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07:00
aaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhh
@JamesCuster u did it man
if i were not straight .. i would have said 'i luve you' :)
thanks a bunch bro ... i have been trying to solve this for days now ...
and all this time i was never loading the vector properly
you are da maaaaaaaaannnnnnnnnnnnnnnn
Do you actually need to declare that vector outside of that entire block?
That's one huge advantage of declaring things where you need them.
which vector ?
you mean the typedef things ?
You know how you added the line: usr_ques_vector = usr_p_pos1->getusrques(); ?
07:02
yes
Do you need to declare usr_ques_vector outside of that entire block in your real code?
well i typedef user_ques_vector at the top ....
Yeah, but you also declare usr_ques_vector
i just saw in some example people did it .. so i made sure i declared all of them at the very top
The problem could have been avoided if you did something like: usrq_vector usr_ques_vector = usr_p_pos1->getusrques();
i.e. declared usr_ques_vector inside the loop, where you use it
then when you started to use usr_ques_vector without ever setting it, a compiler error would have occured
07:04
yeah i think that would help more ... as it would complain about the declaration and assignment
i get you .. would have been much easier
unless necessary, defer declaration of your variables until you absolutely need them
it helps avoid things like this
how can i rep u a billion times ... u might have saved me a fortune tonite
yeah i would keep that in mind ...
It's fine, I was kind of bored, so I wanted something to do. Now I'm really tired.
well thanks again bro .... have a well deserved rest ...
Take a look at the Effective and Exceptional C++ series of books.
1130
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are released every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book...

They're really great and have a lot of helpful hints like I was saying above
Good night.
07:10
you know i really hated C++ ... never touched it for the last 13 years .... but heard great things about c++11 and wanted to learn it ... so i chose to do this project in C++ ... and man have i learned a lot
Good Night bro
07:34
It's time to get out of bed and get somebody to make me a sandwich.
I'm more hungry than @ScottW.
Lol
I could do recursion in C++03 already, no need for C++11. — daknok
Well, I'm convinced!
:D
Guys what's your opinion about using auto instead of built-in type names such as int, unsigned and double?
auto foo = 42u; // unsigned int
auto bar = 42; // int
auto qux = 3.14; // double
08:15
@classdaknok_t I forgot about the 42u notation. That does help.
I believe Herb Sutter's advice was to always use auto unless when you need to do a type conversion.
I always append a u when I want unsigned ints, because otherwise you can have glitches with large numbers.
Does implicit conversion work with constructors that take rvalue references?
class Christian {
public:
  Christian(Atheist&& a); // not explicit —> conversion?
};
I think it does.
Oh GCC, I love you and your helpful error messages.
error: expected ')' before '&&' token
Why don't just fucking tell me that Atheist wasn't declared yet?
Also: it works. Pretty neat.
@classdaknok_t But that's explicit.
@StackedCrooked Fixed it.
08:29
Is std::ofstream::close required to flush?
@GManNickG it effectively calls rdbuf->close(), so yes.
I like how lambda's facilitate initialization of function-local static variables.
std::basic_filebuf::close() flushes the put area buffer and closes the associated file
@classdaknok_t Yeah, just read it, thanks.
For some reason I remember some implementation (or even standard mandate) that said letting an ofstream destruct didn't necessarily flush.
Yet I'm reading that the destructor of basic_filebuf calls close() (which flushes), so I don't know anymore.
@StackedCrooked I'm confused. What do you mean?
Do you mean using std::call_once?
08:46
so my fellow n00bs
good morning :)
Any j2me developer around?
lol
lol java.
08:48
they usually hang out with the cobol developers
I'm going to write a little HTTP library; might come in handy some day.
And I'm bored to death.
@class java developer
Yeah I know, you said "J2ME".
But I don't do Java; it fucks my brain up.
i am j2me developer but completely stack in sorting text
Use a sorting function.
08:56
@classdaknokt what r u doing for work?
@Nils I don't work.
my http lib is called qt
I don't want a > 1GB library just to do HTTP.
Ah nice not to be the kind of proletarian why has to work for his money :)
why do people take double free errors from glibc to mean that they've got a memory leak?
08:58
@classdaknokt no need to reinvent the wheel
am using vector but has no sorting funtion
same for people writing their own xml libs
@awoodland A double free error is UB, and therefore can be a memory leak. But nobody can ever tell if that's always the case.
better do some computational science or something
7
Q: sorting vector in java

