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08:02
@sehe no, more like a parallel wall of 'nubes'
damn, I missed that
@sehe: casting away const from a reference or pointer is legal if the object is not const. In a const pointer or const reference the word "const" only says something about the pointer or the reference, not about the object. This is for example why a const reference or pointer cannot really help the optimizer... the referenced/pointed object can still mutate and can be aliased.
@6502 That explains a lot. Thanks for filling in the memory gap
Xeo
Xeo
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: We have non-const references | Free unproductivity here! [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
Just to be pedantic :P
pedantic about what?
Xeo
Xeo
"non-const reference" is an oxymoron, although we all know what is meant
08:10
@Xeo: i think the name "const" for references and pointers is sort of misleading because pushes people thinking that the object is const. Probably a better name would have been "readonly". Passing you a readonly pointer makes you think that others may have a read/write pointer...
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 I was just rambling on the fact that there are no non-const references, there are only references-to-non-const
This got nothing to do with your little const discussion :P
Now I'm thinking. What does int& const mean?
Xeo
Xeo
A compiler error
const int& is an unmodifiable integer value. It's sort of meaningless unless the int is a pointer of some kind
08:18
It's a reference to one.
Xeo
Xeo
@Neil Or you're holding on to that reference to read from it later on, after the value of the referenced int may have changed
@Xeo True
I prefer postfix const.
Xeo
Xeo
Same for me
I know, but I find it less confusing when using pointers.
Xeo
Xeo
08:19
Better? :P
:)
pXeo = NULL;
I have wasted already nine hours of today.
@Xeo to be pedantic: compilation failure, not compiler error :)
@RadekdaknokSlupik wow, you get up really early
Or you wasted someone else's time too
Xeo
Xeo
08:20
@RadekdaknokSlupik Didn't even let me crack an unfunny joke on that misspelling!
@sehe Ill-formed program. The standard doesn't require compilation.
Xeo
Xeo
@RadekdaknokSlupik "ill-formed" is the term the standard uses
And it may not say "compilation", but it does say "translation"
@Xeo Also good. My point is, the compiler wasn't in error :)
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe heh
Well, it must emit a diagnostic.
Xeo
Xeo
08:22
So should we be pedantic about the usage of "compiler error" now?
"Hey, I got this compiler error... " - "No, the compiler didn't make that error."
@Xeo What does it matter. I did. And I gave advance warning :)
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe That was just an introduction sentence for the next message :(
Does MSVC even completely implement C++98?
Or 89 whatever.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Easy boy. Of course the compiler emits a diagnostic, which is why it isn't in error :)
@Xeo heh
08:24
@Xeo I suspect if we ever managed to connect human thought with a compiler, it would continuously correct our grammar meticulously and insult our intelligence.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Does gcc? or clang?
clang does, except for export.
Xeo
Xeo
@RadekdaknokSlupik Wasn't export in C++03? I thought we talked about 98
(a) so it doesn't (b) prove it, fanboy :)
@xeo: void foo (const int& x); const int x=12; foo(x); .... foo receives a const (readonly) reference to a const (immutable) int. Casting away constness in foo would be illegal (UB). The same with just "int x=12;" would pass foo a const (readonly) reference to a non-const (mutable) int... casting away constness in foo is perfectly legal.
08:25
@sehe the clang website says so.
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 Err.. so? I never argued about that
@RadekdaknokSlupik Oh sweet. I didn't know you could prove things that way. I'll try to use that sometime
It's unlikely an OSS project would lie about such things.
@Xeo He's just providing a sample with something he stated earlier.
Anyway, I'm off. Später!
Xeo
Xeo
08:26
"This program works correctly according to the specification." - "Why?" - "Because I wrote so in the docs."
@RadekdaknokSlupik It's also unlikely anyone would be correct with such a statement
@RadekdaknokSlupik Spáäåéter
Xeo
Xeo
Früher!
Rechtzeitig!
Xeo
Xeo
Maan, 5 upvotes for the tag for the silver badge
xeo: nothing... but in C++ there are const/non-const references (with the meaning read-only/read-write) to const/non-const objects (with the meaning mutable/immutable). the only bad combination is a read-write reference to an immutable object.
08:28
@sehe okay let me prove it differently.
Look at its source code.
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 No, there are no const/non-const references. Only references-to-const and references-to-non-const :P
@RadekdaknokSlupik Again, impossible. Ever heard about provability? Still something to learn in college :)
