8 manifest; Windows 8 emulates these modes but still runs in 32-bit color mode.
this has nothing to do with the applications running on the server. this is the server settings for RD
also, do you have to use windows because some one said you do, or because you (think) you need to use software that only runs on windows?
Ok, you are of course right.
I like that 'of course' part :D
meh
10:48
fuck
my app crashes when you close it and I can't find out why
it closes though right?
no, it crashes
this a DX thing?
no
my own code
I need to use software that only runs on windows..
10:50
@dead what sort of things are you doing?
for some reason, I get back 0xfeeefeee as the iterator to an STL container
even though the container and object are both valid
I have a container and a contained object, and they both point to each other (raw pointers, non-owning)
when you destroy one they remove their pointer from the other
hmm... sounds a bit funky to me
nah
the contained object needs to point to the container, else when you change it's position, the octree will not update itself
so you have like a tree with a pointer to a leaf, and a leaf with a pointer the tree?
I wouldn't really call it that
each object can be in multiple containers at once
and there's only one level
10:53
ok, so you have two objects, both pointing to each other
yep
I keep the pointers in an unordered_set<T*>
then when you destroy one, or on some other appropriate events, they clear their pointers from each other to avoid dangling pointers
well then, they can't both delete each other. can they
they don't, at all
any hoops, lunch break time :D
someone else deletes both of them
what's strange is that when you come to destroy one, the empty unordered_set gives back an iterator to 0xfeeefeee
so when for_each comes to iterate through it, the application crashes
y silly robot travelling instead of here
robot seems to be in the room
Xeo
Xeo
11:24
@RMartinhoFernandes, some folks want something from you.
You can make your life easier by plinking the guys you need to talk to :P
Or we could get costum plinking on certain words, like IRC highlighting
I was thinking about polymorphism without all the pointers and references hassle, and I came up with this. ideone.com/4Vu1t
How horrible does it look?
I still have to figure out how to implement copying and moving…
Oh, hi.
I'm about to go have lunch and then I won't be online for the afternoon...
Seems I've reinvented the wheel (pun not intended)…
11:30
@DeadMG Oh, I think I remember that thing.
yeah
except that was one-way and I had to add in a second way
now very funky things are happening and I have no idea why
UB, most likely.
heh
I confirmed that it is not a double delete or a delete of an invalid pointer
and all the other data members are valid and the debugger thinks that the unordered_set is fine too
and the end() iterator seems perfectly normal
I flagged that youtube link from our old friend. It is spam, out of context, in this room
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Wait, .h++?
11:36
@Xeo Why not?
@Xeo Goes with .c++.
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, but why the break from cpp/h(pp)?
I thought that .c++ was cooler.
Xeo
Xeo
By how much, about 20%?
The designers of the standard library thought that "" was cooler.
@classdaknok_t Minor point: std::is_base_of<T, T>::value is true so you don't need the std::is_same checks.
@LucDanton didn't know that. Thanks!
On the whole I don't feel like the class buys you a whole lot over std::unique_ptr.
I want to expand it to support copying and moving.
Well the best advice I can give you here it to call such a class a clone_ptr. Other names are rubbish.
11:42
Hey! I resent that. ;)
What kind of pointer doesn't point to a value? Duh.
It has value semantics.
I don't like thinking of it as a pointer, more as a value. It has value semantics.
I thought of polyval or polymorphic_val.
I hate both of you!
Because it provides polymorphism with value semantics, but the class isn't quite complete yet.
It misses a copy constructor, move constructor and assignment operators.
And what it already has sucks.
11:44
I'm reminded that I once considered a unique<T> over std::unique_ptr<T>.
@classdaknok_t Explicitly default the move special members.
error: 'polyval<BaseT>::polyval(polyval<BaseT>&&)' cannot be overloaded meh.
I have to do this in a decent IDE, not Ideone.
By the by, I'd leave the get member to behave the same as for other smart pointers and instead overload dynamic_pointer_cast to match other smart pointers as well.
Hmm. I wonder why the heck didn't I just use a unique_ptr for storage.
Imma completely rewrite this thing.
Reusing std::unique_ptr is handy because it covers things like references as deleters.
I think I might write my own clone_ptr to match you guys.
11:49
@LucDanton There is no dynamic_pointer_cast for unique_ptr, is there?
@RMartinhoFernandes Nope.
I suppose dynamic_pointer_cast<Derived>(std::move(p)) was too 'weird' or something.
More seriously though typical/idiomatic usages are more likely to simply go with if(auto q = dynamic_cast<derived>(p.get())), ownerships rarely comes into play for this kind of code, does it?
@LucDanton Yeah, unique_ptr<Derived>(dynamic_cast<Derived*>(p.release())) isn't weird at all.
@RMartinhoFernandes When do you need that?
Dunno, when you would need dynamic_pointer_cast?
Mmh I should take a look at the Boost docs.
11:53
Boost has unique_ptr?
@RMartinhoFernandes It has some gimped version, IIRC.
not the real deal because they have no rvalue refs.
dynamic_pointer_cast and static_pointer_cast are for shared_ptr.
You mean scoped_ptr?
That doesn't really need dynamic_pointer_casts.
It's supposed to be local.
The only place I think one would need dynamic_pointer_cast for unique_ptr would be when storing it in a container with the derived type. And then you'd want to move anyway.
is my login to SO an openID?
I don't know what's the typical use for dynamic_pointer_cast and the docs give no indication. static_pointer_cast does make sense to me as the converse to e.g. conversion to pointer to void though.
11:55
The question of how you end up in that situation is also interesting.
@LucDanton Well, downcasting shared_ptrs?
It's not like dynamic_cast has many uses. I don't expect its smart pointer cousin to have many more.
@RMartinhoFernandes Scenarios where that's useful feel contrived.
> The seemingly equivalent expression shared_ptr<T>(dynamic_cast<T*>(r.get())) will eventually result in undefined behavior, attempting to delete the same object twice.
There's also this.
@LucDanton Sure, I agree.
Is this the correct way to do the default constructor? I'm a bit confused.
template<class... Args>
polyval(Args&&... args)
: ptr_(new BaseT(std::forward(args)...)) {