HidayatI cant find any sorting function in the java API for vectors. Collections.sort is only for List and not for Vector I dont want to write my own sorting algo because I think java should implement this Im looking for something like, class ClassName implements Comparator ... ClassName cn; sort(cn);

08:59
Stop posting Java
Stop Java.
5
Java.
collaborate and listen
Java is THE BEST ... coffee.
3
09:01
:D
Douwe Egberts Ice Mocha Latte is better, for sure.
I wonder if 'C' stands for coffee
@class daknok_t no collection in j2me. Sorry guys, pliz join me in the java chat room
I dislike coffee, I only like iced coffee.
Coffee is so fucking bitter. It's worse than Brussels sprouts.
@Olnjore I don't know Java so I cannot help you.
Also, shortening "please" to "pliz" doesn't show much effort.
I think learning java is comparable to lobotomy. Not only will you forget everything that you've learned so far, but you will be unable to learn anything new also.
09:04
thanks
No problem.
Hey @kbok! How you doing?
Hey @ScottW! I mentioned you a while back!
typedef const unsigned int cunt;
For some reason I find the using cunt = const unsigned int; syntax much more readable.
I always put the typedef parameters in the wrong order.
I wonder if this works:
using foo = struct { };
% cat foo.cc
using foo = struct { };
% clang++ -std=c++11 foo.cc
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
  "_main", referenced from:
      start in crt1.10.6.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
@Pubby So yes, it does. :)
Yay
I'd just use struct foo {}; instead.
This isn't C.
09:13
But you can do template tricks I bet
template<…> struct foo{};
template<typename A> using foo = template<typename B> struct {};
Does this compile?
% cat foo.cc
template<typename A> using foo = template<typename B> struct {};
% clang++ -std=c++11 foo.cc
foo.cc:1:34: error: type name requires a specifier or qualifier
template<typename A> using foo = template<typename B> struct {};
                                 ^
foo.cc:1:33: error: expected ';' after alias declaration
template<typename A> using foo = template<typename B> struct {};
                                ^
                                ;
2 errors generated.
:(
expected ';' after alias declaration
Combined with the suggested location, this looks like GCC.
@Pubby But it doesn't make sense. In what order would the template arguments go?
09:16
I dunno
what about this:
template<typename T> struct foo { T t; } foo(T t) { return foo{t}};
(I apologize for using you as a compiler, I guess I should use ideone)
% cat foo.cc
template<typename T> struct foo { T t; } foo(T t) { return foo{t}};
% clang++ -std=c++11 foo.cc
foo.cc:1:41: error: expected ';' after struct
template<typename T> struct foo { T t; } foo(T t) { return foo{t}};
                                        ^
                                        ;
foo.cc:1:46: error: unknown type name 'T'
template<typename T> struct foo { T t; } foo(T t) { return foo{t}};
                                             ^
foo.cc:1:42: error: C++ requires a type specifier for all declarations
(see full text)
@Pubby Ideone doesn't understand the using syntax.
But anyway, you cannot do struct {…} function(…) {…}
You sure? I recall seeing it before.
There must be a type name before the function name in the function declaration (in C++, not in C89). struct{} isn't a type name.
@Pubby Probably some stupid GCC extension.
Oh, it works in C
C89 doesn't require a type name and defaults to int.
But still, struct{} shouldn't work and it's probably a language extension.
09:20
No, it should be standard
Huh? Hey you are right!
% cat foo.c
struct {int a;} foo() {}
% clang foo.c -pedantic
foo.c:1:24: warning: control reaches end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type]
struct {int a;} foo() {}
That's cool. :P
@RMartinhoFernandes once told me it was not possible.
But that was a few months ago.
Don't believe his lies
Maybe he was referring to C++.
Oh wait, it was @Xeo. I apologize @RMartinhoFernandes!
Jan 24 at 23:52, by WTP'--
Can you directly have a struct as a function return type? Like struct { int a; int b; } foo() { … }?
Jan 24 at 23:53, by Xeo
no
Oh shit, I already sent the hammer squad to @RMartinhoFernandes's house
Any other thing he's lied about?
yesterday, by R. Martinho Fernandes
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Java is a better language than C++ in all regards. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
09:27
Ok, my conscience is clear
Okay, now I still haven't started on my HTTP library. Stop distracting me!
I need a name for it. :P
httl
I'm looking for food, I like food.
I happen to share your interest in food
No I mean that I want my library to be named after food.
And the Albert Heijn is too expensive. :P
libcupcake or libpopcorn
09:34
Why not just libcup?
You get opaque tokens from a factory, you pass them to tasks (either explicitly or by lambda capture), and the tasks are responsible for polling the tokens and performing appropriate cancellation actions.
^ What?
How do I add #*# to my .gitignore file? Lines starting with # are comments…
Never mind, got it. \#*#.
0
Q: "Faxen dicke" haben - woher kommt das?