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe IIRC, Clang got its testsuit down to each paragraph
(to each that is provable, anyways)
@RadekdaknokSlupik But props for sticking to facts.
@Xeo That's the cinch. Now prove the testcases are actually correct. @litb would immediately recognize that such a thing is impossible. For one thing, the standard isn't complete, unambiguous and may even contradict itself in minor ways
@Xeo: i'm not sure I understand your point or if you indeed have a point or not. in void foo(const int& x) x is not a reference to a const int, is a const reference to an int
08:31
@6502 it is a reference-to-const to an int...
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 No, it's a reference-to-const-int
:)
Xeo
Xeo
My point is me being pedantic btw
const reference is the tautology
Xeo
Xeo
We all know what you mean when you say "const/non-const reference", but according to the standard, that's an oxymoron, because there are no such references
08:33
argh
Lounge<C++>: home to the pedantics antics
@jalf Wut? A singleton?
Good morning
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe You can change the topic now, you know? :P
ok, I have a dll which depends on msvcr80.dll. I have just installed the VC2005 redist thing, and I can see a bunch of msvcr80.dll's scattered under \windows
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf and argc and argv too (SCNR)
@Xeo Yeah - thanks. I'll not impose my bad taste for now
08:34
but when I try to start the app that uses this dll, I still get a MSVCR80 NOT FOUND
I'll reserve it for binning and peaking at deleted messages :)
Xeo
Xeo
Try throwing the dll into the apps folder where the exe is?
You know, useful stuff
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe Are you owner of the bin too?
this is exactly the problem of the bad naming... and even of bad examples in the standard API. Where a value is logically meant to be passed a const X& is passed instead and it's a programmer problem to deal with the troubles of this decision.
see for example v.push_back(v[0])
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 That's valid though
And easily handled by the implementation
@sobingt see newbie-hints
@Xeo He didn't onebox, I'll rather give a hint first. Oh crap you're right
Xeo
Xeo
No, I meant that you should try to move my last message
Damn context, making sentences ambiguous instead of unambiguating them
1 message moved to bin
08:40
@Xeo: v[0] is passed as a reference and push_back may trigger reallocation
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 Yes, it's explicitly valid
@sehe ok
@Xeo Woot. That was a surprising UI. Anyways, will work nicely for large-volume spam removal. If that is even possible in throttling-ridden-amusement-park SO :)
@Xeo then I get this instead: "An application has made an attempt to load the C runtime library incorrectly."
anyone know anything about how to debug dll loading stuff?
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf Wait, did you copy the correct dll? There is msvcrt80 and msvcp80 (I think the second one is called like that)
No nvm, that wouldn't even work if it was the wrong dll
08:43
yeah, I did (otherwise, it wouldn't have given me a new error message) :)
@jalf Yes. But the real problem is most likely that msvcrt8+ require loading by manifest (from the Windos SxS cache)
It can't work with copy local, at least not without a manifest. There are numerous MSDN docs to document this irritating behaviour, but the lowdown is that MS want to force you to share central DLLs with a view to security patches
@jalf Stupid question: You are using VS 2005 aren't you?
@Xeo: are you sure it's valid? I think that if the object move constructor is non-throwing then move construction may be used to reallocate the vector and this makes using a reference from the same array illegal... or you mean that the standard requires checking effective address of the referenced element being pushed?
Xeo
Xeo
grml... why can't I find that standard quote now..
@Neil nope, 2010.
Or actually, I'm porting an app from 2005 to cmake+2010
and one of its dependencies is a dll built for 2008
08:46
@jalf You know there's a 2010 redistributable, right?
Xeo
Xeo
@6502 Atleast MSVC10 checks if the element being pushed is a member of the vector, and if it is, it saves the index and copies from that later on
I can't find the standard quote that explicitly makes a v.push_back(v[0]) valid right now, though.
I had the exact same problem upgrading one of our programs to be compiled with VS2010 rather than VS2003
oooh, for some reason the 2005 version generates a manifest which lists Microsoft.VC80.CRT as a dependency, but the 2010 version does not
actually, it lists two versions of VC80.CRT. Is that even valid?
@Neil But he needs the 2008 2005 (?) redistributable. That'll probably fix it.
@jalf I suppose so, though I can't see your file :) It might be the minimum version and the 'current' version, or a debug version... stuff like that
08:50
