which means that you cannot define this non-intrusively since C++ has no compile-time way (or run-time, for that matter) of walking the AST and modifying it
@DeadMG I’d be interested to see this, I’ve just tried writing a y combinator and I’ve been horribly unsuccessful, even when using type erasure, since I can’t figure out the argument types of the lambdas
just write a function that checks if arguments are in map, if so retrieve result, otherwise call original func and store result, or am i misunderstanding completely?
@KonradRudolph So my version doesn't work (even though I posted a running sample which produces the exactly correct result), but your version is correct even though it doesn't work?
it’s equivalent to showing me a program that prints “bananas” when I want a missile guiding system, and insisting that your program is more correct than mine, which is a missile guiding system, albeit one that has a floating point bug
@DeadMG No, it doesn’t. A Y combinator isn’t merely about injecting a function, it’s specifically about defining a recursive function, nothing more and nothing less.
I want to know, exactly, what property of a Y-combinator (except the generic part, my example was just an example in one function) that my system does not exhibit
It's very satisfying to disable copy construction and copy assignment while allowing move construction and move assignment. And I don't even need to write any special code most of the time. Just a few cases of = default and = delete.
@KonradRudolph No processor on my computer or any computer I might wish my programs to execute on accepts lambda calculus; therefore it has neither relevance nor use.
@KonradRudolph You say that, but you have little evidence for it. As I've said, I believe that my Y-combinator works just fine for the specific example.
The following program gives a signed/unsigned mismatch warning:
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
unsigned int a = 2;
int b = -2;
if(a < b)
std::cout << "a is less than b!";
return 0;
}
I'm trying to understand the problem when it comes to mixing signed and unsigned ints. ...
@DeadMG To be honest, I don’t know. Maybe it’s because now the inner lambda has the same signature as the resulting function? There may be some mathematical reason to prefer this form.
@Potatoswatter Actually, yes. I’m not even sure if this really is a fixed-point combinator (since it changes the signature) but since it fulfils the purpose …
@KonradRudolph All you did here is break a binary function down to nested unary functions using lambda calculus. There's no semantic difference as far as LC is concerned…
@stackedcrookked @pubby ideone.com/MQr0Z I cant recall how up-to-date it is, and if I recall I was reinterpret-casting a pair<a,b> to a pair<const a, b> (which is UB if I recall).
does std::function use an allocator to work it's witchery?
I'm a bit curious regarding TMP and its history, is there some motion to actualize formalize it a little better. It is useful, but because it's more or less an exploit of its turing-completeness, it becomes cumbersome over time. Perhaps take its general uses and expose them more neatly in future standard revisions? Some neat facilities that encapsulate its power?
The C++ committee asking for for more library proposals. And yet there are so many boost libraries. But why are we then still lacking a few very basic ones? Like unicode, xml and gui?
I should check what the possibilities of Poco::Process were again. It wasn't too great in my memory. I remember having to change the source code to prevent a DOS window from popping up when starting a process.
Bad design choices often had a rational. Albeit a short-sighted one.
Cool Poco now has a TextIterator. It allows to iterate over unicode characters.
Does std::vector impose any overhead compared to manually managed dynamic allocated arrays? The only thing I can think of is that it may take a little more space on the stack. Anything else?