« first day (2447 days earlier)      last day (2493 days later) » 

user1804599
2:00 PM
Guru Mediation
 
user1804599
Happy tau day!
 
@rightfold is it better than Haskell though
 
Ven
Haskell or GHC?
it doesn't have all the GHC extensions but it has some very very nice things
@rightfold what because of your compile-time regex hack?
 
objective C will become the new cobol :p
 
Ven
2:05 PM
objective-c++ on the other hand
 
Obj-C and thus Obj-C++ are dead
Swift on the other hand
 
@BartekBanachewicz For some reason I thought I remembered you ranting on Haskell and saying it was awful or something.
Might have been a nightmare.
 
@Shoe it's still the best language I know of vOv
there's no match for the clarity and expressiveness and common abstractions used by everyone
 
Ven
I like working with haskell when I don't have too much I/O to do
it gets real painful
 
funnily enough OpenGL in Haskell isn't that bad
I'm gonna go back to Hate during autumn/winter BTW
 
2:25 PM
0
Q: Why do references occupy memory when member of a class?

ThuI have been told that references, when they are data members of classes, they occupy memory since they will be transformed into constant pointers by the compiler. Why is that? Like why does the compiler(I know that it is implementation-specific in general) make a reference a pointer when they are...

Anyone else wanna have a go? Its obvious to me what the difference is but apparently I cannot express it clearly (enough).
 
Ven
wow
he's so confused
 
On this site: https://www.quora.com/What-will-happen-if-humans-use-100-of-their-logical-thinking-without-emotion

Someone said, "*(Humans)+(Logical Thinking)-(Emotions)=(zombies)*"
Does this mean humans + logical thinking = zombies + emotions ?
lol
 
Ven
lol quora
 
Just came across it.
 
@Borgleader when you said " while this may seem redundant, consider the print call, how could it refer to the right int without using some memory?", couldn't the compiler simply replace the reference with the address of the integer instead of making the reference into a pointer and then make that pointer point to the address of the integer? I know that I am maybe a little too confused. — Thu 15 mins ago
I can hardly parse that -.-;
 
Ven
2:40 PM
@BartekBanachewicz did you read the fun with the proposed C++ macros/Metaclasses?
 
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz i dont think you realize ; D
 
a what
also someone just tried to attack my argument on FB by saying "but you didn't respond to my other claims". Yeah, I didn't, I just said you were wrong in this particular point. Sigh.
 
3:10 PM
@BartekBanachewicz Nice
 
Real analysis is way realer than I expected.
2
 
3:46 PM
with all our bureaucracy, I was able to add a single missing slash to one python script in just a 15 minutes, now about two hours of waiting time to see the results //_.
even then some devops would probably fuck up the build, so they would give me tickets, like it's really my problem and not theirs… eh
 
user1804599
@sehe Do you use HTTP in C++?
 
4:10 PM
@rightfold rarely . Hint: use checked buffets (unlike Beast)
 
user1804599
?????
 
user1804599
 
Ven
sehe back at it.
 
Phone.
 
user1804599
Oh "rarely"
 
user1804599
4:12 PM
Now the first part of it makes sense.
 
user1804599
Now all that is left deciphering is the hint.
 
hi
@sehe Video
 
TIL that void foo(int a[3]) doesn't take a by value :/
 
Ven
lol passing array as parameters
 
yep
 
4:18 PM
@gnzlbg Doesn't it?
You get the value of a*
 
which allows you to modify the content of a
 
user1804599
@gnzlbg Use std::array<int, 3>, you badlet.
 
@gnzlbg but you can't modify a's state itself
 
user1804599
In C you can do foo(int a[static 3]), and then it's UB to pass a pointer to an array shorter than three elements. :P
 
but what is the difference in behavior of void foo(int (&a)[3]) then ?
i would expect the &a to allow me to modify the array
and a by value to allow me to modify it but those changes not be observable outside of foo
 
user1804599
4:20 PM
Yes, but the problem here is that you are expecting things.
 
but because both a and &a meant int* and int*&
 
@gnzlbg awwwww, so adorable :3 you thought C-arrays behave sanely
 
@gnzlbg It's simple -- any changes to a itself propragate I think
 
user1804599
This is C++.
 
next time you won't be using C-arrays
 
4:21 PM
reference to pointer to int
 
I mean, this was totally unnecessary
 
@gnzlbg It's a good design choice imo
 
just forbid int a[3]
 
@gnzlbg That's stupid
 
and allow only int (&a)[3]
 
user1804599
4:21 PM
Incompatible with C.
 