@sehe If it's being compiled in VS 2010, it needs the 2010 redistributable, otherwise I think we're talking 2008
@sehe the 2005 redist is probably the only one I don't need. So far, it looks like we're going to need the 2003, 2008 and 2010 ones... :(
yay. I didn't say I read manifest files. I loath them. Which is pretty much the same
@Neil we've already got that though
what's missing is getting it to load the 2008 one, which seems to be because it's not listed as a dependency in the exe's manifest
Then it must be that. If it still doesn't work, might be worth disinstalling the 2010 redistributable and restarting before retrying with the 2008 redistributable.
I don't pretend to know what Microsoft hocus pocus is going on behind their redistributables, and I don't really want to know, quite frankly.
possibly. What I recognized is the "An application has made an attempt to load the C runtime library incorrectly." part. That is googleable. The answer is really simply: don't explicitely (delay) load the DLL but let the OS manage it, it is apparently very important to Windows...
08:53
@sehe we do let the OS manage it :(
@Neil +1
so what determines which dependencies make it into the manifest by default? I can't find anything explicitly adding the vc80 crt to the 2005 project's manifest, but it's there
@jalf It thinks otherwise. Probably because of the fact that it is an indirect dependency. I think googling it will yield canned explanations.
@jalf If it's in windows\system32, it's available as a dependency. I think that's all the redistributables do, they simply throw them in system32 and hope for the best.
@jalf Unftly it's been too long since I had to meddle with that. I don't quite remember. As you'd envision, I think it dealt with numerous dialogs and checkboxes :)
@Neil That doesn't explain how a manifest got materialized
08:56
@sehe The manifest lists these dependencies?
@Neil You don't get a manfiest containing everythin in %SYSTEM%
Xeo
Xeo
@6502: Meh, I found this, but that doesn't really confirm or deny anything it seems...
@Neil the manifest specifies which CRT version the app depends on, yes. And for some reason, my manifest doesn't, and so it refuses to load the CRT
@sehe In fact I didn't think it did.
Xeo
Xeo
Although I think the standard could easily demand that a self-push_back shall Just Work™
08:57
@jalf Have you tried renaming the manifest and seeing if it gets recreated?
@Neil Then saying that dependencies exist is largely irrelevant to the existence of the manifest :)
@sehe Pardon, monseur. I'll bow out of the conversation then.
Not for me :)
@Neil there isn't one. That's what puzzles me. VS generates one and embeds it, but that's all automatic
and somehow, vs2005 picks up "oh, I should add vc80 crt to the list of dependencies", but 2010 does not
@jalf At the very least you can find a checkbox to say whether the manifest should be embedded or not. That much I remember (VS2008 by the way)
09:04
@sehe well, I could, except it (the vs2008 project) is an nmake project, not a vcproj... :/
but with mt.exe I can extract the manifest from the resulting .exe
@jalf that looks like a start. FWIW it's usually easier to grep the web for the relevant CLI option than to browse VS's intricate maze of option dialogs
@Abyx Hmm, should be a feature request.
oh wait, btw, I can't count. vc80 is 2005, not 2008.
which means I need the 2005 runtime but not the 2008 one
still doesn't really change anything though
Oh gawd, you're talking about manifests.
yes :(
09:29
I had to write software for Windows CE, and you had to distribute it with a cab file and a manifest. Manifest described how the software was to be installed, which was fine and good, except that Visual Studio took it upon itself to generate it for me.
I remember having to add a step in the build to fix the broken manifest Visual Studio generated, in my previous job.
Took me a while to figure out that it wasn't as simple as modifying a manifest, despite the repeated examples on their documentation that the manifest was what installed the software.
Just CRTP'ed my way out of a bunch of boilerplate. I'm happy.
Now I only have to make sure my friend won't have an aneurism when he sees that.
My colleague just asked me why the batch file wasn't doing anything. I inspected what he wrote in the command line, and he had copied from the documentary C:\patcher>publish.bat and pasted in the command line.
woo, progress!
09:38
The command he ran was >publish.bat, and windows remarkably interpreted this to clean out the batch file without a word of warning.
I don't even know what that means.. stream oblivion into a file called publish.bat?? What the hell, Microsoft?!
so apparently, VS doesnt' really care which dependencies actually exist. VS2005 just adds a dependency on the vs2005 runtime. And 2k10 ditched the sxs stuff again, so it adds nothing to its manifest by default
Sexes.
@Neil lol
@jalf *grabs pitchfork and torch*
good morning
09:44
I give you … template subclassing. (Just because it’s an interesting technique)
3
A: Can I make a template specialisation that inherits from its base?

