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20:01
44 mins ago, by Pubby
> What the fuck is a "solution" anyways?
Ell
Ell
@RMartinhoFernandes is there perfect forwarding... for templates?
@Ell What?
Ell
Ell
as in - can I have a template class that inherits another template class' templates?
sort of - meta-inheritance
Ell
Ell
like if i had template <class A, class B, class C> base_temp
could I get another template class to inherit that ones template, so i could go
template <> : base_temp
20:04
^ A not overly annoying robot-inspired SciFi short movie I ran into today
I think it was someones graduation piece
Ell
Ell
I could then go template<int, int, int>
and we all go, like, ew?
I don't understand, put it into ideone?
Or is this what you mean?:
template<typename... T> struct foo : base_temp<T...>
Ell
Ell
yes - I think
I guess that's forwarding, although far from perfect ;)
Ell
Ell
20:08
that is what I mean but it wont compile :L but no worries - I'm just thinking over some designs in my head
@Ell Therefore, you are
-1
Q: For what purposes we need to use <cassert>?

JaneIn which cases we include cassert in C++ library?

^ I added comments.
Love the leading answer:
> Just like any other header file, you #include <cassert> when you use something declared in that header file, such as assert(). -- Greg Hewgill
Genious.
Gonna favorite that question just for Alf's comment and Greg's answer.
But it really isn't worthy of a high rep answer, either. I don't +1 it
@RadekdaknokSlupik Really? When will that come up again?
20:16
@sehe I don't know but I like it.
Since you guys seem to like 'poor-but-honest' questions, have a look here: at least I put some effort into that answer :) stackoverflow.com/questions/10611306/…
rvalue references extend the lifetime of temporaries, right?
How? Can you give an example?
@Pubby in the same way const references do
Rofl I cannot believe that my answer got ten up votes. It's really a horrible answer that makes no sense at all. xD
9
A: Markdown and image alignment

WTP'--Embedding CSS is bad: ![Flowers](/flowers.jpeg) CSS in another file: img[alt=Flowers] { float: right; }

