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18:01
...silence... (@sbi is performing a reply-combo)
@MooingDuck you were baffled about the bitfields? that's the connection back, the context.
#define SELECT_FIRST( Type ) false?*((std::remove_reference<Type>::type*)0)
// x = (SELECT_FIRST( t ) :a? u :b? v : w);

#include <iostream>
void foo()
{
    ostream& o = SELECT_FIRST( ostream& )
        :true?  cout
        :       cerr;
}
sbi
sbi
@Abyx You were disturbing the moment of awe that (rightly, mind you) ensued after I gave a few statements.
What does it return, @CheersandhthAlf ?
@CheersandhthAlf oh, I get it. That sentance should have been outside the note (or in it's own note), since it has nothing to do with the note. I think that's an error.
awe, huh? was it a typo in "ape"?
18:05
@SerenityStackHolder the value v of the first ":condition?v" pair where condition is true
I am so confused by this code
could you please elaborate it?
I used to just write 0?0 instead of that SELECT_FIRST
worked fine for strings due to design bug for string (basic_string) constructor
This use of alfs code makes the usage more clear
0?0 is easy to recognize visually
18:08
Got it! I have read the comment and all suddenly became very clear to me. :)
sbi
sbi
If every #atheist left the US it would lose 93% of the National Academy of Sciences but less than 1% of the prison population @rickygervais
@Abyx What? What is "a moment of ape"?
@CheersandhthAlf (removed)
@sbi dunno, it's you who said that
yes, but it's a little more verbose and potentially microscopically less efficient
sbi
sbi
@Abyx No, I spoke about "a moment of awe". (That's the one you disturbed.)
18:09
e.g. one possibility is a lambda with just if ... return value statements in sequence
I gave up on finding the bit in the spec that prohibits deferencing null, can't find it
@sbi You gotta love Ricky
Lex can be used as a verb, right? i.e., "The first step in compiling is to lex."
@sbi well.. anyway it looked as "moment of ape", no awe...
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay I have never heard about him.
@Abyx But it did so only to meager ASCII birds.
18:11
@Maxpm Lex is a noun. It's a program
@sbi Are you serious now?
@sbi nevermind, the moment was gone already, maybe another day
@ManofOneWay Well, yeah, but it could also be a verb. After all, lexer is a word.
most lexers also serve to vex
3
(maybe)
Type dummyValue()
{
    assert( false );
    typedef typename std::remove_reference< Type >::type BasicType;
    return *static_cast< BasicType* >( nullptr );
}

#define SELECT_FIRST( Type ) false?dummyValue<Type>()
// x = (SELECT_FIRST( t ) :a? u :b? v : w);

#include <iostream>
void foo()
{
    ostream& o = SELECT_FIRST( ostream& )
        :true?  cout
        :       cerr;
}
@CheersandhthAlf nitpick: you're missing template<typename Type> off the beginning
sbi
sbi
18:22
@ManofOneWay About what?
I also prefer assert(!"This function should not be called!"); or similar, but that's personal preference.
@sbi Not knowing who Ricky Gervais is?
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay I solemnly swear that I seriously do not know who Ricky Gervais is. I am sorry.
@ManofOneWay I've never heard of him
???
Haven't you heard of The Office?
18:25
@ManofOneWay I've heard of it
@ManofOneWay The MS Office ?
Then I suggest you watch it, it's the best tv show ever
The UK version
The US version isn't as good
but still good
@ManofOneWay but I'm not normally aware of producers of bad foreign TV
@MooingDuck oh sorry.
Bad foreign TV? Are you for real?
18:26
remind me, code pasting site that runs prog?
@CheersandhthAlf ideone
@ManofOneWay "...When it was first shown on BBC Two it was nearly cancelled due to low ratings..." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Office_(UK_TV_series)
^ Little program for my writings.
@MooingDuck It's funny how to just paste that part but not "the series has been sold to broadcasters in over 80 countries,"
18:29
ideone does not like C++11, like header <type_traits>?
@MooingDuck And you could have at least pasted the whole sentence: "When it was first shown on BBC Two it was nearly cancelled due to low ratings, but has since become one of the most successful British comedy exports of all time."
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay I am working at an office. There's no Rick working there. And definitely no Garvais.
@ManofOneWay :D
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay Oh, it's a TV thing? Well, I haven't lived with a TV for 20 years.
But seriously guys, I suggest you watch it. It's really good
... Lived without a TV for 20 years?
18:31
@ManofOneWay I hated the US version, never bothered to see the UK version. I dislike that genere
@ManofOneWay I haven't had one in 4 years
long longFrom( char const spec[], int const radix = 0 )
{
    char* pEndOfScan  = 0;      // The unsafe type is required by `strtol`.

