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18:00
@RadekdaknokSlupik My fault?
@rubenvb Urgh. Does that mean I have to install all that Cygwin bullshittery?
@RMartinhoFernandes probably I'm using it wrong.
@DeadMG no
does that mean I have to install GCC?
@RMartinhoFernandes Your wheels are like mini-boost, it's pewpew :)
18:00
I have the build server testing it on both GCC and clang, but I must admit I haven't tested extensively.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes That was an accident, BTW. When I realized it, it was too late to fix.
@sbi well, exceptions work if paired with the right GCC build, but there was some parse error in the libstdc++ headers in my latest built.
@DeadMG if unzipping it counts, yes.
@rubenvb pfft
@RadekdaknokSlupik You can see examples in the test folder.
I remember why i needed the pointer to ifstream now
18:01
no wonder Visual Studio and Windows are quite dominant
the alternatives have no concept of shipping systems that work
Woa. I just read the whole discussion on porn.
I needed that to mask the fact that libstdc++ needs an istream for the trickery I implemented for UTF16 filenames
I don't... really... understand what is going on.
@DeadMG MinGW has an installer dude
Codeblocks comes with a MinGW
Qt as well
@DeadMG is trolling again.
@rubenvb So that I can install Clang? that doesn't sound like a sensible idea
18:02
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Let's not talk about porn, for a change. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
@rubenvb Being trolled, in the porn discussion, not doing the trolling.
@RMartinhoFernandes Good idea.
what's wrong with Clang just being dependent on Clang and to use Clang, you just install Clang?
@DeadMG dream big
18:04
We need a metaclang.
@DeadMG the fact that it needs a Standard library
Yeah, I also think that Windows support is clang's biggest issue right now.
and OS headers and stuff
@rubenvb So ship one. If VS can do it, anyone can do it.
@DeadMG in comes MinGW, which you seem to hate for no apparent reason.
18:05
@DeadMG They can't ship the one from GCC because of the stupid license.
"Install third-party" does not qualify as "ship one"
MinGW = headers and libs.
libc++ is under way.
@rubenvb and compilers and other stuff
Oh, so that's why they're implementing their own SL.
18:06
@MooingDuck wrong. That's GCC and binutils.
@RMartinhoFernandes I have this code, but I get 36 errors, most of them reading "'Pointer' does not refer to a value.", in value_ptr.h++ on lines 230, 238, 245 and others.
@rubenvb oh
Even with libc++, you'll still need MinGW(-w64).
mingw = crap
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes Uh oh. If this isn't going to draw attention we don't want.
18:07
@rubenvb It's a third party library. If Clang depends on it, then why doesn't it ship with it? And install it? Itself?
@DeadMG because Clang doesn't work on Windows, duh.
it's Clang's job to track and deal with Clang's dependencies.
@DeadMG Does Clang ship with glibc?
@sbi Who said we don't want attention?
@RadekdaknokSlupik Thanks. I'm now heading home, but I shall be looking into it in about 10 minutes.
18:07
@rubenvb How would I know? ^^
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel There was no discussion. @Cicada went all emotional, and @Dead got mad for not being able to discuss rationally.
Ranting dogs -> Rabies dogs -> must be put down.
@rubenvb This functionally answers my original query, which is "Does Clang work on Windows?"
sbi
sbi
10
Q: Is mentioning sex ok or is it not?

sbiAfter we had a discussion about sex on the Internet in Stack Overflow's C++ chat room yesterday, the room description was changed to something mentioning sex. Before you think you discovered something held back by me, I did this particular change, but it's by no means the first time sex was ...

18:08
and the answer is "No."
@sbi How often has this happened since the Tina incident?
@DeadMG it works in a limited fashion, as in, better than before. So I'm an optimist, and I promote the new stuff.
@sbi That went well.
@DeadMG Yes, you'll have to accept that clang on Windows is not a deliverable product.