Johannes Schaub - litbIch frage mich gerade woher der Ausdruck "Jetzt hab' ich die Faxen Dicke!" herkommt. Hat "Faxen" was mit den störenden Geräuschen (Piepen) eines Faxgerätes zu tuen? Und "Dicke" mit der Breite der Zorntoleranzgrenze?

@StackedCrooked He means "token" as some sort of flag.
And what would "opaque" mean in this context?
09:41
@StackedCrooked not translucent.
@ScottW faxing a picture of your dick.
@Pubby IIRC I sent a DR about template<typename T> using foo = struct { ... };
@StackedCrooked There's something called an "opaque" type.
In computer science, an opaque data type is a data type that is incompletely defined in an interface, so that its values can only be manipulated by calling subroutines that have access to the missing information. The concrete representation of the type is hidden from its users. A data type whose representation is visible is called transparent. Typical examples of opaque data types include handles for resources provided by an operating system to application software. For example, the POSIX standard for threads defines an application programming interface based on a number of opaque types ...
So I guess "polling a token" looks something like while (!cancel)
@JohannesSchaublitb Any conclusion?
09:42
@StackedCrooked He's confusing you because he missed conceptually user-side details with implementation details.
@GManNickG Ah I see.
@ScottW it must sounds naughty to an english guy
Conceptually, you just check to see if you should be canceled. How this is done is with an opaque data type that, internally, comes from a factory.
@JohannesSchaublitb: For the life of me I can't find where in the standard template using declarations are. Do you know?
@Pubby hmm i seem to misremember
@Pubby but I remember that was fixed in the draft to forbid it
@GManNickG "Template declarations"
Aww well, I didn't intend to do it anyway.
09:47
clause 14
i think the "= struct {}" thing forbidding for alias templates are somewhere at clause 7 about the "type-specifier-seq" being allowed to contain struct definitions
@JohannesSchaublitb kommt hierher de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisimatenten
@ScottW i have the spec on my android phone..
i still need to put some trolly pic on my facebook page thanking all the ppl for their happy birthday. but I don't know what pic i shall take xD
I have it on my iPod touch. :P
Though finding something slow as hell. Even the TOC lags when scrolling.
@JohannesSchaublitb is it your birthday?
not today xD
but yes
I'm confused now.
It is your birthday, but it's not your birthday?
09:58
why do you say that i said that it is not my birthday
1 min ago, by Johannes Schaub - litb
not today xD
i don't understand
is it your birthday?
< not today xD
< but yes
"is it your birthday?" does not necessarily ask "is today your birthday?"
I see. Depends on the context.
09:59
lol
perhaps I shall take an android logo and put all the people at appropriate places of the android logo xD
Can't wait till my birthday after which I'm finally allowed to drive a car.
Does anybody know why twitter removes some punctuation from your own tweets?
I'm 1000% sure I put a hyphen between "three" and "button", and a period at the end.
It only happens when JavaScript is turned on.
@classdaknok_t hyphen makes your message smart
and twitter fixed it
@Abyx it makes me look dumb to myself. It always only happens with my own tweets.
If they fixed it, why is it still happening?
10:08
@classdaknok_t fixed presence of hyphen
The right spelling is with a hyphen.
@classdaknok_t who cares? twitter is for small messages, not for smart messages
TDS
TDS
Anyone here use branch in Github in Mac. Use case Actually, People are working on same project from other countries, I am working branch of Master project and It is committing locally but when I am merging it with master project it throws an error Git Error Occurred.
I do. I don't want my punctuation to disappear.
@TDS Any more details? What's the complete error message?
TDS
TDS
I found this and the complete error is Git Error Occurred. (as I'd mentioned above ^_^)
10:13
Use the command-line interface.
TDS
TDS
How?
Open Terminal, type git <your-command> and hit return.
TDS
TDS
On typing Git in Terminal, getting Command not found.
If you dislike command-lines, GitX may be something for you.
I've heard it's very good.
But GitHub for Mac is really horrible.
TDS
TDS
I am using this. Ok, Let me try. Thanks anyways.
10:16
If you do want the command-line interface, you can find it on Git's website.
I might as well try GitX. I never tried it because the screenshots looked ugly, but I really like to easily see my changed before committing.
'sup G?
Oh God GitX looks horrible.
Maybe Atlassian SourceTree…
Why do all Git GUIs hurt my eyes!
10:50
iGitt!
LOL
For now I'll just use the CLI and git diff | mate -w
Übliche Faxen wird auf ein in Mundarten geläufiges Verb fickfacken hin- und herlaufen zurückgeführt, wobei ein Substantiv Fickesfackes als Übergang gedient haben mag (s. ficken).
lol
wtf
Mat
Mat
I like git, mostly because the tutorial showed how to fork the Spoon-Knife repo.
Is this correct?
template<class T, class... Args>
std::unique_ptr<T> make_unique(Args&&... args) {
  return std::unique_ptr<T>(new T(std::forward<Args>(args)...));
}
I'm a little confused when it comes to type-punning and strict aliasing. Now I have this code: uint32_t value = *reinterpret_cast<const uint32_t*>(&mac[0]); and the compiler doesn't complain about it. But I remember similar constructs where the compiler did complain.
11:23
@classdaknok_t yeah
@bamboon thanks.
11:47
2
Q: Strict aliasing and std::array vs C-style array

