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17:00
@LearningSlowly: did you graduate in CS?
@Fanael I really wanted to use duct tape in that sentence.
@RadekdaknokSlupik A lot of my programs are completely header-only.
and they taught you VB?
@JamesCuster you need at least one cpp file containing the main function.
Or you compile header files as TUs.
Which is practically the same thing.
17:00
@RadekdaknokSlupik Right... so my header file / cpp file ratio is huge :)
LOL Java and VB.
And SQL.
user784668
@RadekdaknokSlupik gcc -x c++ wtf.hpp
They should teach Visual Basic and Basic at the same time and call it "Basics of Basics".
Or Basics of Brain Damage
That's C and Java.
17:02
@CatPlusPlus Beginner's all-purpose symbolic instruction languages of beginner's all-purpose symbolic instruction languages?
You can't really say "when".
You need to develop an intuition for that.
2
You learn about tools for solving problems, fitting them to actual problems is your job.
user784668
@LearningSlowly Sure. Just issue mkfs.ext4 /dev/brain
@LearningSlowly Then go read a good book and write programs.
@CatPlusPlus: that's a bit simplistic. The university should give you a methodology, which actually drives your intuition.
Universities suck.
17:05
which one did you graduate from ?
@LearningSlowly: the best way of being helped is to ask something meaningful, actually.
@akappa I'm mostly self-taught, so, dunno. Maybe. Probably.
@CatPlusPlus: most probably you developed a methodology on your own, which is fine.
I'd like to be a corrupt government official. Nice pay, not much to do.
You should learn Haskell.
5
but the vast majority of people doesn't like to have methodology, they see them as limiting and boring. People are mentally chaotic, on average.
17:07
@LearningSlowly program a corrupt government official robot.
Or corrupt government unofficial robot.
@LearningSlowly: what is the most "complicated" thing you wrote?
Goodbye world.
boom, headshot.
user784668
17:08
12 mins ago, by Fanael
/**
 * @brief Returns five;
 * @return Five.
 */
constexpr int returnFive() { return 5; }
lol
lol php.
PHP is easy as hell, until you need to go back and fix something, or find out how a bug occurs (since it's probably a bug in the implementation and not in your code).
PHP is not easy.
languages aren't easy or hard, design and algorithmic problems are.
It's a mess of quirks that just looks easy.
17:11
It's a mess.
Languages can be crappy and unhelpful, or specifically designed to be impossible to use.
user784668
@LearningSlowly: that is a site wrote in flash.
@akappa I'm finding JavaScript to be troublesome despite knowing exactly the design I want, which isn't a complicated one.
@CatPlusPlus brainfuck FTW
Brainfuck isn't impossible. Try Malbolge.
Malbolge is awesome. Encrypted ternary machine code!
JavaScript running on browsers is crappy.
JavaScript is awesome.
@CatPlusPlus Running JavaScript anywhere else is idiotic.
17:13
JavaScript elsewhere is bearable, despite stupid type system and stuff.
''        ==   '0'           // false
0         ==   ''            // true
0         ==   '0'           // true
false     ==   'false'       // false
false     ==   '0'           // true
false     ==   undefined     // false
false     ==   null          // false
null      ==   undefined     // true
" \t\r\n" ==   0             // true
I love JavaScript!
@LearningSlowly You still need another library besides jQuery to provide class inheritance, which is pretty incredible for a language with "Java" in the name.
@Potatoswatter I wrote a chat server with Node for work.
@LearningSlowly Any Turing-complete language can be used to solve any solvable problem.
AFAIK
@Potatoswatter: C++ is "harder" than Java, and Haskell's Monads are not so user-friendly. My point is that writing the actual code is just the last step of your problem-solving, arguably the easiest from an intellectual point-of-view (just a matter of experience)
17:15
@CatPlusPlus Was it easier than doing it in C? Was the result more efficient or portable?
@LearningSlowly: it is "right", not "rite".
@Potatoswatter Yes.
I still don't understand monads. xD
user784668
@akappa u no rite
@CatPlusPlus was it the one from the introductory video from the Node.js website?
17:16
@Potatoswatter Java in the name is purely marketing thing from the first browser wars.
@RadekdaknokSlupik I don't watch introductory videos. I find this entire concept completely stupid.
@CatPlusPlus Well, it's incredible for a language in the UI domain, where OO does tend to be helpful.