They even mention it's experimental on their own site.
humph
18:09
Ok, now really heading home.
90% of the whole desktop market not worth their attention?
oh well
@DeadMG It's an open source project. It's 90% of the desktop market that's not interested in them.
which is why OSS sucks
@DeadMG what browser are you using?
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes I think I have seen a few negative comments about or room on meta.
@EtiennedeMartel ??
18:11
Let's not forget than Clang's main sponsor is Apple. They don't really care about Windows.
@sbi I mean, the whole "discussion".
@rubenvb Chrome.
@EtiennedeMartel Apple Clang != Open Source Clang. Linux support wasn't added by Apple devs either.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel I got that. But first, there was no real discussion, and, second, it didn't went well at all. (If one party leaves enraged, that's a bad sign, you know.)
@sbi Was it only one? I thought we both left enraged.
@sbi I was being sarcastic. But yes, I agree.
sbi
sbi
18:13
@DeadMG To me it looks like you are still here.
@DeadMG cicada shortly left the room, you merely ignored
@sbi True, but I did leave the discussion.
@DeadMG Chrome is OSS, if you didn't notice.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Oh. You might consider adding some clue next time.
Yeah, I might the next time I say something that is obviously wrong.
18:14
@rubenvb I didn't. Probably because, AFAIK, it's basically developed by Google and the Chrome source is available as a pleasantry, rather than actually purely developed by OSS contribution.
@DeadMG So you think LLVM/Clang is different?
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG No, you didn't. The discussion died because she left. You were driveling on until then.
or GCC
@sbi I ignored her before she left, IIRC.
18:15
I can't use a returned-by-value iostream, cause I need to store it in a class as a reference later.
which apparently doesn't work
@MooingDuck All I get with my browser is a big square.
@rubenvb GCC is definitely different, because whoever monitors their development is actively making it worse for cross-platform, whereas Google know how to develop cross-platform software and make it work.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck I wouldn't even have understood those. Some appropriate smiley might have helped, though.
@sbi he put her on ignore about 2 minutes before her last post. Small time period, but it was there
unlike whoever drives Clang, who clearly does not
sbi
sbi
18:16
@MooingDuck Ah. Oh well. That's still not stomping out of the room, though.
@DeadMG I don't even know what this is about. You hate GNU, I guess, and you think MinGW is GNU. You think LLVM/CLang should work on Windows by magic. You think Clang got 90% C++11 support by fairies swinging their wands in the air. Fair enough. I'll leave you ignorant.
@rubenvb No, what I think is that if you're developing a software which is cross-platform, then it only makes sense to target most of your resources on the most dominant platform.
instead of leaving the most dominant platform as unusable
sbi
sbi
Anyway, I'm going home now, too. See you, folks!
which is exactly what Chrome did not do.
@DeadMG There's a tad of difference between a browser and a toolchain.
Documentation and all.
18:19
I do hate GNU because, well, as far as I can tell they're worse than Microsoft. I have nothing specific against MinGW, it's just not what I wanted to download when I wanted to get Clang.
@rubenvb Not in this sense. It's a bit of software which is supposed to work on multiple desktop platforms.
Now I have the Botanicula soundtrack stuck in my head.
Working without music is tough.
@DeadMG oh, Clang itself works just fine on Windows. It's the code that it produces that doesn't run on Windows. There's a difference. The program code is fine, there's just no output format support, really.
I can't really translate that to a web browser...
@rubenvb That's pretty functionally the same.
if you download Clang on Windows, and you run it, does it work? no
@DeadMG nobody claimed differently.
@rubenvb I'm with DeadMG on this, when I download a program, I want it to come with everything it needs, and not require me to also manually install some other stuff before it works. Chrome just works. clang doesn't.
18:21
then why did you say that Clang itself works just fine on Windows?