StackedCrookedWhen compiling the following code with gcc 4.7 (MacPorts build on Mac OS X) I get seemingly contradictory results. The compiler does not complain when I try to reinterpret and dereference a section of an std::array as an uint32_t but it does when using a C-style array. Example code: { std:...

^ This is spam.
12:03
18
Q: make_unique and perfect forwarding

FredOverflowWhy is there no std::make_unique function template in the standard C++11 library? I find std::unique_ptr<SomeUserDefinedType> p = new SomeUserDefinedType(1, 2, 3); a bit verbose. Wouldn't the following be much nicer? auto p = std::make_unique<SomeUserDefinedType>(1, 2, 3); This ...

12:13
The selected answer is wrong. And make_unique should be a class template, not a function template. See the discussion on Herb's new GOTW, or for that matter see my old blog article about it.
0
Q: boost.spirit: taking action on incomplete input stream

sashangWould it be possible to use spirit to take action on an incomplete stream? I want to make a command line interface for a program. For example, a complete command sequence could look like this: processmanager process rouge kill but say the user entered: processmanager process ? (or hit t...

^ Ah, I got that off my chest! (Re the comment)
@FredOverflow I hope it'll be in TR2.
@StackedCrooked dunno why you say it's spam, but i added an answer anyway.
i think food is in order now that i've commented on one question, discussed another (here), and answered a third
awfully quiet here today though
afk... :-)
my answer was wrong so i deleted it. didn't notice a detail in the code.
now really afk
@CheersandhthAlf I must be blind, can you give me a link?
12:30
@CheersandhthAlf Pathological apologetic-ness.
@CheersandhthAlf I don't see your answer.
@CheersandhthAlf Ok.
@CheersandhthAlf What exactly is the problem? Does unique_ptr have an implicit constructor from raw pointers? Nope, just checked, the constructor is explicit.
Xeo
Xeo
@classdaknok_t Excuse me for assuming you're talking only about C++ in a C++ chatroom :P
4
~/blargh
14:40:45 $ cat t.cpp
struct { int a; } foo();
~/blargh
14:40:51 $ clang++ t.cpp
t.cpp:1:1: error: '<anonymous struct at t.cpp:1:1>' can not be defined in the
      result type of a function
struct { int a; } foo();
^
1 error generated.
Now let's compare that to GCC's output…
Since when is GCC so kind?
prog.cpp:1:1: error: new types may not be defined in a return type
prog.cpp:1:1: note: (perhaps a semicolon is missing after the definition of '<anonymous struct>')
Since recently.
Xeo
Xeo
Because the error usually occurs when you write a class and forget the semicolon
12:47
How should I implement move constructors? Just std::move all members in the initialization list?
Xeo
Xeo
Preferrably you don't.
@FredOverflow if a function has two unique_ptr arguments, then a call of it is not guaranteed to be formally exception safe. because the compiler can do stupid things like evaluate new expressions first, then construct the smart pointers. if, otoh., it has two make_unique arguments, then exception safety is guaranteed (re invocation)
Why not?
Xeo
Xeo
13
A: What is the "correct" way to write the Copy/Move/operator= trio in C++11?

XeoPreferably, they'll just be = default;, since the member types should be of resource managing types that hide the move details from you, like std::unique_ptr. Only the implementors of those "low level" types should bother with dealing with that. Remember that you only need to bother with move se...