    stdErrnoRef() = 0;
    long const result = strtol( spec, &pEndOfScan, radix );
    string const failureDescription = [pEndOfScan, spec]() -> string {
        if( pEndOfScan == spec ) return
            "longFrom failed: the number spec was not accepted by strtol().";
        if( stdErrno() == ERANGE ) return
            "longFrom failed: the specified number value is too large for strtol().";
I am not sure if that is better.
How would you guys write it?
Assuming that strtol has to be used (e.g. because compiler does not support C++11 rules for iostream input conversion)
One natural variant I guess would be a sequence of if throw
But that would be a special case solution, not applicable to e.g.
wstring stringFrom( NegatableInteger const x, Radix const r = Radix( 10 ) )
{
    return 0?0
        : x == 0?       L"0"
        : x < 0?        L'-' + digitsOf( StrictlyPositiveInteger( -x ), r )
        :               digitsOf( StrictlyPositiveInteger( x ), r );
}
awe!!!
I haz kat
it is a tiny little ball of awesome cute
makes up a shitty day
@ManofOneWay @sbi beats me in number of years, but I also can't understand why people willingly subject themselves to a chatter-box in the center of their home, like a sort of god on a pinnacle, serving distracting mumbo-jumbo to the worshippers all the time
@CheersandhthAlf ideone.com/S0IZp
18:47
@CheersandhthAlf I thought owning a TV was unavoidable when having kids.
@sbi I assume you still watch TV shows though, like download them
@Abyx yes, that's the if throw sequence I meant. But I would never throw logic_error. It is intended for those situations where you'd better assert. The standard actually (for once) explains the intentions. The intentions are not good...
awe, she's sat on my lap, nibbling my hair
the cat that is
the grumpy one that wouldn't socialise earlier this week?
@thecoshman you have very long hair?
i'm trying to visualize...
18:53
I'm going to play it safe and assume it's arm hair we're talking about
@CheersandhthAlf happily reaches down to my nipples :P
@awoodland me? grumpy? hardly
@thecoshman someone was talking about a grumpy rescue cat
I now think the following best -- explicit is good, implicit is bad:
wstring stringFrom( NegatableInteger const x, Radix const r = Radix( 10 ) )
{
    return 0?wstring()
        : x == 0?       L"0"
        : x < 0?        L'-' + digitsOf( StrictlyPositiveInteger( -x ), r )
        :               digitsOf( StrictlyPositiveInteger( x ), r );
}
@awoodland oh no, this is a little of pure cute. she (we think it's a she) likes to nibble your hands.
19:15
Is it me or does: stackoverflow.com/suggested-edits/266978 break the code?
@awoodland it totally breaks the code, he accidentally a line. But that's what the "improve" button is for
@MooingDuck yeah, it's a good idea in principle
@1166066 you accidentally a line
hmm, doesn't work. Oh well.
I really wish I could @ people on SO to bring them here :/ Never figured out why we can't.
@MooingDuck you need moderator powers to do that
you can @editors on questions/answers though
even though they don't autocomplete
@Jared your edit lost a critical line it seems — awoodland 43 secs ago
@awoodland sure they do, unless you @ the poster of the Q/A itself.
19:21
@MooingDuck try it - jared doesn't auto complete on that but is still notifiable
@awoodland oh, it autocompletes other posters. Are you sure the notification happened?
I don't think anything happens when you @randomnames, including a warning
10
A: Allow post editor to see @comments directed at him

Jeff Atwoodedit: this is now implemented. We do a simple reverse chronological walk of the latest "action" by any user with a valid displayname in the post -- where "action" is defined by any sort of edit or comment. So you can now @reply to editors of a post even if they haven't commented. (and just as ...