@gnzlbg You're expecting Java things from C++ don't do that
 
user1804599
Too breaking a change this would be.
 
@gnzlbg C++ does it because C does it
 
user1804599
Deal with it and use std::array instead of arrays.
 
user1804599
Don't be a badlet. You know how.
 
4:22 PM
@rightfold what is std::array good for again? hmmm
 
Ven
not for you
 
@VermillionAzure not being a C-array is the main advantage
 
@milleniumbug but seriously
what is the advantage
 
I know, still, somebody wrote it on reddit and I was like "thats wrong, that array is taken by value, C++ won't let me downthis time again"
 
user1804599
@VermillionAzure It's not a C-style array, so that's already a pretty good thing about it.
 
user1804599
4:23 PM
You can pass it and return it and assign it and so on.
 
that's the advantage
 
@gnzlbg No, it's a well known principle that arrays decay to pointers in C++
 
user1804599
It won't decay to a pointer.
 
@rightfold Mmm so it's a first-class object now and not decaying
@rightfold Ohhhh right sorry
 
i knew that they decay to a pointer, if i pass it to foo(int*)
but I am passing it to foo(int a[3])
 
4:24 PM
@gnzlbg Hmmm I see your point
 
79
A: How do I use arrays in C++?

fredoverflowAssignment For no particular reason, arrays cannot be assigned to one another. Use std::copy instead: #include <algorithm> // ... int a[8] = {2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19}; int b[8]; std::copy(a + 0, a + 8, b); This is more flexible than what true array assignment could provide because it is ...

^ see parameter passing
 
Welp anyways
I need to go to work
bye
 
ok, I think i got over it
 
user1804599
In C it was convenient to have this.
 
user1804599
And if a function took an array by value you couldn't call it anyway lol
 
4:27 PM
one would need to implement assignment for arrays
 
user1804599
Not very useful.
 
anyways, <array> sucks
 
user1804599
Fixed-size arrays are of extremely limited use.
 
I use them a lot :/
 
user1804599
And dynamically-sized arrays would need memcpy anyway.
 
4:29 PM
and memory allocations
<array> seems like the attempt to fix C-arrays done by an evil genious
initialization, its an aggregate, so you must use {{ ... }}
initializer lists don't work with it (yet another corner case with initialization)
 
template<typename T, std::size_t N> struct array { T inner[N]; /* all the stuff */ }; done
^ it's basically this
 
also array does not propagate noexcept correctly, and it just became constexpr in C++17
 
user1804599
Lol using braces.
 
sure, because who would dislike to learn a completely new incompatible array syntax?
array<int, 3> a = {0, 1, 2}; // jokes on you
array<int, 3> a {0, 1, 2}; // jokes on you again
 
well, the former works, it always worked
because you can elide braces
the latter doesn't but the uniform initialization syntax is garbage anyway
 
4:34 PM
clang and gcc spit errors for us
something like array is an aggregate and you must use {{ }}
or something like that
 
user1804599
std::make_array
 
maybe it's just a warning that gets turned into an error
 
user1804599
auto a = std::make_array<int>(0, 1, 2);.
 
user1804599
It uses sizeof....
 
4:35 PM
we definetly needed another array syntax because we don't have enough
 
heh, clang warns
main.cpp:5:29: warning: suggest braces around initialization of subobject [-Wmissing-braces]
    std::array<int, 3> a = {0, 1, 2};
 
try to write a compatible std::make_c_array that you can use to port a code-base step by step
oh you cannot
 
yeah but that's because you can't return C-arrays but value
 
@milleniumbug yeah, array is just template <T, N> struct array { T elems[N] } so you are doing the direct initialization of array member by member, and the first element is a member, so you need {{ }}
 
only if you have that warning enabled and made it an error
 
4:37 PM
I don't know why gcc doesn't warn, but this is actually some logic that I can follow
 
it's legal C++ otherwise
 
I think we compile with clang -Werror
maybe also -Wall, who knows
 
user1804599
-W{all,extra,pedantic}.
 