I have a class Socket. It doesn't make sense to copy a socket, but moving it does. At least in my eyes.
12:49
@CheersandhthAlf Why not? If you pass unique_ptrs, everything is fine. If you pass raw pointers, the compiler will reject the program, because there is no implicit conversion from raw pointers to unique_ptrs.
Xeo
Xeo
@classdaknok_t I meant that preferrably you don't write the move ctor yourself
Of course, if you're stuck with VS...
@Xeo It can be = defaulted?
I didn't know that.
Xeo
Xeo
Yep
f( unique_ptr<Blah>( new Blah ), unique_ptr<Argh>( new Argh ) ); <- you're screwed
@Xeo I don't care about Windows. :P
12:50
@CheersandhthAlf Ah, you mean if the client is stupid enough not to use make_unique. But then you have the same problem with shared_ptr.
Hmm that's cool. Thanks! Saves me a lot of headaches.
and of course he/she is
Xeo
Xeo
Just make sure the members all handle being moved
@FredOverflow yes, the make_shared design is wrong. it should have been a class.
+ it should have supported custom deleter.
@Xeo When an int is moved, will it be set to 0?
@CheersandhthAlf Does anybody else agree with you? Never heard that "proposal" before.
Xeo
Xeo
@classdaknok_t Nope
Same with pointers
@classdaknok_t No, copying and moving is the same thing for scalar types.
Xeo
Xeo
@CheersandhthAlf I really don't think make_shared could possibly support a custom deleter
So I need to set it to zero myself, so I do need to implement the move ctor myself, right?
12:52
@FredOverflow generally, people are unaware of these issues. most don't even grok the exception unsafety.
Xeo
Xeo
Without sacrificing the advantage of a single allocation
@Xeo it is trivial
IIRC make_shared can take a custom deleter
@classdaknok_t Is it important that it is set to zero? Then yes, you will have to do it yourself.
Xeo
Xeo
12:52
Now I'm interested
@JohannesSchaublitb it doesn't
@FredOverflow It's a file descriptor which will be ::closed in the destructor, so yes.
why can you not just placement new the deleter into the single allocation?
Xeo
Xeo
@classdaknok_t Or you shove the int into a small wrapper
Wait I should write a FileDescriptor class which handles a file descriptor.
12:53
The standard says template<class Y, class D> shared_ptr(Y* p, D d); so yes it takes a deleter.
@JohannesSchaublitb you can. except existing design does not support that
Xeo
Xeo
@JohannesSchaublitb How should the deleter delete the pointer if it's part of the control block? That was my issue
@FredOverflow make_shared
@Xeo with ordinary shared_ptr the deleter is stored in the control block
Xeo
Xeo
@CheersandhthAlf Yes, but I don't care about the deleter
I care about what the deleter should do with the pointer to the resource it gets passed
12:54
oh well it's unfun fighting ignorance
i'm off to other things
i'm anti-social
Xeo
Xeo
It can only call p->~T() or something like that
@Xeo the deleter does not have to delete the control block
The expression delete p shall be well formed, shall have well defined behavior, and shall not throw exceptions.
What's the difference between the first two shalls?
of course the constraint will have to be that the deleter must not deallocate the memory
wasn't aware there is no such make_shared overload :(
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow deleteing an undefined struct is not well-formed
or void*
12:57
But it is well-formed?
@FredOverflow a program that has UB can still be well-formed
Xeo
Xeo
I think both mean the same
like, struct A;A *a ...; delete a; is well-formed (if A is incomplete) but can have UB
no, they are not the same
1.3.9 ill-formed program: program that is not well formed
Thank you, C++aptain Obvious!
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, deleting an undefined struct was UB?
I thought it wouldn't even compile
12:58
a program that is not well-formed requires a diagnostic, except when it violated the ODR by a rule not diagnosable
1.3.26 well-formed program: C++ program constructed according to the syntax rules, diagnosable semantic rules, and the One Definition Rule
@Xeo no it was not UB
it is only UB when the type has a nontrivial dtor
Xeo
Xeo
Anyways, thinking about it, the deleter surely could get passed a flag whether it's from make_shared or regular constructed share_ptr. However, that'd mean you need to write a wrapper for stuff like fclose etc which only take the resource pointer
@JohannesSchaublitb right-y
So is there a program that is not well-formed but has well-defined behavior? Because if there isn't, then why mention the well-formedness separately?

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