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22:00
Does wxWidgets still use the shitty message map mechanism?
Isn't meego related to qt?
VLC ppl changed to Qt from wxWidgets for good reasons
it's just too impressive how "audacity" has such a nice UI while still using wxWidgets xD
lol
And doesn't the new VS use WPF or something
@SethCarnegie: Yes. That's why it's slow as shit
I must have a fast machine because it's not slow to me
a lot faster than the previous one
22:03
@SethCarnegie: I wasn't being entirely serious. :-)
I can tell a huge difference between native scrollbars and the ones use in VS
@SethCarnegie: I think that's intentional
I don't think so
the slaggish scrollbars seem to be trendy nowadays
slaggish?
22:04
I thought WPF scrollbars look just like native scrollbars by default
@Insilico they try to but fail
By the way a lot of web browser's scrollbars are drawn by the browser itself
For example in IE the scrollbar doesn't highlight when you mouse over it
Which is why they don't have a transition from hover-on to hover-off
necessarily since they can be changed by CSS
yeah
makes things feel wierd
22:07
Hi can anyone help me in this
0
Q: How can i set normals using Vector4f instead of 3f is there a alternative way to this - java3d

Nabmeisterhi I am trying to generate normals by using vector4f gi.setNormals(v4f); gi is GeometryInfo and v4f is Vector4f The above code is not compiling so is there another way to do this an alternative?

