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17:00
@Ell oh yes, according to recent survey for national geographic, i think it was
but then, most americans, i think about 89.8 percent, are strongly religious
@Ell Most people will assume "Do you believe in UFOs?" means "Do you believe in extraterrestrial beings visiting Earth?"
user784668
@CheersandhthAlf Most Americans, I think about 99.99%, are strongly stupid.
well, then they're real dumb
If you take the question literally, the only sane response is "Yes".
@sbi I'm still shaking my head over that answer while I try get some work done for my prof... lol
Ell
Ell
17:01
I am completely atheist
yeah I think people maybe just assume UFO = little green men
i've never talked to an extraterrestrial, so i can't answer whether i believe 'em
Because obviously, the objects that are not identified exist.
likewise, regarding god, never spoke to her either
Oh wow, Tim Post said he will force that answer out of wiki should it ever go wiki from edits...
@RMartinhoFernandes if you add the weasel word "some". because some may have ceased to exist.
let's be pedantic about it
17:03
@CheersandhthAlf :)
Ell
Ell
would I be correct in saying most games don't have arbitrary resolution ui?
@Ell i think so. clouds may be fractal but only a few levels deep
Is C1X redesigned and cleared from pervious critical errors?
@RMartinhoFernandes so what happens when you zoom in on a stone?
17:05
@user1131997 If they redesigned it, it would be a different language.
@user1131997 one critical error was fixed:
> Removal of the gets() function, deprecated in the previous C language standard revision, ISO/IEC 9899:1999/Cor.3:2007(E), in favor of a new safe alternative, gets_s.
C1X is just C, but with more things. There's very little to fix in C.
Ell
Ell
sorry should have made myself clear, I mean specifically, graphical user interface, for example the side panels and huds and things like that
@CheersandhthAlf Oh, I think he was referring to something else. Which apparently he was. :P
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes There are many things to fix in C. Fortunately, a fixed version exists, it's called C++.
17:06
Also, there is no C1X anymore, the language is called C11.
@Fanael Like I said, that's make a different language.
user784668
@FredOverflow The language is called C.
@FredOverflow Well, if you want pedantry, it's just called C.
Pro-tip: in a room full of pedants, don't go half-pedant.
You f******* pedants :)
user784668
You p******* fucks.
17:07
@FredOverflow We take pedantry pedantically.
*** ******* ******* **
@RMartinhoFernandes metantry?
user784668
@FredOverflow ***** x = nullptr;
user784668
@FredOverflow Pedanception?
@Fanael ***** is not a type.
user784668
@FredOverflow It's censored.
17:09
@Fanael void*?
@FredOverflow Presumably, FredOverflow is.
▒▒▒▒▒▒▒
@CheersandhthAlf What is this?
Is it unhealthy to eat 2-3 bananas per day?
it's ▓▓▓▓
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes lol, I'm not a five-star programmer.
17:11
People, are you listening to the rock music?
user784668
@user1131997 Rocks don't make interesting music.
Metallica 1988 - And Justice For All (1988)
classic
17:12
@FredOverflow Uriah heep, deep purple, kiss, nirvanna, pink floyd
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes This is wrong.
I meant some classic rock music ;)
as Child in Time of Deel Purple
it sort of gets better. first songs are like beginner's things
user784668
@user1131997 Alternative rock > classic rock. Star if you disagree.
@Fanael what's the examples of alternative rock?
17:13
@user1131997 you need to get "Machine Head" album and listen to it
why does it call "alternative"
alternative from what and on what details?
you mean modern rock as Limp Bizkit && Linkin Park?
I like only some few songs from them, but mostly their songs not more then screaming on sawing on the guitar
@CheersandhthAlf this one?
Machine Head is an American heavy metal band from Oakland, California. Formed on October 12, 1991, the group was founded by Robb Flynn and Adam Duce. There have been 4 member changes since their inception. The current lineup of the band comprises Flynn (vocals, guitar), Duce (bass), ex-Vio-Lence guitarist Phil Demmel (guitar), and Dave McClain (drums). Machine Head is one of the pioneering bands in the New Wave of American Heavy Metal. Machine Head was formed by member Robb Flynn, previously part of the bands Forbidden and Vio-lence. Flynn felt musically unfulfilled with Vio-lence and r...
@user1131997 yes. the version of "Lazy" there is the only one worht listening to. Among other things.
Oh I didn't mean the band!
user784668
@CheersandhthAlf Damn you. I was right.
I meant the album!
Recorded in Switzerland!
Among the dwarfes!
With a burning hotel!
Machine Head is the sixth studio album released by the English rock band Deep Purple. It was recorded through December 1971 in Montreux, Switzerland, and released in March 1972. Machine Head is often cited as influential in the development of the heavy metal music genre. It is Deep Purple's most successful recording, topping the charts in several countries following its release. The album reached number 1 in the United Kingdom and stayed in the top 40 for 20 weeks. It reached number 7 in the United States, remaining on the Billboard 200 for 118 weeks. Backg...
user784668
17:21
Hello
I know y'all don't do 'C' but I'm hoping I might get some help with a Cairo drawing problem?
0
Q: Rotating and compositing PNG files using Cairo with C

Jim NortonI am writing an application using Cairo in C that does the following: Load background PNG (wheel) rotate wheel 90 degrees draw on wheel a set of numbers from other PNG files do this until all 6 parts of the wheel have the numbers drawn on the wheel save the PNG to a file ( results.png ) The p...