@DeadMG he never did, he said it kinda sorta works
because if you run it and it doesn't work, then it most definitely does not work just fine on Windows
23 mins ago, by rubenvb
@DeadMG yes, kind of
Please don't put words in my mouth
"kind of" and "no" are not appreciably different.
It makes you look childish
@DeadMG within bounds: ie -std=c++03 works flawlessly (compared to GCC obviously, there's no perfect C++ compiler anywhere).
18:23
@rubenvb I'm just pointing out your contradiction.
@DeadMG I can't figure out what you meant to say there
> Clang itself works just fine on Windows. It's the code that it produces that doesn't run on Windows.
these two sentences are in direct and exact opposition.
@DeadMG oh, I missed that bit
@DeadMG the program executable "clang.exe" works great on Windows. It can produce code for all of the platforms it supports.
it would be difficult for me to define the inverse of a compiler working as anything other than "the code it produces doesn't run".
18:23
Clang is a cross-compiler by nature.
So I reiterate:
1 min ago, by rubenvb
@DeadMG within bounds: ie -std=c++03 works flawlessly (compared to GCC obviously, there's no perfect C++ compiler anywhere).
those bounds are pretty meaningless
the main reason I'd switch from MSVC is to enjoy superior C++11 support
not worse
and see for yourself
mind you: it's a commandline tool, it has no Visual Studio plugin
I hope you're okay with that.
lol windows command line
18:26
@DeadMG Then you have to buy a Mac, or use Linux.
@rubenvb Hence my point of how silly it is, since Windows is the primary desktop platform.
@DeadMG I wonder what you mean by "it" there. That an open source project developed by 1) Apple, 2) People in their spare time, mostly BSD and Linux enthousiasts, 3) the one-off Windows dev, doesn't work on the platform that receives the least contribution? Weird. Really weird.
Hey! Linux is cross-platform and it doesn't work on Windows. It must suck.
Childish.
@rubenvb That a project aiming to be cross-platform doesn't target 90% of all desktops? Yeah, I'm calling that silly.
@rubenvb he never said it's wierd, nor surprising. He said it's silly, and he's right.
@rubenvb also linux is not an application, analogy doesn't apply.
@DeadMG and man hours are really free? Who do you think would maintain this code targetting Windows?
18:31
@rubenvb Repeatedly claiming "Childish." is rather childish.
@rubenvb irrelevant to his point.
@rubenvb I don't care. I'm the user, not the developer.
@MooingDuck not quite. Chrome wasn't made cross-platform overnight.
but there's something more than a little misleading by calling your system cross-platform when it can't target the vast, vast majority of systems.
@DeadMG you need to check your definition of cross-platform.
18:32
@rubenvb They targeted most of the desktops first.
@DeadMG The problem is that they don't have any regular contributors that actually know Windows.
@MooingDuck and Clang targetted most of the open source developer audience. Sue them.
@rubenvb cross-platform usually means it works on most operating systems, even if that's not the technical definition.
They made an appeal on GN.
@RMartinhoFernandes he's aware, and again, not relevant.
18:33
@RMartinhoFernandes I get that. But stuff like WriteFile is hardly rocket science.
@MooingDuck Yes, and in that sense, Windows is only 1 operating system.
@rubenvb Which is 90% of all desktops.
@DeadMG You really think that's the problem?
@DeadMG irrelevant.
gah lag makes chat hard. Probably a good thing as I'm working.
@rubenvb Extremely relevant.
18:34
Not in the definition of cross-platform.
The problem is undocumented C++ ABI.
nobody cares about the number of platforms it supports, they care about the number of users it supports.
Period.
Damn -- I leave for a while, and there's a discussion of porn -- but by the time I get back, it's about WriteFile and which OS dominates on desktops. I'm like Tony, but in reverse...
2
And that is, however you put it, MS's fault.
@MooingDuck How come it's not relevant? They still aim for being really cross-platform. They're just lacking resources to have it ready right now.
18:35
and if that's not Windows, then it's capped at 10%, max, which is kinda low.