@Nabmeister don't ask to ask
oops sorry
Why do other people think the Lounge<C++> members can possibly help them with Java questions?
He was asking for help with his question
Ell
Ell
hi guys
22:10
Well java is the same as C except the fake multi dim arrays and memory mangement
Hi @Ell
Ell
Ell
what do you think about a lounge c++ mumble server?
@Nabmeister: Java != C != C++
what is mumble
Voice chat thingy.
22:10
Not even close in any way whatsoever
@Nabmeister no. They have almost nothing in common, except a little syntax.
I can host mumble, but don't expect me to speak.
Ell
Ell
mumble is like teamspeak
they are both object oriented (c++ and java)
@Nabmeister: C++ is multi-paradigm.
22:11
@Nabmeister knowing one definitely does not mean you know the other, you would be better served to look somewhere else for help
C++ is multi-paradigm, and that's no similarity.
@Nabmeister Java and C++ have little more in common than English and Spanish
Ell
Ell
why no speak cat?
It's like saying Lisp and Java are similar, because they both have OO systems.
@Ell I'd assume no mic or phobia
22:12
Cat is shy.
@Nabmeister anyway our point is no, I don't know how to help you
I'm back
@CatPlusPlus so phobia then
Ell
Ell
it can be private?
22:13
@MooingDuck I'm doing RAII in php with much confidence and little use right now. But it feels right =)
Ell
Ell
regulars only
@CaptainGiraffe: Isn't PHP a memory-managed language?
You're still all random unknown people from the Internet.
Ell
Ell
and put your voice through a voice changer :L
you know I have to say that C++11 is much more of an improvement to C++03 than C++03 was to C.
22:14
Lol.
@CatPlusPlus Actually I'm from California
@Insilico memory managed libraries make RAII hard, because they replaced it with something that doesn't work.
yes I know C++ started before C++03, but that's my point. C++11 roxors
Also I have terrible accent for English.
@Insilico Its execution should be handled in milliseconds then destroyed so memory leaks aren't that big on the agenda.
22:14
Maybe it is a sexy accent
@stdOrgnlDave I'd disagree with that. templates.
2
@MooingDuck yes. but lambdas, and built-in threading, and better templates, now...plus a hundred other things...
C++03 is a minor update to C++98. And the main advantage of C++98 to C89 is that you can DEFINE VARIABLES WHERE YOU WANT.
@stdOrgnlDave are not bigger than templates than templates were over nothing.
I mean, come on. C89 is such a pain to even begin to write.
22:16
lol
no it's not
C11 attempts to make it less painful with X-Macros
Yes it is.
NO ITS NOT
@Insilico what are X-macros
22:16
cat fight
Actually no not X-macros, it's something else
YES IT IS.
X-macros were used in 89, too.
IT IS NOT STUPID KITTY
C IS CRAP.
@stdOrgnlDave See, is it "IT IS NOT STUPID, KITTY" or "IT IS NOT, STUPID KITTY"?
22:17
C++ IS CRAP++.
That too.
The last good thing written in C was in the 1830s by Chopin
hmm, my company's code works fine when I install from the build machine, but if I build any component myself everything dies.
@Insilico both of those interpretations are fine
throws banana at giraffe
22:18
mawnin
@DeadMG: Morning.
@MooingDuck I think maybe something is wrong with some part of your process somewhere.
@CatPlusPlus I can't eat foul stuff from the ground like you do! I only eat fresh leaves.
It's a mint banana.
Oh yes, it was the _Generic keyword I was thinking about
22:18
@stdOrgnlDave binary incompatability somewhere, but I dunno where :/
Oh great lemme bend down and check it out.
C11 (formerly C1X) is an informal name for ISO/IEC 9899:2011, the current standard for the C programming language. It replaces the previous C standard, informally known as C99. This new version mainly standardizes features that have already been supported by common contemporary compilers, and includes a detailed memory model to better support multiple threads of execution. Due to delayed availability of conforming C99 implementations, C11 makes more features optional, to make it easier to comply with the core language standard. The final draft, N1570, was published in April 2011. The new s...
@MooingDuck I think C++11 just makes templates a lot easier and a lot more worthwhile. yes templates were cool before, now they're awesome. and part of that is the update to STL
@stdOrgnlDave Did I read correctly that you disabled your hands?
> Type-generic expressions using the _Generic keyword. For example, the following macro cbrt(x) translates to cbrtl(x), cbrt(x) or cbrtf(x) depending on the type of x:
22:19
@DeadMG my disability left me unable to use my hands
#define cbrt(X) _Generic((X), long double: cbrtl, \
                              default: cbrt, \
                              float: cbrtf)(X)
_Generic is meh.
Might was well use C++ if you want generic
I used to know a guy who disabled his hands
Ell
Ell
@deadmg morning!?
22:19
doing heavy work out of college
Poor man's overloading, with manual name mangling.
I didn't go to college
@DeadMG: "used to know"? :-P
@Insilico He decided to stop coming online, it's not my fault :P
Couldn't use the keyboard?
22:20
nope
probably went back to work or finally started seeing that girl he was going on about :P
How did he come online at all
Hawking style yeaaah** (+shades)
@SethCarnegie Used his tongue?
Oh hey, my portage update script hanged on sending the report mail.
8 times.
So that's why I haven't got any mail. I didn't even notice lol.
> If at first you don't succeed, try it 8 more times
22:22
It runs daily.
And it's been doing this all week.
> If at first you don't succeed, try it again 8 more times per day all week every week
And apparently mutt instances are eating my CPU alive.
@CatPlusPlus Crap I need to +1 (useful) for mutt, despite my hurting neck.
@CatPlusPlus: So said script(s) manages to do nothing while chewing though the CPU time?
I'm pretty sure it managed to do the update itself, but hangs on sending the mail.
22:24
Does the email end of things work? (When you do it manually?)
Lovely, isn't it.
Well boss, I've been really busy with emails lately (screenshot.png).
@CatPlusPlus: Nice to know that it's taking at least 66 hours for one of the processes to send email (and fail to do so)
Postfix runs and listens properly.
HMm, C++11 has a wiki page, C++03 has a wiki page, C++98 redirects to C++ wiki page.
22:28
And sending manually workses.
Wtf, mutt.
@MooingDuck That would be how I would do it too.
@CaptainGiraffe I want to read about C++98 and C++89 :(
@CaptainGiraffe: Yes, there were C++ versions prior to '98
Standardized stuff?
22:29
No.
C++98 was the first standard.
14 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
C++03 is a minor update to C++98. And the main advantage of C++98 to C89 is that you can DEFINE VARIABLES WHERE YOU WANT.
ah, I misread
The very first C++ compilers were in fact C++ --> C converters
Of course almost no C++ compiler nowadays actually does that
@Insilico CFront
@Insilico some do, most can
Ell
Ell
Speaking of ceeing people's fronts
Yep, the first Bjarne tools for C with objects was just that.
22:31
@MooingDuck Yes, that's what I was thinking
Ell
Ell
I don't get to :(
Who cares if it outputs C or assembly.
Compiler is compiler.
@Ell: I think "seeing" is the proper spelling. :-P
@CatPlusPlus I prefer the chain; Do one thing and do it good.
What chain?
22:32
c++ main.cpp | C | asm
Ell
Ell
Yeah I know I was trying to emphasise the awful pun :L
I'm reading an OCR'd e-book that was hand-corrected. But not perfectly. I just read this line: "so he laid his head on his anus and cried."
@CaptainGiraffe who optimizes?
Lowering the compiled C++ to anything is pretty much trivial compared to actually getting C++ semantics right.
Ell
Ell
Has anyone tried android ice cream sandwich? I find it most user unfriendly
22:33
@Ell You're not supposed to eat phones, silly.
@MooingDuck all do of course, thats the do it good part, are there really optimizations in between these stages?
@MooingDuck The interrupting-optimizing cow?
@CaptainGiraffe there's some optimizations that can only be done on base classes
@MooingDuck sure, let c++ handle that
@CaptainGiraffe so optimize at all steps?
22:35
yep pretty much
@CaptainGiraffe "Do one thing and do it good."?
what if my one thing is writing really well optimized, functional, readable, maintainable code?
Ell
Ell
Shouldn't it be "well"?
i have a challenge
Thats the idea. And it is pretty solid for most cases
22:36
in a moment...
@Ell You are probably right, not a native.
Ell
Ell
Right, sorry for nitpicking!
@Ell Well, it's more or less an idiom so you'd be correct on nitpicking here.
how to rewrite the extend function with modern iterators?
@Ell we are C++ people, we are infamous for nitpicking. Our mild discussions on the merits of std::map over std::list for a particular case make forum xbox vs playstation fanboy rage wars look quaint. it's part of the ISO C++ standard.
22:39
@CheersandhthAlf or countOf with std::distance?
I just got a nitpick from STL
Ell
Ell
Haha I like that use of quaint :L
@stdOrgnlDave I almost nitpicked your example :(
:)
@MooingDuck i mean, how to use iterators instead of integer indices? in the last loop?
@MooingDuck the (C++) force is strong with you
22:41
@CheersandhthAlf for(i : patterns) or something isn't it?
@CheersandhthAlf Is there a reason other than smarter looking code?
std::force.
@MooingDuck can it count down?
see? even that was nitpicked. BY A STUPID CAT.
@CaptainGiraffe no, it's just about me possibly missing out on some idiom
22:41
I'm not stupid. ;(
reverse_iterator?
user406009
@CheersandhthAlf I am probably wrong, but can't you just use rend and rbegin?
I should not have eaten so much for dinner
Boost.Range's reversed, obviously.
@CatPlusPlus I know you're not stupid, it's just that cats are stupid, and you're a cat.
22:42
You obviously haven't read my profile.
i thought about them reverse iterators, but are they guaranteed of same type as the forward ones? the loop can go both ways. reverse or forward.
@CheersandhthAlf no, but extended doesn't count down
@stdOrgnlDave You sound like PROLOG, which is a significant insult.
I have this question: http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/67131/how-to-properly-build-the-article-is-some-words-deletable-creatable-questio