20:25
@Pubby no. a local rvalue reference can do that.
This is still ungood:
Foo&& g() { return Foo(); }
@RadekdaknokSlupik apparently it conveys a basic 'idea' that people think attention should be given to (even if it hardly applies or is really ill-explained)
@CheersandhthAlf So, basically that was 'yes, a local rvalue reference can do that'
@Ell it should compile
Hi all
I need to execute some linux command, so I call system("command). The function gets char* argument. But how to pass std::string in it?
20:38
system(my_std_string.c_str())
@RadekdaknokSlupik Thank you very much. It works!
@Innuendo In the future you may want to look here first. :)
And no problem, of course.
haha, user-defined literals are awesome
you can Create syscall literals, like my $retval = `echo "hello world"` in Perl
int retval = "echo hello world"_x;
@RadekdaknokSlupik, Thanks, I've bookmarked this site. When I google, I've never turned up at that site
Or Brainfuck literals :) Use template meta programming to make the Brainfuck code use std::cin and std::cout.
20:45
@KonradRudolph But wouldn't they constraint the return type?
@Innuendo it's way better than cplusplus.com.
@YetAnotherGeek What do you mean?
You can only return one resulting type from operator""?
@RadekdaknokSlupik It starts to turn up, slowly … probably as a consequence of being linked quite a lot on SO
@YetAnotherGeek Well, why would you need more?
@YetAnotherGeek return a program type
20:47
because in Perl `` would return other types of stuff?
@KonradRudolph that's not a syscall. :)
@RadekdaknokSlupik Whatev’s ;)
@RadekdaknokSlupik (I know that the Unix function syscall exists but for me, a call to system has the same claim to the name “syscall” …)
template<char... code> BrainfuckProgram operator"" _bf() { ... }
int main() {
  auto prog = "++++++++++[>+++++++>++++++++++>+++>+<<<<-]>++.>+.+++++++..+++.>++.<<+++++++++++++++.>.+++.------.--------.>+.>."_bf;
  prog();
}
@KonradRudolph ah k :P
e.g. my $current_dir = pwd :)
argh
my $current_dir = ` pwd `
Hi everyone! Have a good code day :D
20:49
@YetAnotherGeek So? it always returns a string
@omercan1993 My day almost ends.
Yes but Perl is weakly typed
so that is easily converted
@YetAnotherGeek So is the terminal emulator
in C++ that would not give the same flexibility
Most OCR programs output Perl code.
20:50
ofstream::close isn't synchronius, is it? I create file and in next line execute it, and it prints that file doesn't exist
@YetAnotherGeek You cannot get that flexibility, and it’s not C++’ fault. Terminal programs simply always deal in strings
@Innuendo Why do you call ofstream::close?
Yes but my point was that you returned int
@Innuendo how do you execute a file you just created?
@YetAnotherGeek Since that’s what system returns
but now I understand your point :)
my toy example simply returns the retval of the system call
@RadekdaknokSlupik. I've created file, filled the context, and I don't need filestream more, so I close it
@RadekdaknokSlupik For you, have a good night :)
and yes, in order to be useful I’d need to read the standard output of that program …
@Innuendo it closes it when it goes out of scope. But anyway, what do you mean by "synchronous"? Can you give an example?
@omercan1993 thanks :P will wait a few hours though.
20:52
  fs.open("test.sh");
  fs << /* filling */;
  fs.close();
  system("chmod +x test.sh");
Did fs.open succeed?
@Innuendo oh, you mean, you close it, and then use system on it? Gotcha. Yes, it should flush and be ready immediately.
yeap. If I delete system() line, than file is created
@Innuendo Do this:
fs.open("test.sh");
if (fs) {
  fs << /* filling */;
  fs.close();
  system("chmod +x test.sh");
} else {
  std::cerr << "couldn't open file.";
}
with system() line it's not created
20:54
@RadekdaknokSlupik Would'nt that throw a nullpointer exception ?
if fs didn't succeed
sorry
if fs was null
@YetAnotherGeek this is C++, not Java. C++ doesn't throw null pointer exceptions.
By default streams don't throw exceptions (except maybe for std::bad_alloc).
You need to enable that on them explicitly.
@YetAnotherGeek no, fs isn't a pointer
@RadekdaknokSlupik Arguably a big, fat error …
I meant null pointer derefence error
same same
20:56
@YetAnotherGeek no, because there's no pointers involved. This is C++, not Java
@MooingDuck Yes I did see that
… or not
@YetAnotherGeek The only pointers that code uses are the string literals which decay to pointers. And they point to valid objects.
Uh, I found my mistake, it was not in C++ code, but in shell script itself
Has someone of you used apitrace for OpenGL? is this really useable for "professional" work, or not? I want to use it, but want to know if someone has already some experiences with the tool.
20:56
sorry ;)
@Innuendo always check your return codes
(or enable exceptions)
@MooingDuck, ok. thank you
@RadekdaknokSlupik I did not see it coming that fstream had operator void* defined such that it would be converted to a null pointer
So got a bit confused by the if statement
@YetAnotherGeek if that function isn't marked const I'm going to die.
@YetAnotherGeek oh, yeah, thats how you check the state of a stream.
@RadekdaknokSlupik explicit operator bool()
20:59
Oh. meh.
@RadekdaknokSlupik so that "std::cin + 3" is not valid :D
@RadekdaknokSlupik why would you have a const stream anyway? I don't think streams have many const members
@MooingDuck To inspect it or whatever.
Also, @MooingDuck, operator void*() const; is deprecated in C++11 for std::basic_ios.
And explicit operator bool() const; is new.
Hmm, x was taken? Let's go with y!
@RadekdaknokSlupik yes.
I'm becoming an expert at writing barely readable lambdas.
21:02
Lambdas are overrated.
Saying things are overrated is overrated.
8
Hey who unstarred that! D:<
I starred it... like the philosophy behind the text :D but why "un"-starred?
I like pears, you know.
Who not like them? :D
Well, right...
21:06
@RadekdaknokSlupik I was amused, but changed my mind about star-worthy-ness
@MooingDuck DIAF for unstarring my message.
:P
So I'm writing a web app and I couldn't come up with a better name than "foobaz". -_-
@RadekdaknokSlupik write a program to generate random names/words. I made one somewhere, based on en-US letter frequencies.