@DeadMG ad hominem
@rubenvb It's the C++ Standard's fault for not specifying one.
@JerryCoffin hehe.
@MooingDuck Yeah. I'll delete.
@MooingDuck An insult is not an ad hominem argument.
Because, well, it's not really an argument.
18:36
@DeadMG Yet you're very quick at blaming unrelated developers.
accurate, but I should still not have left it
@rubenvb I'm not even sure where the ABI factors into this. I never asked Clang to use MSVC's non-C-interface libraries.
Last I heard, exceptions were not quite right.
@RMartinhoFernandes that was fixed (as far as GCC's dw2 exceptions work right on Windows)
@DeadMG Exception handling == C++ ABI.
@rubenvb You have to implement one, not conform to someone else's undocumented one.
@DeadMG If you want best performance, and compatibility, you take what the OS hands you.
18:38
Hi guys
Otherwise, you get GCC's sjlj exceptions, which are slower, or dw2 which can't pass exceptions over foreign code.
It's pretty on-or-off in that department.
I'm being told you can't perfect forward a function that takes a shared_ptr<T>&& parameter, is that right?
@rubenvb Slower exceptions are quite preferable over no exceptions.
besides, afaik, the EH implementation is a LLVM problem, not Clang- LLVM includes EH intrinsics.
@MooingDuck That's always an rvalue reference.
@DeadMG True.
@DeadMG There's dw2 exceptions now.
But you don't care.
@RMartinhoFernandes but T&& binds to lvalues?
@rubenvb What does that have to do with the problem you stated, which was not outputting PE files?
@DeadMG Where did I say that?
@MooingDuck If T is a template parameter.
shared_ptr<T> isn't a template parameter.
18:41
@RMartinhoFernandes huh, wierd
@MooingDuck I think it's called reference collapse
@bamboon Collapse.
well, I assumed that you didn't go off on a completely unrelated tangent from my original point, which is that it's silly to not be able to target Windows since they are such a majority of all users
@RMartinhoFernandes wrong?
@bamboon It's reference collapse.
18:41
@RMartinhoFernandes ah ok, thanks
@MooingDuck It makes sense. In shared_ptr<T>&&, if I pass a shared_ptr<int>& you can't deduce T to be int&.
@DeadMG There's a difference between the PE file format and proper exception handling and type info code. The difference is documentation.
@DeadMG And they do target Windows.
I have no idea what you just said
It's not complete yet, but it's not like they're just saying no.
18:44
@RMartinhoFernandes "Not targetting Windows" and "Targetting Windows last" is silly for the same reason
Okay guys, time for a little bit of Culture:
DEMETRIUS Villain, what hast thou done?
AARON        That which thou canst not undo.
CHIRON       Thou hast undone our mother.
AARON        Villain, I have done thy mother.
@sehe Please dear God, no.
I hate English culture.
a whole bunch of people seem intent on unceremoniously ramming it down my throat when I really could not care less
and I'd happily burn all of Shakespeare's plays to the ground
@DeadMG I can translate if for you
18:45
and call it a net improvement in life
@DeadMG It was simply a matter of resources available. I'm pretty they'd have supported Windows sooner if they could.
@DeadMG What did you have for dinner?
Guys i have a form 1, that calls another form. But i neeed the parameters ive initialized on form 1 to be on form 2
how do i send em?
@sehe The realization that the only way I'm gonna do better than MSVC10 is to do it myself.
18:48
-.-
Ignored files is handled quite stupidly on SVN compared to Hg.
X is handled quite stupidly on SVN compared to Hg?
@RMartinhoFernandes Yeah.
4 hours ago, by FredOverflow
static void (* const dispatch[])(word, word, word, word, const word *) = {
    draw_texture, draw_texture_90, draw_texture_180, draw_texture_270
};
God I just love this piece of syntax, it's almost beautiful :)
You're a pervert.