Moderators closed that saying: "try asking in SO/Programmers/EL&U chat and seeing if anyone has any suggestions"... and so, can you help me?
@DeadMG Have your star, dear MG
22:43
@CheersandhthAlf doesn't look like it goes both ways
@MooingDuck (opt.reflect? -1 : +1);
@CheersandhthAlf oh, the second one
Now I'm getting insulted by a dead guy for calling cats stupid. I'm sure a robot will come along soon and join in.
@CheersandhthAlf forward and reverse iterators are rarely the same types
@user502052 I can't interpret your question to have anything to do with C++... or even programming in general.
22:44
Robot's recharging.
@CheersandhthAlf oh, wait, yes there is an algorithm: std::foreach. Probably with a lambda
why do you have '10'
@DeadMG I have to give a name to a method / function.
@user502052 on a scale of 1 to 5 with 10 being somewhere in the middle, what value should the answer state between true and false?
@MooingDuck ah, thanks, i didn't think about that. then a little lambda for body?
22:46
do you want it like this?
true 1000 false
@CheersandhthAlf Maybe two functions f1(ReverseIterator i1, i2), f2(NormalIterator i1, i2) thats all I can think of.
@user502052 The only advice you will get here is to give it the best name you can come up with and move on.
@CaptainGiraffe you got for each, don't need two functions
@user502052 What function?
@MooingDuck You do if you want to iterate backwards.
you would have to write your own reverse_foreach
22:47
@DeadMG pass it reverse iterators
If you want generic answer: a name that reflects what the function does.
@MooingDuck Reverse iterators and forward iterators aren't the same type.
so you can't take them
@MooingDuck I already told them to do that, they didn't listen
although if you have the source container, you can just do for_each(rbegin(), rend(), lambda)
if (opt.reflect) {
      foreach(...)
} else {
      foreach(...)
}
22:48
@catplusplus The phrase I am looking for is the function name.
@DeadMG can be done without the source container with std::reverse_iterator
@MooingDuck The google guys would tell you to use subclassing for that. Not agreeing, just stating.
@MooingDuck right, thnaks! i need some coffee first though. now how about the impractical looking & ugly & verbose command argument parsing?
@MooingDuck Not if you want to take a single range. Passing in both regular iterator and reverse iterator could well be irritating.
22:49
@CheersandhthAlf I'd actually just replace the strcmp with actual strings, but leave that alone. It's nice, and extendable.
template <typename Range>
void that_inner_loop(const Range& range, whatever) { boost::for_each(range, [](...) { ... }); }