@awoodland I wish it would give a warning if you @ a typo'd name
@MooingDuck yeah that wouldn't be too hard to do presumably either since it's just a "return error if we didn't match" anything
19:44
Damn, I have the Super Mario RPG soundtrack stuck in my head.
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay I find it especially important to not to have a TV because I have kids.
@EtiennedeMartel Link to the best song in the game please :)
I'm away for a while and all kinds of uninteresting and boring messages get starred.
Also, what's up guys?
@RadekdaknokSlupik probably that messages are too smart for you.
Probably.
Or I'm too smart for them.
sbi
sbi
19:53
@thecoshman Actually, I don't. I sometimes watch football, but even that is rare. The mother of one of the kids in one of my daughter's kindergarten group is an actress, and after she told me she has become the detective in a rather important German detective story series, I have watched two of those. But otherwise? Nah.
We picked up my father from the airport today, and right now he sits opposite of me and watches TV (using his laptop). From what I hear, nothing appeals to me.
Whoo! This is the first use of an (experimental) new Stack Exchange feature in which you can answer your own question http://serverfault.com/questions/390493
@sbi What?
Oh, you can just write up the answer before the question goes live?
sbi
sbi
@Collin Oops. It's the date?
Mhmm. Indeed, the very same second.
What's that supposed to be good for?
@Collin In fact, you could always do that. You'd still have to post both of them manually, of course.
@sbi That's what confused me about the tweet, I'd seen (and done that) very thing before
32
A: What is this "answer your own question" jazz?

Shog9Since Stack Overflow began, spontaneously sharing what you've learned by posting a question and immediately answering it has been allowed and even encouraged: if you have a question that you already know the answer to if you’d like to document it in public so others (including yourself) ...