}
@classdaknok_t Ah those constructors are annoying to set up.
In any case that would be a perfect-forwarding constructor. And only a default constructor when the pack is empty.
#1 Needs explicit, otherwise you get implicit conversions from everything. #2 Needs to not be a copy/move ctor.
11:59
So I must force Args not to be polyval<BaseT>?
Modulo references and cv-qualifiers.
@classdaknok_t If you provide the actual special ctors explicitly overload resolution picks them over that one, so that's no big issue.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, what about cv-quals? You do make use of EnableIfUnrelated yourself, don't you?
@dead did you work out where you were being silly yet?
12:04
@LucDanton Yes. And now I remember that non-const lvalues can still bite you if you don't do that.
@classdaknok_t Well, 'Zing!' - i hit the wrong button. Regardless: same difference: http://ideone.com/6LPK9sehe 1 min ago
@RMartinhoFernandes That's not an argument, dynamic_cast<derived>(p.get()) ? static_pointer_cast<derived>(p) : nullptr works. (No MI silliness right?)
static_pointer_cast, well that's a new one on me
@classdaknokt ^^ oops. I guess that did make me look like a fool. Anyways, c++11 had the same symptom
@LucDanton No, you can't downcast with static_cast. I think.
Anyway, people are waiting for me now. Bye.
12:05
I'm stuck implementing the copy constructor. :/
Bye!
poly_val(const poly_val<BaseT>& other)
: ptr_(new BaseT(*other)) {
  // So, what if "other" holds an object whoose class is a subclass of BaseT?
}
@RMartinhoFernandes dynamic_cast gracefully fails whereas static_cast assumes you're correct in downcasting (like other situations like casting from void*).
@classdaknok_t And that's why it should be clone_ptr: the pointer that clones.
No way, this must be possible.
What must?
The copy constructor.
Well sure.
12:08
Using RTTI and a template factory function, maybe.
Not being able to pass template parameters to constructors sucks.
Meh I need a variadic variadic template template.
@classdaknok_t check the robots wheels implementation, he had the slicing problem, too but somehow fixed it
Cloning. That's how it works to not slice.
12:24
Meh I'm using void pointers.
But this factory thing seems to work.
I just added a "copyer" std::function to the polyval's members which is called in the copy constructor, and looks like this.
std::function<BaseT*(void*)> copyer_;

template<class D>
void set_copyer_() {
  struct {
    BaseT* operator()(void* other) {
      return new BaseT(*static_cast<D*>(other));
    }
  } copyer;
  copyer_ = copyer;
}
In the constructor I just set the function.
template<class DerivedT>
explicit poly_val(const DerivedT& value) {
  static_assert(std::is_base_of<BaseT, DerivedT>::value, "DerivedT must be (derived of) T.");
  set_copyer_<DerivedT>();
  ptr_ = copyer_(&value);
}
That's still slicing. You want new D(*static_cast<D*>(other).
Meh of course. :P
By the way you can use copyer_ = [](void* p) { return new D(*static_cast<D*>(p)); };
Instead of that local type.
Clang segfaults when using lambdas here.
dang, this Eclipse RCP just seem to be some sort of pot induced nonsense
12:37
@thecoshman Why? Many very powerful applications were built on it.
just so much abstraction and terms which have slightly odd name
I'm sure it will makes sense eventually
and just because powerful things have been built with it, does not make it good
12:51
@classdaknokt, you can't have both operator=(poly_val<BaseT> other) and operator=(poly_val<BaseT>&& other)
either drop operator=(poly_val<BaseT>&&), or replace operator=(poly_val<BaseT>) with operator=(const poly_val<BaseT>&)
I dropped operator=(poly_val<BaseT>&&). The compiler will move anyway when possible.
@thecoshman You mean, it's java? Good thing is ugliness doesn't prevent usefulness
@sehe just seems to be so many factories and helpers and 'advisers'
@thecoshman I disagree; so may diverse, cool things have been built using RCP that it proofs beyond doubt that it has been well designed.
@thecoshman Meh. Again: java
@sehe so many empires where built and rose to power on slavery, does not make it good
12:56
@classdaknok_t Since you have an std::unique_ptr member, the copy assignment operator was deleted. If in turn you introduce one yourself, this gets rid of the move assignment operator.
So it is good advice.
@sehe all it proves is that you can do this diverse cool things whilst using RCP
@thecoshman No, but if a sinlge 'empire' (say, a company) manages to adapt to times and wildly changing challenges, that kind-a proves that the company strategy is sound and flexible.
The main difference is that 'slaves' are 'consumed' (abused), whereas a good Framework constitutes a self-supporting eco-system.

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