that other function() {
    if (opt.reflect) that_inner_loop(input | reversed, ...);
    else that_inner_loop(input);
}
Or something like that.
Psuedocode, obviously.
sigh
SERIOUSLY?
you can't even template a reverse foreach properly? come on
Who, me?
@MooingDuck - From kleimo.com/random/name.cfm: Diputs Era Uoy! (with "obscurity factor" set to 0; that is, clear)
@DeadMG I can't figure out what you think the problem is, seems simple in my head.
22:51
argp doesn't work on Windows, AFAIR.
Boost.ProgramOptions!
Ell
Ell
What do you think boost is lacking?
@DeadMG oh, I understand. No, the function would simply call the "reverse" version with std::reverse_iterators made from the two forward iterators passed in. The caller doesn't have to pass in the extras. That'd be silly.
@Ell GUI
@MooingDuck Didn't realize you could just convert them like that.
@DeadMG yeah, it's pretty sweet
@DeadMG get an iterator to .end(), decrement until you hit begin(), what's so hard about that?
22:57
@stdOrgnlDave that's not related to his confusion. I think he didn't realize you could create a std::reverse_iterator from any bidirectional iterator
Ell
Ell
Who is it here that says you can't get a cross platform gui?
"E' na' caciara", I go away. Bye bye @MooingDuck, thanks for the link...
160
Q: What is Boost missing?

Robert GouldAfter spending most of my waking time on Stack Overflow, for better or for worse, I've come to notice how 99% of the C++ questions are answered with "use boost::wealreadysolvedyourproblem", but there must definitely be a few areas Boost doesn't cover, but would be better if it did. So what f...

@user502052 it was a joke, sorry
just for the sake of argument - how often do you find yourself decrementing through a loop anyway?
0
A: What is Boost missing?

std''OrgnlDaveBOOST IS MISSING GOOD DOCUMENTATION 'nuff said


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