Now there's a checkbox reminding people that this is a perfectly reasonable way to put up notes of problems you've solved
sbi
sbi
20:11
@Collin Ah, good find!
Xeo
Xeo
I have a feeling the C++faq had a great part in pushing this forward
sbi
sbi
@Collin Yeah, I noticed that quote, too. He has a point.
@Xeo Have a look at this.
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi I saw that, but that's a different matter, isn't it?
sbi
sbi
@Xeo TTBOMK it's the last time we've brought this to the attention of meta's inmates.
@sbi yet he still watches tv?
sbi
sbi
20:21
@thecoshman Who? My father? What do you mean, "yet"?
Oh, you mean despite it being dull?
@sbi yeah, bad wording sorry. You say he finds nothing appealing, yet still watches tv on his laptop
any hoops, I have kitten :D
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman "...nothing appeals to me"
I find it dull. He, I think, likes crime stories.
@sbi ¬_¬ stupid words not being what I think they are
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman What? Is that infective?
@sbi it's adorable :D
it was resting on my lap as I watched some you tube, now it's running around, and pulling at my shirt
sbi
sbi
20:25
@thecoshman What are you doing with a kitten? I thought you have a girlfriend?
@sbi I have both now :D
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I'd find that too stressful.
77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777‌​777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777‌​777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777‌​7777777777777777777777777777777777777789999999999999999999999999xxx
said that cat :P
@sbi why? both are able to feed and clean themselves and are both potty trained
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman I thought cats walking on the keyboard are typing PERL?
@sbi not all cat's know perl
sbi
sbi
20:29
@thecoshman And both consider you personnel, no?
@sbi what do you mean?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Do you have to know PERL in order to type it? I thought all you have to do is to drop a cat on your keyboard.
@thecoshman Nobody owns a cat. Those who think they do, are just the cat's personnel. That pretty much resembles women, doesn't it?
@sbi cats think they own humans though so at least it's a mutual misunderstanding
sbi
sbi
@awoodland No. There's no misunderstanding on the cats' side.
@sbi I can vouch for this. Our cats own us.
20:38
yeah, I know cat's tend to get the upper hand, they so cute :D
sbi
sbi
Yeah, just like women.
I promise I will stop going on about the new cat soon
@sbi oooh, you're only saying that because you had a few bad runs :P
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Actually, I had very good runs. Only they ended prematurely. That doesn't change the facts about women, though. :)
What to buy for my girlfriend for her birthday? I'm all out of ideas :(
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay The best would be to buy her what she would want.
20:48
@sbi You've being doing this many times, any suggestions on what to buy?
@ManofOneWay You just got his suggestion
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay That depends on the persons involved and their relationship. Without knowing either, how are we supposed to help you?
By brainstorming!
@ManofOneWay legos?
sbi
sbi
@ManofOneWay What does she like?
20:55
@ManofOneWay Something written by Nicholas Sparks
@ManofOneWay A movie based on something written by Nicholas Sparks
for(int i = 0; bool j == 0; j = false) cout << "huh";
why does this end up in endless loop!?
i want it only go one time through it
did I mention I have kitten :D
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman No, you didn't. Tell us all about it!
@thecoshman does it have the nothrow guarantee
@JohannesSchaublitb because your test condition for the for loop never gets set to false, btw it should be j == false. not j = false.
sbi
sbi
21:04
@ManofOneWay Cosmetics, jewelry, a book, a movie (DVD or cinema), a visit to some wellness temple, a play at the theater, a self-written poem, a night out (dinner?), a night in (bed?), a book about pregnancy, a pair of baby shoes, the long-awaited repair of the dripping tap, a bunch of loving words (for a change), you drop all the other lovers you have... There, that was my brain storming about this.
@sbi it's an amazing little bundle of cute
@johnathon but I set it to false with j = false !?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Um, I wanted to hear about the kitten, not the woman.
@JohannesSchaublitb your not testing f, your testing j
sorry i meant j
but i set j to false!?
21:07
@JohannesSchaublitb better to use for(int i = 0; i < 1; i++){cout <<"huh";}
sbi
sbi
@johnathon You fail to see the point. He always shows up here with such twisted pieces of code, and pretends he doesn't understand it. It's somehow satisfying to him to see you guys struggle to catch up with his analysis.
@MooingDuck are you having a better day to day?
@sbi i really could care less what his intentions are right, and i don't struggle with his analysis, the whole point of his loop was to make an endless loop. It was ill formed. End of story.
@johnathon I think you misread the code
@johnathon there's no f in his code
@MooingDuck i never misread his code, he's the one that mentioned the f
21:14
@johnathon so he did, he edit'ed it away. Sorry :/
@sbi though i agree with your whole comment in general sbi, doing things like that is just moronic to begin with
sbi
sbi
@johnathon Of course it is. That's his point.
@JohannesSchaublitb first glance says (1) in the middle of the for loop, creating a variable always evaluates to true, resulting in an infinite loop, and (2) in the increment part of the for loop j is out of scope, it shouldn't compile. Second glance wonders if that's valid syntax, and if variable creation actually always evaluates to true, even when it's a bool assigned false.
21:30
@sbi Thank you :)
@EtiennedeMartel Sounds nice! How's the game?
21:53
@sbi /slowclap
22:07
see what I replied to him:
22:18
@AnthonyWilliams: No. On i=++i I think it's your answer that is wrong. 5.17.1(N3126=10-0116) says that the value computation of the assignment expression itself is sequenced after the assignment. ++i is equivalent to (i+=1) (5.3.2) and therefore its value computation is sequenced after the increment. The main assignment in i=++i is therefore sequenced by transitivity after the increment assignment and the expression is valid. The very fact that someone claiming your C++ experience can get this wrong also confirms (albeit anecdotally) that my rant on complexity is not totally foolish. — 6502 Mar 7 at 20:30
my o my. truth in advertising
is there a standard template algorithm that is the equivalent of int compare(char*, char*)?
@MooingDuck I think Boost Mpl is supposed to contain some compile-time string handling stuff. Brace for ugly syntax
@sehe I don't need compile time, I just want compare on generic types :/
@MooingDuck What does that mean? Do you want std::less<>?
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman: UHC
@MooingDuck What exactly do you mean? compare doesn't make sense outside of strings, most of the time
22:29
template<class iterator, class comparitor>
int compare(iterator left_begin, iterator left_end, iterator right_begin, comparitor comp) {
    while(left_begin != left_end) {
        int c = comp(*left_begin++, *right_begin++);
        if (c) return c;
    }
     return 0;
}
@MooingDuck std::lexicographical_compare
@Xeo sure it does, lessthan/equalto/greater than all at once
@sehe returns a bool
@Xeo a map of std::string is slower than could be, because when when it finds a match, it first checks less than, and then checks not less than. This compare function would allow both at once, giving a (tiny) performance boost
Xeo
Xeo
@MooingDuck That's what I meant with "most of the time". For a sequence of anything else than chars, I don't really see any use, though
@MooingDuck Then use (roughly) std::mismatch
@Xeo anything that could compare less than/equal to/greater than at the same time where comparisons may or may not be slow
22:34
// assuming elements convertible to int and modulo iterator checking:
auto p = std::mismatch(...); return *(p.first) - *(p.second);
@MooingDuck ^ viable?
@sehe I never heard of mismatch, I'm reading up on it
@sehe thats... remarkably close actually. Except it returns the iterator instead of the value :/ Oh well.
@MooingDuck see snippet^
@sehe I'm already copying it into my code :)
But to be more precise, no I'm not aware of a 'one-stop-shop' standard algo
I do think mismatch is a better idea than what I wanted, I just wanted a one-liner. Two's fine.
22:38
@MooingDuck Remember to do the iterator checking for strings of different lengths/end of input conditions. You can know what to expect (could be more efficient with nullterminated strings, but you'd probably want to expand std::mismatch)
@MooingDuck Two lines is a myth. You can't have it if you consider all (edge) cases ^
oh noes. not that one :)
@stdOrgnlDave specially for you:
I am in the middle of writing some code to retrieve the amount of lines in a file and then to take each line and store it into a vector, the function written to do this works fine however when I call the function the vector does not get returned to the new vector that I am trying to pass the returned vector to
Is there something wrong with this? vector<string> vectors = ReadIn(fille,lines);
22:51
@Charlie There is something wrong if it doesn't work as expected...
^ Be sure to include the relevant code
haha I just narrowed it down to that line
@Charlie are you trying to fill up that vector1 in the ReadIn function?
because to add an item to a vector you should use vec.push_back(item);
that gets filled in there, I added a cout line each time around to make sure it was being populated
ah
22:54
@TonyTheLion or std::copy and std::back_inserter
and not vec.at(i) = blah because .at(x) returns an item at that position, afaik and cannot be used to insert
#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <fstream>
#include <iostream>