4:55 PM
meow
hello
@rightfold loooooooooooool
Hey what do you guys think about Nim?
 
5:28 PM
Not worth learning
Immature ecosystem, no paradigm shift
 
user1804599
5:48 PM
Certainly worth learning.
 
user1804599
Just like every programming language.
 
Would be cooler if the language was called Ni instead of Nim
 
The Knights Who Say Ni!
 
Ni Ni Ni!
 
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Sounds like a really annoying little sister in some Anime.
 
5:58 PM
You should watch the monty python movie
If I remember correctly it's the Holy Grail one
 
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Mounty Python? Is that the Canadian version of Monty Python? :-)
 
"The Mounties who say Ni!" Oh, sorry. "The Royal Canadian Mounted Police who say Ni!"
 
funny
By itself the mounted police sounds funny
 
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Given rule 34, I hate to think of how many NSFW pictures would turn up in a search for "Royal Canadian Mounted Police". At least one too many meanings of "mounted" for that to be safe at all...
 
6:07 PM
@JerryCoffin I was just thinking about assumptions about who is mounting whom
 
6:18 PM
@JerryCoffin lol
 
user1804599
7:00 PM
@sehe @StackedCrooked Did you ever use POCO's HTTP library?
 
I've used it a little bit long time ago.
 
user1804599
I'm not sure if I'll use it. It looks awful.
 
user1804599
Maybe I won't use HTTP.
 
user1804599
Well I need to perform an HTTP request.
 
user1804599
apparently this is a thing github.com/Microsoft/cpprestsdk
 
7:10 PM
@Borgleader Dat title:
50
Q: Saying that a user is in "top 100%" isn't nice

user259867Colin is here for the badges, not reputation. And that's okay. Why rub it in by saying he's not even in top 99% of users? It's like saying "he graduated in top 100% of his class". I suggest not showing percentages above 50%.

 
Ell
7:25 PM
@Mysticial lol
 
7:55 PM
@milleniumbug What an idiot, he answered his own question 4 times... :)
 
as if one time wasn't enough :D
 
@AndyProwl process substitution in e.g. bash is another case of splicing you might be already familiar with, namely splicing in the output of a subshell: echo "the date is $(date)"
 
user1804599
@fredoverflow What happens with template<typename T> void f(T); and then f<int[8]>(xs)?
 
user1804599
Will f take a pointer?
 
Good question! I have no idea.
Either that, or compile-time error.
 
8:04 PM
@Mysticial lol
its a good motivator!
 
#include <iostream>

template<typename T>
void f(T)
{
    std::cout << sizeof(T) << '\n';
}

int main()
{
    int xs[7];
    f(xs);         // prints 8
    f<int[7]>(xs); // prints 28, wow
}
 
user1804599
> After substitution, all function parameters of array and function type are adjusted to pointers and all top-level cv-qualifiers are dropped from function parameters (as in a regular function declaration).
 
@fredoverflow now name the parameter and compare to the size of that
 
Should not make a difference... a variable of type T has the same size as the type T, right?
 
user1804599
@fredoverflow No, see my message
 
user1804599
8:08 PM
The type parameter stays the same, but the value parameter is adjusted to a pointer type
 
@fredoverflow oh boy :)
 
@LucDanton You're right, it does make a difference!
 
user1804599
So the parameter won't have type T if T is an array or a function type.
 
try it with a function type
 
sizeof doesn't work on function types
 
8:10 PM
and I’d say try it with a reference type but that would be anti-climactic :)
 
Did you know there are references to functions? :)
 
@fredoverflow now try template<typename T> void f(T x) { std::cout << sizeof(T) << " " << sizeof(x) << '\n'; }
 
@milleniumbug I already tried, it prints 28 and 8, and I hung my head in shame :(
 
@fredoverflow template<typename Val> struct one { Val payload; }; comparing sizeof(Val) to sizeof(one<Val>) should be more illustrative when it comes to that question and reference types
 
That dog's owner is a genius!
 
Ell
8:14 PM
@fredoverflow cute
 
> After you DDoS your system, you put a call to sleep(). After you slowly DDoS your system, each retry waits twice as long as the previous.
 
user1804599
@fredoverflow lol
 
user1804599
#include <boost\\asio\\error.hpp>
#include <boost\\locale.hpp>
using namespace std;
 
user1804599
At least OP is using Boost.
 