@LearningSlowly: English is not my native language, so I find difficult to read and parse not properly written English.
Misread.
@Potatoswatter Ever seen a good UI written in Java? Me neither…
17:17
@LearningSlowly: I understood it on my second try ;)
UI can be done without OO.
Sorry all, that was unclear. JavaScript should have a proper class system because its primary purpose is UI.
Interesting point.
@Potatoswatter CoffeeScript. FTFY.
user784668
@Potatoswatter wat
17:18
You don't need classes in JS.
It's not idiomatic.
@LearningSlowly you.
you dont need classes anywhere.. but they tend to help a lot !
@CatPlusPlus Um, you need classes if you need classes. Idioms don't enter into it.
I've never used any inheritance library for JS.
@LearningSlowly: don't take it personally.
17:19
I've just implemented a UI with several modes of interaction, and now I realized that they have certain things in common and need to be put into a class hierarchy.
Most other languages, the natural thing to do would be to develop it that way in the first place.
@Potatoswatter: the point is that you are so accustomed to OO that you naturally think in this idiom, but it is not the only way of expressing commonality
Not all languages support OO.
It's not a silver bullet.
or relationship between different parts of your application
@akappa No, I've written almost no OO code in my career. This is my first UI job in a looong time.
But I know it when I see it.
17:22
@CatPlusPlus What, Java is strongly typed?
lol clang doesn't suggest "register" for auto-completion.
It doesn't appear in the list.
Even literals are strongly typed in Java. And there's no bool coercion.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Why should it? It's silly.
It shouldn't, but it surprised me.
17:25
All that JS talk reminds me that I was working on a parser.
If that's the only keyword that doesn't auto-complete, then we should write a letter thanking them for the attention to detail. That will surprise someone. (By the way, it's probably XCode, not Clang?)
@Potatoswatter Xcode uses clang for auto-completion.
Isn't clang the c front-end of LLVM?
Interesting. Close integration between the parser and IDE is definitely the future of C++…
maybe you mean that auto-completion in XCode uses the LLVM infrastructure
@Potatoswatter: that's why I hope GCC will eventually die
as venerable and capable of optimizing programs as it is
17:28
@akappa Why do you want it to die?
It does have a terrible license which prevents anyone from integrating it with anything else.
it is monolitic, its design prevents some cool things that LLVM, for example, allows
user784668
@akappa They want to work on it.
^ By intention
user784668
@akappa It won't die, it'll just change name to something more catchy, like "low-level virtual machine".
A compiler is not anything else
17:29
GCC is more modular, and Clang is less modular, than their reputations sometimes suggest. It's a matter of advertising.
@Fanael probably GLLVM :P
@Fanael: good luck! It is a design problem, they should rewrite it from scratch
@Potatoswatter: really?
At least the GCC team/contributors worked a little on the diagnostics.
Btw. GCC 5.0 will be written from scratch.
@akappa GCC has a ton of interchangeable front and back ends. Clang does too, but its development tends to go in whatever single direction Chris Lattner takes.
user784668
17:30
@manasij7479 [citation needed]
@Potatoswatter: clang is just a front-end, while gcc is the entire infrastructure. You should compare GCC to LLVM, really
@akappa It's all Chris Lattner and whatever teams he leads. LLVM + Clang.
17:32
Note that the GCC backend is analogous to LLVM, and the C and C++ frontends are analogous to Clang. There is a very clear separation.
Dunno about the people working there, but LLVM is a collection of libraries, while gcc is as monolithic as it gets.
The can't make it too modular for ideological reasons.
Wow.. there is a lot of FUD going on here !
No, you're just a GCC fanboy.
Well, for practical reasons, there is the matter of being able to select from over a dozen architectures and half dozen or so languages.
17:33
@EtiennedeMartel: really? Why?
Because that would make it easier to use GCC in commercial projects.
GCC is a huge monolithic block because otherwise it might be too easy to embed in commercial software.
this sounds moronic.
No, Stallmanic.
there is a difference?
17:34
If only I could find that fucking quote...
He's smart, but crazy.
> One of our main goals for GCC is to prevent any parts of it from being used together with non-free software. Thus, we have deliberately avoided many things that might possibly have the effect of facilitating such usage... — Richard Stallman
There, @Radek got it.