std::vector<std::string> ReadLines(std::istream& file)
{
    std::vector<std::string> lines;
    std::string line;
    while (std::getline(file, line))
        lines.push_back(line);

    return lines;
}

int main(int argc, const char *argv[])
{
    std::ifstream file("/tmp/test.cpp");
    std::cout << "Lines: " << ReadLines(file).size() << '\n';
}
@Charlie are the strings whitespace seperated?
got it
22:55
^ @Charlie something like that?
yea I think @sehe got the idea
@TonyTheLion I think that's the key
Also lag :(
ok thanks
I just started on my C++ adventures today
It makes me HATE JAVA!
22:56
have you got a C++ book?
because learning just from the interwebz, is not a good idea
too many rules and funny exceptions to the rules
ohh, No I dont, I have a basic idea of things because I know c and java
so Im kind of just figuring bits out
But I will invest!
you should
I see what you mean, there is a million different ways to do one thing some of which are just stupid!
(from the internet guides)
Actually, I do have a book, I was given it last year!
22:58
indeed
std::vector<std::string> ReadLines(std::istream& file) {
    std::vector<std::string> lines;
    typedef std::istream_iterator<std::string> iiter;
    std::copy(iter(file), iter(), std::back_inserter(lines));
    return lines;
}
what makes that better?

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