9:05 PM
^ one slash for her protection, one slash for my protection
 
> a = "\\"
'\\'
> a = JSON.stringify(a)
'"\\\\"'
> a = JSON.stringify(a)
'"\\"\\\\\\\\\\""'
> a = JSON.stringify(a)
'"\\"\\\\\\"\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"\\""'
> a = JSON.stringify(a)
'"\\"\\\\\\"\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"\\\\\\"\\""'
This must be why run-length encoding was invented.
 
That's also why code-bloat is as fast as Moore's Law. Both are exponential.
 
Incidentally this is why JSON is not fit for applications where users may manually input data (for example Windows file names). XML fo life.
Although XML has a problem with spaces in keys (or attributes, or something similar)...
 
percent-encoding does not have this problem. It's so much nicer than dumb escaping.
 
Come to think of it, backspace escaping is gonna cause problems with the config file format that I'm using in the next version of my Pi program. If anyone copy-pastes a path with slashes in Windows into it, it's gonna break.
 
9:08 PM
Yes, use xml
 
But OTOH, backspace escaping is standard almost everywhere.
 
With percent encoding you get: %, %25, %2525, %252525, %25252525
And if you need to escape a comma in a CSV file, then the comma will disappear in the output (replaced by %xx). Making the file easier to parse.
 
JSON was nice because fields don't, aren't allowed to alias
We need an HTML subset that enforces the no alias behavior
 
You mean fields can't reference to other fields?
JSON has stupid comma rules though.
 
9:19 PM
Oh that's kind of neat
 
Woa Rapptz is back wooooot
 
Woah, it's RAPPTZ!!!
 
@Mysticial I know a secret incantation to summon him
 
I didn't know std::span was accepted?
I thought that was a GSL thing
 
Stop the presses! Deck the halls! Verb the nouns!
 
9:21 PM
Also hi lol
I'm in the Discord server now
 
@Rapptz last I looked it was spelled std::string_view, and the array/vector/container equivalent was still TBD what with the ranges work (but could still end up being named span I guess)
 
Yeah you have stock options with them.
 
They didn't remove std::strstream did they
 
@Rapptz Didn't even know that thing existed.
> strstream has been deprecated since C++98
Wow that's a long time and it's still there.
 
9:24 PM
@Rapptz I don’t think so. Sorry if I got your hopes up, but we might be looking at post-C++17 work right now
 
I use std::strstream!
 
> you madman
 
It's good for a stream based on a pre-allocated buffer unlike std::stringstream
 
don’t shout you pervert
 
I'm sure it is.
 
9:26 PM
The problem with std::strstream is that there's this weird dynamic hybrid thing
 
> Since r0, this paper focused on a single syntax for abbreviating lambdas, and includes a stronger motiviation for the need for SFINAE and noexcept.
another proposal that wants automatic SFINAE + noexcept, but this time restricted to lambda exprs
 
@Rapptz Yes, still there--and no sign of their following up the "Deprecated" with actual removal.
 
again the automatic noexcept thing is not properly thought out
 
@LucDanton noexcept all the things!
 
Did you see the metaclass proposal?
I assume everyone here did
 
9:28 PM
Yep.
Dunno if there's been much discussion though.
 
@Rapptz Yes, undoubtedly (for sufficiently loose definitions of "everyone").
 
@Rapptz indeed
19 hours ago, by Luc Danton
of course, this month’s big darling that’s getting all the attention: Metaclasses
 
It piggy-backs off of a lot of other Andrew Sutton proposals.
 
metaclasses?
 
So the proposal felt more like a presentation than an actual proposal.
@Mysticial They're called metaclasses I assume because they allow you to change the meaning of the class keyword/specifier to your own, but I consider them more like super fancy macros.
 