Konrad RudolphYou can, with a bit of trickery. This pattern is sometimes called “template subclassing” and is used extensively in the SeqAn library. The trick is to give the base class an additional template argument tag which determines the type identity: template <typename T, typename Spec = void> st...

Is there no prelude function that does this? \x -> [x]
I was thinking list's constructor but I dunno the syntax
and why the fuck is the flood control still in place, and nobody deigned respond to @sbi’s feature request on Meta?
4
this pisses me off
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh right. That will do.
09:47
I have a memory of a singleton function, but hoogle isn't helping (it only finds it for things other than lists).
Hellow
@KonradRudolph Because they never respond to feature requests on meta.
sbi
sbi
39
Q: Can I please be trusted to not to script a bot that dumps an endless stream of spam messages into the chat?

sbiI will have been at SO for 3 years this summer. Although I have mostly stopped answering questions long ago, I still rake in the occasional piece of rep, and have thus amassed >60k, most of it in this one tag, where, in over a year of me slacking, they still haven't managed to push me off the lis...

Just so you know what he's talking about...
how does one get a so many reputation points .lol
sbi
sbi
Wow, you guys have been quite generous with stars last night.
09:56
What do you mean?
sbi
sbi
@KodeSeeker "so many"? What number are you referring to?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes There's scarcely a message on the starboard that has less than 4 stars.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, then I can answer: You get this by getting two upvotes for a question and accepting one of the answers to it.
@Neil It means 'user aptitude check' :)
The standard guarantees through the exception guarantees in the container that a.push_back( a[0] ); is safe, and it is more straightforward than this approach. While it is dangerous in a hand crafted container, it is safe in a standards conforming implementation. — David Rodríguez - dribeas Jun 2 '11 at 8:30
@6502 ^ I'm tempted to agree with @DavidRodríguez there. What do you say?
@sbi I meant the reputation points of a user, for instance you have 63500 points
sbi
sbi
09:59
@KodeSeeker Well, you get them by giving lots of good answers, mainly. Asking good questions helps, too, but answers are more effective.
@sbi Ahh I see, well I have a long way to go I guess, asking and answering ;)
@6502 see mainly § 23.2.1:
> if an exception is thrown by a push_back() or push_front() function, that function has no effects.
That mainly means that push_back is very hard to get right, but in practice, gcc's stdlib implementation seems to match the requirements
@6502 (I'm afk a while, so please @plink)
sbi
sbi
> If anybody is interested in a job where you sit and drink beer, 3 hrs a day, 2 days a week, for lots of money, contact me... so we can look together. — Debbie Howard
@CatPlusPlus Your starred message is dangerously close to the word 'penises'. I suppose that risks certain people to have more Freudian Dyslexia
@sbi Interesting.
10:03
user image
7
Sorry, I couldn't resist.
sbi
sbi
Oh, wonderful!
@RadekdaknokSlupik hehe, nice one.
sbi
sbi
@KodeSeeker Note that this is not the attitude by which you'll have 50k rep next summer. Also, in order to stand looking for a job with Debbie, you do need to be a very serious cynic. I can't see anyone being able to stand her otherwise.
I wouldn't want to spend much time with Debbie.
sbi
sbi
@sehe Freudian Dyslexia — now there's a term I wish I could remember.
@RMartinhoFernandes This is likely a mutual feeling. :)
10:05
@sbi Is that fancy for pervertness?
@sbi Lol. Nah i can wait for a lot more time than next summer :). But sarcasm isnt something that suits my Sheldonian nature . :(
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes For Merkins, it is, for others, no.
@KodeSeeker With only sarcasm, you probably wouldn't survive a day besides her anyway. I spoke about serious cynicism.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh, yeah, I forgot the tequila fixation. Regarding that, @Dead has a big advantage over most of us: As a Brit, he's used to binge-drinking women.
10:09
@sbi I can live with cyncisim, we had bucketloads of that , at my former workplace :D
tequila shots FTW!
haha
my boss just remarked that it’s too sunny today to do any work
I’m gonna take him up on that
Your boss is awesome.
he actually is
@KonradRudolph bring on the games!
But, how will the company survive summer?
10:14
lol
the problem is that I’ve got a deadline for an abstract submission tomorrow so I can’t really slack off :(
@RMartinhoFernandes Eh, it’s a publicly funded research institute ;) We don’t work for profit
You say you cannot slack off? You being here proves the opposite.
@RadekdaknokSlupik touché
Anyway, I'm off. I have an important final exam in physics today.
See you guys!
2
Q: Default Constructor Recursion Crash

PeerPandit/* CODE :: Default Constructor Crashing because of recursion , And why recursion is taking place , I am agap */ #include<iostream> using namespace std; class Test { public: Test ():x(9) { cout << " Test::Test\n"; Test (x); } ...