@MooingDuck cool.
@RadekdaknokSlupik it's really simple until you start wanting things like "ll" "th" "ough" and such.
May I present to you, my runtime class loader! xD
Dir['./models/*.rb', './controllers/*.rb'].each { |f| require f }
21:12
@RadekdaknokSlupik that doesn't look like C++
@RadekdaknokSlupik get out of my room
@RadekdaknokSlupik What language is that?
21:15
^ that.
Ok that looks horrible
Sorry I asked :O
Ruby is magic.
Yeah.. a synonym for mindfuck
You haven't seen C++ yet.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Not C+11, if that's what you mean.
Ell
Ell
21:18
I love ruby :D
huh. Someone just commented that one of my answers from Aug of last year is the top voted answer of a question, and is 100% dead wrong and doesn't even come close to compiling :( I wonder how I missed that
A function
SomeMethod().. how would it be described in asm?
.SomeMethod ?
I think to use both languages is better then to "hate" one. I never use ruby really but I like it :) I sounds very useful :D
Ell
Ell
I have never used any language for anything useful per se
21:20
@MooingDuck Linky?
and now he deleted the comment. How strange
Eugh
XAML.
Breaking.
Um, so are labels created for every function in assembly?
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't think there's a simple fix. I can only think of fixes that will triple+ the line count and complexity. :(
Ell
Ell
of course theres a fix! Just ignore the problem.
21:26
@Ell lol
@MooingDuck But what's the problem? The comment is gone.
Ell
Ell
@RMartinhoFernandes thats the spirit
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm not passing values to the hash functions
and I haven't the foggiest idea as to an easy way to do so
I don't think there's a way to splice a tuple
Indices trick?
Assuming a variadic hash_combine function, it works fine.
@RMartinhoFernandes I wasn't assuming anything not in the std::
21:28
There's one in boost. Not sure if variadic.
Anyway, writing a variadic one isn't that complicated.
@RMartinhoFernandes so the other answer did, should I just delete mine and upvote his?
Upvote? Yes. Delete? If it were my answer, I'd fix it as I wouldn't give the same solution.
Hum … I can’t use a range-based for on a std::pair<iterator, iterator>?
disappointing :(
@RMartinhoFernandes Already upvoted, still working on how to fix
@KonradRudolph just add a std::begin() and std::end() for it
and SFINAE for operator->
I had just assumed that that was already defined …
21:32
wait, do operator-> since you can test for that on pointers.
size_t hash_combine() { return 0; }
size_t hash_combine(std::size_t a, std::size_t b) { /* whatever */ }
size_t hash_combine(Head const& head, Tail const&... tail) {
template <typename Head, typename... Tail>
size_t hash_combine(Head const& head, Tail const&... tail) {
    return hash_combine(std::hash<Head>(head), hash_combine(tail...));
}
@MooingDuck All that's left is to unpack the tuple onto that function.
@MooingDuck Hmm?
@MooingDuck SFINAE for being an iterator.
iterator_traits<T>::iterator_category
@RMartinhoFernandes oh, yeah, even better, forgot about that.
@MooingDuck Not sure if allowed.
21:34
Dear Google, what part of "WITHOUT" don't you understand?
@RMartinhoFernandes I don't think it is
@RadekdaknokSlupik do you know the workaround?
@MooingDuck The global namespace is free. I didn't mention this.
@RadekdaknokSlupik I think it sees "without" as a noise word and just ignores it. Then it gives you the results that contain "rails".
@MooingDuck yes, but I'm too lazy xD
21:37
@RMartinhoFernandes fixing seems hard. unpacking the tuple is beyond me right now. My brain isn't on enough for that.
"pour"! That's the word I was looking for 3 hours ago!
L'esprit de l'escalier sucks.
Well, not quite the same. Whatever.
Alright, unpacking the tuple is beyond me, but I figured out another recursive way.
I'm a newb, I felt like this didn't merit a new question on SO, but if it does please let me know. In C when I set a char * like char *myStr; in a function, before I leave the function do I need to set it to myStr = 0;? I have seen code that sets it to 0 before it returns, is this something I should do? Need to do?
In C you can't set it to 0 like that.
Are you talking about C++?
Or maybe you can. Don't mind me. I'm confused.
Why couldn't you?
21:50
No worries, good point, I was under the impression this was the same as myStr = '\0'; however I maybe wrong also :)
@PeteHerbertPenito it's common to set it to zero after releasing the memory which may or may not coincide with leaving the function.
But no, you don't need to do it unless you want to.
@PeteHerbertPenito those are very very different
@MooingDuck if I'm setting it inside the function and only use it in the function, then I don't need to allocate it (ie using malloc) I can just set it and then when I return it should automatically release it, is that correct?
@PeteHerbertPenito in C, nothing is automatic.
21:52
In this SO question I have found this: *str = '\0'; /* Same as *str = 0; */
Automatic storage is automatic in C :P
@PeteHerbertPenito note the * at the beginning.
Ah I see it lol
great point
That's just setting it to ""
@Pubby no.
'\0' != ""
21:54
@RadekdaknokSlupik Eh, you can think about the resulting string in the same way
But '\0' == *"".
@PeteHerbertPenito wait, I take it back, those are the same thing, but the second is very very confusing
@Pubby What if str is not the start of the string?
@Pubby '\0' is a char (or an int in C), while "" is a (const?) char[1].
@RMartinhoFernandes There's a lot of 'what ifs' that could be going on
@RadekdaknokSlupik Well obviously yes. I'm just saying that it's essentially setting the 'string' to something equivalent to "".
21:57
'\0' is a null pointer constant!
@RMartinhoFernandes ???
Yes, I like to sow confusion.
@Pubby oh fuck I read the code as str = '\0'; instead of *str = '\0'; and you are right.
> ''\000'', which is of non-class type 'char'
21:58
@RMartinhoFernandes: I fixed my answer, now I'll see if I can make it compilable.
@Pubby Where's that from? It sounds wrong.
Geeceecee
I forgot how to print type, oh well the error shows it

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