9:31 PM
well, that’s more or less how many proposals begin as. there are the minor proposals that introduce simple editiorial/wording changes or introduce a defect fix, but major work tends to start off from a tiny grain of silt
12 hours ago, by Luc Danton
if you read through the lines it’s a way to introduce interface without it being either a keyword or even a feature altogether
another unkind way to put it
 
It was just a lot bigger than most presentation-style proposals
I like the proposal (it looks pretty handy) but I'm still longing for fetching attributes/annotations to a specific field for what I want.
 
the discussion around concepts also has used a lot of background exposition
 
I wish I could do [[thing::tag]] int x;
 
@Rapptz inside the code, or from outside the code? reflection gives you the former
 
or that kind-of lazy annotation proposal
 
9:34 PM
@LucDanton :)
 
@thing int x;
 
Hello c#ava
 
I just want to attach things and retrieve them later.
Meta-info is good
 
@Rapptz you will be able to if the reflection proposal that ends up being picked allows you to reify the correct… thing (e.g. blocks)
 
@Rapptz and the complete lack of RAII locking
 
9:35 PM
the metaclass proposal relies on sutton's type of reflection no?
 
Aww, I was hoping it would be something that would let me forward-declare a typedef as an incomplete type without needing the original type to be visible.
 
@Rapptz any form of static reflection will do
 
The inheritance hack doesn't always work.
 
Herb uses Herb’s static reflection presumably because he is familiar with it. or so he thinks
 
And it's not always feasible to forward declare the entire typedef chain to its root.
 
9:37 PM
I don't actually like the reflexpr type proposal
:(
 
this wouldn’t happen with Template Haskell
 
I wanna write C++ again but I'm pretty balls deep in Python
 
turn off all your notifications
 
@Rapptz That must be an awesome feeling!
 
@Mysticial One thing you can do is replace void foo(MyTypedef) with a function template and only define it in the .cpp file (where the full type is known). It's not really good interface design, but I suppose it's ok for internals stuff in your detail namespace.
When the function is called with the real type the function template is instantiated, which must match the function definition in your cpp file.
 
9:45 PM
> But thanks to the wonders of gradual typing, this isn't a real problem
 
I've used it to avoid needing to include boost::future in a central header file. (Since that would introduce massive compile-time overhead.)
 
@StackedCrooked I don't think that quite works for the use-case that I care about, but it definitely sounds useful in other cases. thanks
Though it would probably still work if I go through another layer of class/struct indirection. But that gets ugly.
@StackedCrooked Speaking of which, there's a hella lot of stuff in std:: that I'd like to forward declare as that avoids unnecessarily pulling in the chain of headers there. Which in Windows at least can easily exceed several hundred 100k LOC alone.
 
Yeah. Lately I've started dumbing down my code in favor of simplicity. Rather have a little bit of duplication then a complicated template construct that ends up having only two instantiations in the entire codebase.
 
Even std::string in Windows pulls in probably around half a million LOC if I remember correctly.
And for someone like me who like to split out things into many small CUs, that gets a little annoying.
 
Dunno about windows, but on GCC they have much of string into the lib.
 
nwp
9:58 PM
@StackedCrooked Sounds like there should be a static analysis tool that finds templates that are instantiated exactly once.
 
@StackedCrooked Problem with <string> is that it pulls in <utility> and then <tuple> and all hell breaks loose.
 
headers gonna head
 
@Mysticial Recently did this benchmark on Linux. This only shows the cost of including the header, without using it.
It was a real eye opener about some boost libraries. (like lexical_cast.hpp and string.hpp)
Which were used commonly.
String is near the bottom in that list.
Also GCC has exported the instantiations for char and wchar in the lib.
 
So I pull in <memory> because I want unique_ptr which can be implemented manually in about 10 lines. And because of the forwarding constructor, it pulls in <utility>, and so on. Likewise, I believe it also pulls in <atomic> because of shared_ptr. Which pulls in <mutex>, and I wouldn't surprised if it pulled in <Windows.h> as well.
*I may be wrong in some of these chains. I don't remember all of them off the top of my head.
@StackedCrooked Those #'s are higher than I thought. lol
lol, something as innocuous as <array> sits above <vector>.
 
the trick is to make compilation so time consuming that header inclusion becomes a drop in the sea
 
10:06 PM
@Mysticial lol yeah
Results may fluctuate though.
 
Xeo
@Mysticial modules when? w
 
So if I can forward declare std::string or std::unique_ptr as an incomplete type in headers, it would make me a lot happier.
 
