@fredoverflow I got done confused by what I thought was a noob question on Kotlin... look here at his 'method 1'. I am confused by the little bit object : MapRowParser<T> { in the extension method.
@thecoshman object:SomeType {...} is Kotlin-speak for Java's new SomeType() {...}, i.e. create an instance of an anonymous class that implements SomeType, where the curlies denote the body of that anonymous class.
@fredoverflow ah SomeType {...} would have made sense, it's the object: part that confuses me. I thought it might be an anonymous derived class, but I couldn't work it out
@fredoverflow Would it not be lots of instances of technical unique anonymous types? The types would all be the same implementation, but technically each is unique?
@fredoverflow Wow... I thought it was a fairly 'basic' bit of code to explain... took a fair bit
Current status: watching youtube.com/watch?v=AKtHxKJRwp4 at 2x speed. This is over the speed of light. And I'm fast-forwarding too.
If you have time for an excellent talk, listen to Stephan Lavavej admonish you why doing std::make_pair<std::string, ptree> is not the solution you want to do "Don't Help The Compiler 48:42. He also explains some of the changes to std::pair and std::make_pair in c++11 — sehe8 secs ago
Yes it does. The real change here is std::make_pair.
C++11 changed std::pair conversion rules, as well as the make_pair convenience function, which was made move-aware.
Analyzing It
Property Tree allows construction like this:
ptree pt("data");
to construct a tree with only value data and n...
Writing answers like this make me happy. When it finds the right audience it will make them learn all these bits I gathered from others over the years.
I've reworded the question. I don't think it's broad. I don't think it's off-topic. Voted to reopen. Sadly, I never heard about SourceInsight and I'm not sure it will be popular. My gut says this is just a limitation of the tool, but perhaps someone else knows! — sehe21 secs ago
Since when are questions about working with the tools off-topic? That question was closed as "too broad" (it wasn't)
Polls on Saturday: std::uncvref, fewer uses of std::decay in the standard library, use of [[nodiscard]] in the standard library, make std::memory_order a scoped enumeration, add synchronized buffer ostream to the library, std::to_address, and adding constexpr to some functions in <algorithm> and to more std::complex functions
@Mysticial Yeah--must have six sharps, if memory serves (but it's been a long time since I was a band nerd, so my memory probably isn't to be trusted).
@Mgetz the question is what about things like foo |> await barAsync |> baz - how should await work in this case? I guess JS and C# are different from F# in this case.
Are you looking for something like this:
> let aMap f wf = async {
- let! a = wf
- return f a
- };;
val aMap : f:('a -> 'b) -> wf:Async<'a> -> Async<'b>
> let aConcat wf = Async.Parallel wf |> aMap Seq.concat;;
val aConcat : wf:seq<Async<#seq<'b>>> ->...
> Nitpicky note: the comment in this screencast about pointers and arrays being "the same" will ruffle experienced C programmers' feathers. The C language does distinguish between arrays and pointers, so the comment is strictly wrong.
> However, thinking of arrays as being pointers will help new C programmers to understand what's actually happening: arrays are laid out directly in memory, with no extra metadata added, so the address of the array itself is also the address of the first element of the array. Simplifying this to "arrays are lies; they're really just pointers" is easier to grasp for someone who's new to C.
@fredoverflow What sense does the phrase "arrays are pointers" make anyway? Those are two distinct types and standard sections. I've never understood the idea behind that "motto".
@fredoverflow Let me translate that to English for you: "The maker of this video discusses concepts he doesn't understand, so he substitutes outright lies for clear explanations. Please support me on Patreon."
Try as I might, the closest answer I've seen is this, with two completely opposing answers(!)
The question is simple, is this legal?
auto p = reinterpret_cast<int*>(0xbadface);
*p; // legal?
My take on the matter
Casting integer to pointer: no restrictions on what may be casted
Indirection...
@Omnifarious When it first started (as programmers.stackexchange) it was on the migration list, but they asked for it to be removed because it was being used (a lot) to migrate questions that just needed to be closed.
@Omnifarious It was worse than you'd probably guess. Problem was it (Programmers.SE) had very little real direction at first--just "questions that didn't belong on SO". So that's what they got--including lots of questions that didn't belong much of anywhere.
I still think SO needs an SO toilet that's unmoderated just to move all the shit to. That way we can at least say it exists instead of repeating the same backstory of Programmers.SE over and over again.
@Omnifarious I think things have gotten better since they renamed is to Software Engineering, but for quite a while it was apparent that nobody was really sure what should go there--for a long time, roughly 3 out of 4 questions posted there were closed within a few hours.
Has anybody gotten this working for a lexer returning something else than double or int or string?
Sure. Simple examples might be found on this site
And for the parser also returning non-trivial objects?
Here's your real problem. Spirit is nice for a subset of parsers that are expresse...
I wonder how many other people spend ~2 days on a single answer
Speaking of that meme, I wonder how @rightfold is these days
@milleniumbug This time it's actually a fractal, because I "late-published" a lot (looooot) of work I did on that Graphviz parser question that I never bothered to give to the OP at the time.
Turns out Graphviz is pretty hairy in that it deals with quite some state that interacts in devious, unwell-documented ways. Even so, that not even the graphviz tools (dot, gvpr etc) consistently roundtrip.
I had begun setting up roundtrip comparisons that included visual comparisons, but it soon turns out that repeated filtering the same graph through dot does not result in stable output.
I think I spent about a week in the graphviz tunnel.
> Schachner said she called Louis CK in 2003 to invite him to one of her shows and was dumbfounded to realise during their phone conversation that he was masturbating. "I felt very ashamed," she told the New York Times.
There was a minor outage in Compiler Explorer today but I swear it was totally unrelated to a panic iron of my BBC Micro T shirt for @demosplash https://twitter.com/JamesMcNellis/status/929102403898572802
@Columbo Not only that. Or did you think wanking on the phone was the worst thing one can do? Because then I misunderstood
I must say I don't know how to detect the other party to a phone conversation is wanking. But if it's noticeable to the extent that it is apparent that is really the case, I must say that's more than a little rude. That has no consideration for public order norms, that have been properly legislated for anyhow.
@sehe Well, I don't think it's acceptable, but neither would I consider the graveness of that incident warranting repercussions. I mean, it's rude. And disgusting. But not sensational.
It means method lookup happens in the scope of the statically known type first and only if conversions do not lead to a suitable overload, the other (inherited) overloads become visible. Or something.
This makes sense from a devirt/optimization standpoint. And much more likely from a DLR standpoint (dynamic and IDynamicMetaObjectProvider could be costly to runtime reflect?)
But it's surprising from a strong typed parametric polymorphism point of view.
@sehe This looks pretty much like things work in C++: B::Foo hides A::Foo. Not sure whether C# provides and equivalent of adding using A::foo; inside B, in which case it'd do overload resolution on them (and then overload resolution selects Foo(int), obviously).
@JerryCoffin Also, play around with some other combos and you'll see...: dotnetfiddle.net/6OVTXn
@JohanLarsson Ah you're right. However, the point was that the signatures do not hide. I added the virtual to make it extra obvious, and also, see my previous counter-example ^
But yes, if they're normally treated as an overload set, but under some unspecified circumstances, you effectively get hiding instead, then that's clearly a pretty surprising result--surprising enough that I'd call it an outright bug.