18:51
I know :)
It's alright, he's male. It's normal for him to be a pervert.
How would that look in D? They have a more straight-forward syntax for that, don't they?
@Giuseppe you're lacking way too much information for us to answer the question. I believe the answer will be more than one word, in which case, you need a stackoverflow question.
Quick check (for other discussion): You have to specialize std::hash for user-defined types, right? Or is there a concept that you can follow to make your class hashable?
man
how come ildjarn's answer has 8 upvotes to my 2?
mine is much simpler and shorter
18:53
@KillianDS There is something in boost that makes it easier for iterable things, I believe. But apart from that, you're screwed.
@KillianDS specialize
I hope that really is Scott Meyers
@EtiennedeMartel The female of the species seem to have perverted "perverted" to mean "perfectly normal, but I don't like it."
@KillianDS You can implement a conversion operator to std::size_t.
@DeadMG the votes came before the edit. Look at his first draft.
18:54
Code y u no just compile.
6
Q: Are there no specializations of std::hash for standard containers?

FredOverflowI just found myself a little bit surprised being unable to simply use a std::unordered_set<std::array<int, 16> > test; because there does not seem to be a std::hash specialization for std::arrays. Why is that? Or did I simply not find it? If there is indeed none, can the following ...

Thanks
Shouldn't the compiler pick the second function here if Base ain't constructible?
Base* operator()(typename std::enable_if<std::is_constructible<Base, const T&>::value, const T&>::type val) {
  return new T(val);
}

Base* operator()(typename std::enable_if<!std::is_constructible<Base, const T&>::value, const T&>::type val) {
  return nullptr;
}
@RadekdaknokSlupik What are the semantics of is_constructible? Has a default constructor?
@DeadMG Hmm...posted six minutes sooner, and has six more upvotes. There may be a trend there.
18:56
if your compiler has decent C++11 support, you can just write auto operator()(const T& val) -> decltype(new T(val)) { return new T(val); }
@FredOverflow is_constructible<T, Args...> If T is constructible with Args as arguments, it's true. Otherwise false.
Hmm, the "scott meyers lookalike" has a scott meyer-like picture in the question, but his profile doesn't have the pic
@RadekdaknokSlupik Oh, I see. thanks.
@FredOverflow only sorta related
@DeadMG I need it to return Base* at any time.
18:57
@MooingDuck Well, the accepted answer mentions "that boost stuff" I was referring to.
@RadekdaknokSlupik Insert Base* cast.
Xeo
Xeo
@MooingDuck It does
auto operator()(const T& val) -> decltype((Base*)new T(val)) { return new T(val); }
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, forced refresh shows it doesn't
@RadekdaknokSlupik Y U NO USE DECENT SFINAE?
18:57
@MooingDuck link please
@DeadMG T derives from, or is Base.
Guaranteed by a static_cast in the containing struct.
OK. Stupid error: I had an incomplete type somehow
Xeo
Xeo
@MooingDuck Force refresh
@RadekdaknokSlupik Yes, I got that far? :P
8
Q: Is T an instance of a template in C++?

user1426649Suppose I'm in a template and I want to know if a type parameter T is an instantiation of a particular template, e.g., std::shared_ptr: template<typename T> void f(T&& param) { if (instantiation_of(T, std::shared_ptr)) ... // if T is an instantiation of ...

Anyway, if those are not templates (i.e., if they're just as you posted), there's no chance for SFINAE.
@RMartinhoFernandes RADEK Y U NO UNDERSTAND SFINAE YET!
@Xeo I did on both the question and the profile, no change
Xeo
Xeo
Worked for me, shows a green gravatar on both
@MooingDuck Thanks, but I don't see anything resembling a human being, let alone Scott Meyers.
18:59
@FredOverflow Look at the avatar.
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow He had Scott's pic as the avatar until some minutes ago
@DeadMG Ctrl-F5

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