The heck's happening in this question?
10:22
@RMartinhoFernandes are people, <gasp>, answering it?
@thecoshman No, I mean, the code.
sbi
sbi
@KonradRudolph Of course, the knowledge that you have your own very good reasons to not to slack off is an important precondition for any boss to chum up with you.
@sbi Hehe, I think he actually didn’t take that into account just now
sbi
sbi
2
A: Default Constructor Recursion Crash

wolfgangTest (x); is parsed as Test x; ... not as a constructor call. You can also write Test (y); and get the same behaviour.

@sehe I absolutely fail to parse that.
sbi
sbi
10:30
@Cicada Look, a butterfly! So?
@sbi He's starring the message he referred to, because he likes the edit message ("fixed gram").
@sbi Looks more like a moth to me
Definitely a moth.
Butterflies are more... butterfly-y.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I absolutely fail to parse that.
@KonradRudolph Still: So?
@sbi You're bokren.
sbi
sbi
10:34
@RMartinhoFernandes "He's starring the message he referred to..." — for starters, he referred to no message.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Ah. Um.
@RMartinhoFernandes Ow c'mon, don't be as pedantic. There's even butterfly moths, FFS! (And this is the room that went all mad at me because I considered lions to be cats.)
Pedantic? I just used the word "butterfly-y". I was being intentionally vague.
Here's a trick: use only one of C or C++. This code is a bad bad bad bad mixture of the two. It doesn't invoke undefined behaviour only because it has a leak and the bad cleanup code never runs. — R. Martinho Fernandes 2 mins ago
WTF man, two answers that give out UB-invoking "fixes".
10:52
@RMartinhoFernandes code shmode
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I already saw that.
afk
Xeo
Xeo
11:07
Hmm, should I take out my magic glass orb of psychic debugging again?
What about -1ing first?
(i.e. totally not encourage that kind of thing)
Xeo
Xeo
Meh, too sleep deprived for proper thought processes
To be clear, the kind of thing I'm talking about discouraging is posting a question without the relevant code.
Xeo
Xeo
I'm currently steadily approaching the 48h mark, just 2-3h left
@Xeo Recently, I started getting headaches when I do that. Didn't happen before.
I hope I'm not getting old.
Xeo
Xeo
11:11
Meh, some 10hours ago my eyes started shacking, but that settled within a few minutes
an hour ago or so I felt some kind of pressure at various places all over my upper body, but that also settled. Let's see what's awaiting me next
You're doing it for science?
@sbi It's a moth actually
Nine days until the new office. I've pretty much given up on getting work done until then, so I'm really excited about it! :D
hehe.
Xeo
Xeo
lol
I like the "orphan blood biodiesel".
11:20
is there anything like ideone that runs g++ 4.7?
Some people here (@Xeo) have used... me for that :S
Xeo
Xeo
@awoodland Your favorite linux virtual maschine!
(or something with userdefined literals)
I was hacking about writing rational numbers as (1/6_Q) this morning
Xeo
Xeo
Well, @Luc, @Pubby and the robot all have GCC 4.7 atleast, IIRC
which is neat except the precedence sucks
11:31
hi
hello
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes g++ stackoverflow.com/q/10814705/500104 && ./a.out
I think our robot should have a CLI
Oh dang, forgot the -std=c++11 switch. :(
Fuck WinSXS
Xeo
Xeo
@Cat needs a CLI too... a Cat Line Interface
11:45
@RMartinhoFernandes something like two hours late :P
Xeo
Xeo
Hour 46: The bad jokes are starting to get even worse.
Is it legal to have two operator "" _Q with different signatures?
Xeo
Xeo
I don't see why not
normal overload resolution applies
Every time you're not sure about something in C++, something is bound to break in hilarious ways.
holy cow so I can template and SFINAE user defined literal operators
Xeo
Xeo
11:48
@CatPlusPlus Would be funnier if someone was to break
@awoodland no, there are specific signatures the standard mandates. anything else is ill-formed
and the list doesn't include std::string does it?
Xeo
Xeo
const char*
unsigned long long int
long double
char
wchar_t
char16_t
char32_t
const char*, std::size_t
const wchar_t*, std::size_t
const char16_t*, std::size_t
const char32_t*, std::size_t
those are all the allowed parameter clauses
+ the one that has no parameters but does it as a variadic template
Xeo
Xeo
aye, the template<char...> one
Too bad the templated one can't be applied to strings, though.
yeah I just discovered that
I sort of assumed it was meant for strings
Xeo
Xeo
11:55
Sadly, nope
but oh well, with constexpr, it's not that bad
That would require string literals to not suck.
So it's consistent, really.

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