@Mysticial A little bit off, yeah. For example, <memory> only pulls in about 45K lines. :-(
 
Xeo
@Mysticial hah, not officially
(I didn't read the rest of the conversation)
 
@Xeo It came out of me wanting the ability to forward declare typedefs as incomplete types without needing to forward declare the entire chain going up to the top.
This wasn't for std:: types, but for user-types. But it dragged into std:: types as well.
For user-types a common work-around is to inherit the type you want to typedef.
But that's ugly and not always applicable.
 
user1804599
10:11 PM
Ok so I'm gonna try use case driven approach in C++
 
@JerryCoffin 45K in <memory> alone? Or the total of everything included?
 
Xeo
@Mysticial I think that's kinda workable with inheriting ctors
 
@Mysticial Total of everything included. I just created a file that contained only #include <memory>, then did cl /E junk.cpp | wc, and it shows ~45K lines (a little under one megabyte) of preprocessed output.
 
@Xeo To some extent. The cases where it fails is the loss of the ability to convert from the main type into the child type.
 
Xeo
right
 
10:14 PM
@JerryCoffin That's still a lot. lol
 
@StackedCrooked I blame all the std::get machinery
also omg lexical_cast being worse than asio
 
@Mysticial Oh yeah. The scary part is that I'm pretty sure STL and company have been working on reducing the degree to which they're tangled for a while too--it used to be substantially worse (in MS VC++).
 
It's really hard to figure out where compile time overhead comes from.
 
@StackedCrooked I find it fairly easy: computers that don't operate at infinite speed.
 
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Second phase of two phase lookup.
 
10:17 PM
I've spent some time commenting code out and recompiling and timing and repeating ad infinitum. Turned out that instantiating std::function from lambda is quite expensive.
 
@JerryCoffin yeah, a shame
 
@StackedCrooked std::function is one of the places where I cheated. I forward declared it in one of my central header files.
 
Also std::map lookups turned out to be high on the list.
 
somehow interesting that <boost/thread.hpp> incurs 10x overhead of <thread>
 
@milleniumbug it has more features though
 
10:19 PM
Yeah.
Might be due to multi-platform support.
 
user1804599
Boost Boost Boost
 
I expected <iostream> to fare worse tbh
 
Even something like <stdint.h> pulls in a crap load of stuff in Windows.
 
@milleniumbug Yeah, that surprised me as well.
It was probably worse in the past.
 
@milleniumbug If you take out all the boost stuff, it makes sense. <thread> and algorithm are both understandably massive.
<iostream> is low because of Boost. So it's Boost's fault. :)
 
10:22 PM
@StackedCrooked At one time, it hardly mattered which header you included--all of them included virtually all the others.
 
Als if you have a lot template instantiations with lambda's then the compiler can't reuse them even if the lambda's have the same signature.
 
#include <yes_please>
 
@JerryCoffin lol
Include stl.h.
 
#include <chuck_norris>
 
@Mysticial Somewhat less obvious why, but (at least on MSVC) <atomic> is extremely large. Almost 64K lines.
 
10:24 PM
@StackedCrooked somehow I imagined someone optimizing lambda instantiations by inserting unary + in front of each one of them
 
user1804599
Happy birthday @Shoe!
 
@milleniumbug only a diseased mind would ever use unary +
 
@milleniumbug Ah. That's clever.
I wonder if it would hinder inlining.
 
clever, but also broken on MSVC - normally I'd blame MSVC, but here I think someone is being too clever
 
@StackedCrooked If memory serves, Alex Stepanov said that's how he originally designed it.
 
10:25 PM
to cut some slack to library designers, the language-feature-as-library-feature approach of C++ does not help a lot of the time
 
@LucDanton Good point.
 
e.g. it’s safe to assume that any part of my projects includes my own tuple.hpp which extends <tuple>
 
@JerryCoffin Does it pull in <mutex>?
 
@Mysticial Doesn't seem to.
 
They are mutually exclusive.
 
10:42 PM
@Mysticial A default compile does, however, pull in 106 other headers.
 
@JerryCoffin Wait, including no headers pulls in 106 of them anyway?
 
@Mysticial No, I mean including <atomic>, and compiling without specifying any flags, pulls in 106 other headers (I only specified "default", because it occurred to me that specifying different flags probably changes what headers get included, in at least some cases).
 
oh
 
Has the MSVC experience with include-what-you-use improved? Tried using it a few years back but various MS specific things (like magic defines, etc) kept tripping IWYUI up
 

« first day (2447 days earlier)      last day (2493 days later) »