@manasij7479 That's pretty awesome, especially the talk about licensing. GCC left GNU once before, with EGCS, right? Here's hoping they leave it all behind.
such as being able to export the AST to the IDE, so it integrates better than "just parse the compiler output"
17:36
@RadekdaknokSlupik (The slide preceding the one with Dart Vader.)
He's like the Pol Pot of software.
We will set software free by murdering it!
He's the closest thing we got to a religious fanatic.
EGCS was because GCC was developed behind closed doors, though. They kept the license.
Well, they had to. Silly GPL.
Right. Need some sort of clean room design? What's the necessary legal standard?
Why am I chatting. Parser, dammit.
17:38
He is smart, but common-sense deprived. While I dislike people being entirely common-sense driven (it is an arbitrary way of thinking), I also dislike people who think exclusively in terms of abstract theories
C++ got your tongue.
Because chatting is much better than parsing.
Yeah… in my mind this disqualifies him from "smart." He's just incredibly lucky, and such an asshole that people can't comprehend his social position.
Well... his GPL license is pretty clever. Unfortunately it is more helpful to the user..than us, developers.
GPL must die.
17:40
Pol Pot was really clever. He murdered the largest fraction of the population under his rule of perhaps any tyrant.
Linux is GPLv2, but my phone and my desktop are running it.
The really notable thing about these guys is that they came to positions of power. Screwing up royally doesn't really take talent.
coming to positions of power.. often does
Political talent is not correlated with any other kind. Who wants someone with political talent?
then the analogy does not work here
in a meritocracy, like the open source ecosystem, it takes a lot of talent to get to the top.
17:45
> warning: argument to 'sizeof' in 'memset' call is the same expression as the destination; did you mean to dereference it?
lolwut?
I'm going to dinner. Good $whatever_your_local_time_is
A SIGIL! KILL IT WITH FIRE!
@RadekdaknokSlupik memset(p, 0, sizeof p) vs memset(p, 0, sizeof *p)
That is a very specific and perceptive warning!
17:46
Instead, it should warn about using memset in C++.
Probably someone got sick of their coworkers' mistakes and submitted a patch.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Clang is a C compiler, too.
@LucDanton the warning was in C++ code.
Still not a reason to prevent the warning.
People stitch up bits of C and C++ together all the time.
There are still legitimate uses for memset in C++… although mainly as a microoptimization of std::fill.
(And memset doesn't do the correct thing even in C because null pointers aren't guaranteed to be all zeroes. std::fill is always right.)
17:52
Well, no. If you std::fill the object representation (which would match what memset is doing), you're still dealing with a char type, not a pointer type. If you're std::fill-ing a typed piece of memory (that would mean messing with objects of trivially copyable/destructible types IIRC) then you might as well use assignment, conceptually.
Huh? I mean std::fill or std::uninitialized_fill, whichever is appropriate, and no typecasts. The latter isn't equivalent to assignment.
It is for some types, including pointers.
Woah. I go away for five hours and you guys like, talk, and stuff. And it looks like it was NERD FIGHT
NERD FIGHT NIGHT. Who will be the champion?
That is, the only time there's ever that much activity in an SO chat is NERD FIGHT
17:56
Not that I would mind seeing std::uninitialized_fill rather than assignment as it's more self-documenting, but the point was that it's not similar to memset-ing.
Well… I'm talking about all types. The common use case for memset( p, 0, sizeof *p ) is when p points to a struct whose size might change.
And there are superior alternatives to memset in C for those cases where in C++ you'd use a non-memset-like std::[*_]fill.
(How often do you put a solitary primitive on the heap?)
Gawd, I need to go back and write this JavaScript so I can go sleep before the eclipse tomorrow morning.
iPod headphone socket y u rusty.
On the other hand…
-1
Q: C++ - operator delete[]

NFRCRSome people write this. delete[] ptr; Others do this. delete [] ptr. Obviously this is just a matter of coding style, but everything has a reason. I don't think this is just about the whitespace, I believe there are philosophical reasons why some prefer the first and others the second. What...

18:06
@Potatoswatter Just stay awake till tomorrow morning.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Yes, that is "on the table."
@Potatoswatter thanks. Now I lost 1 rep.
However, I'll be riding my motorcycle out into the lawless, unpaved countryside to get a good view, so being awake is good.
@RadekdaknokSlupik You don't lose rep for downvoting questions.
user997112 y u no accept answer!
@Potatoswatter oh cool. :3
18:21
My parser is so awesome.
Now I need a lexer.
Let me guess… you implemented the entire parser with no testing whatsoever?
@LearningSlowly What's the question, how to forget everything so you can learn properly? Get thee to a Buddhist temple!
Sorry, you have to become a Jedi for that.
Or you could try google search.
Oh. Unfortunately I don't know. Many large projects use Qt but it overlaps with the standard library in an ugly way.
@CatPlusPlus Really?
18:24
Yes.
Did you change that usual recommendation or did I forget about it?
Games != GUIs.
What usual recommendation?
There are low level games?
I want mid level games !
I implemented Tetris in Verilog. The intent was to port it to TTL.
user406009
18:26
GUI implies you want buttons, sliders, etc. Games implies custom sprites(or objects) in one large window.
I had a motor spinning an armature with 32 LEDs in a row.
GTK+ sucks, wxWidgets is terrible, raw WinAPI is unportable and tedious, MFC is unportable crap, Tk is old crap.
Stock answers to questions of the like "What should I use for networking/signals?" and so on.
@CatPlusPlus Ya I remember that.
No GUI in Boost.
Well those were the only examples that came to mind. There are non-Boost answers to other questions.
user406009
18:27
You can make a tetris game in Qt easy.
Uh… I guess I would have to say Verilog/VHDL. And don't forget Ohm's Law.
user406009
Qt has a widget for easily supporting simple 2d games.
@EthanSteinberg QPainter.. or something else ?
Qt is probably heavyweight for Tetris. There's SDL and various other frameworks designed specifically for 2D games.
QTetris.
Qt5 will also have QPong.
Or UDK.
Unreal Development Kit.
Free version of Unreal Engine 3.
Well, free up to some point when going commercial.
But that's long long time ago in the future.
user406009
18:32
Well first you learn to program by creating simple games.
Also SDL sucks.
I'd take Qt over SDL any day.
user406009
Tetris, connect four, checkers, pong are all awesome.
@LearningSlowly There's nothing for us to suggest except cross-platform frameworks because you didn't specify a platform.
The good ones are cross platform anyway .
(And Qt comes in handy when you're doing a launcher, crash reporter and all that other non-in-game tools.)
18:33
Fair nuff then. You don't want to start from zero, so don't worry about that :v)
user406009
@LearningSlowly With tons of effort.
Which things?
@LearningSlowly : You aren't going to learn most of those frameworks by not understanding C++ very well. So, try that first.
Basic UI handling is easy, and not really tied to any language.
user406009
In reality, these are created with core OS windowing libraries. I know Linux's library is called xlib. Forget the names for the windows and OSX ones.
18:37
What exactly do you mean by "from scratch" ?
Call headhunter :v
Use Qt, so you won't spend 2 years trying to get basic framework up and running.
They have simple games in examples.
(Earlier today I realized that I've started writing silly games in December and been doing basic GL windowing ever since. Gah.)
GL windowing ?
Assuming that you mean OpenGl, isn't the windowing supposed to be handled by other libraries ?
I'm writing that other library.
Because other other libraries suck.
Great. (I like SFML very much though..)
What are you using underneath ?
18:42
Xlib, WinAPI.
user868935
does anyone know how to install Sybolic C++ for VS?
Well, and recently, Qt, to release something actually working sooner.
user868935
*Symbolic
what is symbolic C++ ?
user868935
Its for writing complex mathematical equations (the formulas you see with all kinds of symbols)
18:48
I wouldn't use C++ for that. SymPy instead or something.
19:07
Checked exceptions are making me cry.
19:41
Has anybody here every really needed std::vector::at?
@RadekdaknokSlupik range checking fetish only
@RadekdaknokSlupik Sometimes when the vector was created as the result of deserialization. Then you can't be certain that it will be of the expected length. Whether using at() is the best choice here is another (valid) question though...
A numeric library would do best to call at for indexes passed by the user, at least in debug mode. When the user is the end user, then you need to decide whether bad input is really exceptional, but that would be a valid solution.
For deserialization, you often can read the required amount of input and then check for EOF/termination, instead of reading until EOF and barfing if too much got eaten.
@KerrekSB Using std::remove_copy_if is discrimination!
Actually, std::discriminate_if might have been a better name.

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