@JimNorton It's mostly that we don't like people doing C++ like it was C. We can't just pretend C code doesn't exist, that would be dumb.
@Potatoswatter Damn, I'm at work and our network block you-tube. :-(
17:29
@RMartinhoFernandes Is it possible to use an initializer list in order to pass a const std::vector<A> *a?
@JimNorton Oh, you don't want to look like a gen-Xer at work.
@ManofOneWay No, you can't pass pointers to temporaries.
@RMartinhoFernandes Got it.
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes Technically you can, but there's no implicit conversion.
@RMartinhoFernandes You can legally static_cast a temporary to const & and then apply the unary &
17:30
@Potatoswatter I do have my phone though if I must watch some videos. :-)
@Potatoswatter Oh well.
@user1131997 I love KISS!
It doesn't sound good though. I'd consider fixing the design first.
@JimNorton Sorry I don't know anything about Cairo. What's up with the C room? You created it but I was the only one to post.
@Potatoswatter The duck already had one, so he abandoned that one.

LOUNGE(C);

A room to hang out and chat. The primary focus is on the C lan...
17:35
@RMartinhoFernandes That name doesn't even make sense…
Yeah, I commented on that too :)
user784668
@Potatoswatter It does.
Jun 21 at 15:44, by R. Martinho Fernandes
You know, Lounge<C> is at best, an unfinished C expression.
@Potatoswatter Yeah, then Lounge<C> was created and I don't know how to delete the room I created.
user784668
@Potatoswatter int Lounge, C, foo; Lounge<C>foo;
17:35
@JimNorton It will die on its own. No biggie.
@RMartinhoFernandes ok great
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes You will die on your own?
So it's wrong to write C++ as if it were C, but writing nonsense in C to make it look like C++ is OK…
No, I won't die.
@RMartinhoFernandes :-)
17:40
@Potatoswatter lounge<c>rulez is perfectly fine C ;)
But it's still nonsense.
@FredOverflow It can only be true if rulez is less than one, which is a little lame.
user784668
@RMartinhoFernandes You can overfload operator< so it… oh wait…
@Potatoswatter What do you mean, "only"? Half the ints are less than one.
@FredOverflow But it would not be much rulez.
17:42
In my nearly topic there were interesting answers:

@user1131997 Let me assure you, on Windows remove() does call NtDeleteFile() in the end. Use a debugger if you want to see it actually happen. – Alexey Frunze 30 mins ago

@AlexeyFrunze debugger? How I can debug NtDeleteFile() execution? Doesn't it invsible for debugger and I can only look the some address was called ( like: ntdll.dll!0xcccccccc ), so remove() on Win equals to NtDeleteFile() ?
lounge<c>rulez… but only for negative rulez T_T
so remove() == NtDeleteFile() on Win
no? :)
boost::array<boost::array<int, 100>>1> > used to be valid C++03 but is illegal C++11 now, right?
is cat still AWOL?
user784668
@FredOverflow Yes.
17:43
screw backwards compatibility
@RMartinhoFernandes But it would be possible to pass an initializer list using const std::vector<A> &a ?
@ManofOneWay Drop the ++ and become a man!
@FredOverflow What? =)
C doesn't have all that modern crap.
I want to be modern :(
user784668
17:46
C++ is shit, don't use it. C is better.
Are you Linus Thorvalds in disguise?
@Fanael been waiting for some to put that into words
C is shit, don't use it. BCPL is better.
Long Live Assembler!
17:47
BCPL is shit, use x86 insrtructions
user784668
@FredOverflow BCPL is shit, don't use it. Raw binary is the bestestestestestestestestestestestest.
x86 is shit , use Turing machine
@CheersandhthAlf B came after BCPL, right?
@FredOverflow i think it was opposite?
17:47
@user1131997 x86 is shit, use 6502.
@FredOverflow Do you have any ongoing projects ?
@FredOverflow why not next step us Turing Machine?
@CheersandhthAlf Wikipedia says BCPL influenced B.
BCPL (Basic Combined Programming Language) is a procedural, imperative, and structured computer programming language designed by Martin Richards of the University of Cambridge in 1966. Design Originally intended for writing compilers for other languages, BCPL is no longer in common use. However, its influence is still felt because a stripped down and syntactically changed version of BCPL, called B, was the language on which the C programming language was based. This important fact led many C programmers to humorously issue the backronym Before C Programming Language. BCPL was the fi...
@user1131997 Because Turing machines aren't real.
Turing Machine is shit, use Post–Turing machine
@FredOverflow it's real , but in mind
17:49
right...
@ManofOneWay Still working on Karel.
Don't prematurely jump to using a Turing machine. A finite state machine is typically more stable.
@FredOverflow or DNA-PC :)
@FredOverflow What's that?
Karel is an educational programming language for beginners, created by Richard E. Pattis in his book Karel The Robot: A Gentle Introduction to the Art of Programming. Pattis used the language in his courses at Stanford University, California. The language is named after Karel Čapek, a Czech writer who introduced the word robot. Principles A program in Karel is used to control a simple robot named Karel that lives in an environment consisting of a grid of streets (left-right) and avenues (up-down). Karel understands five basic instructions: move (Karel moves by one square in the direct...
@Potatoswatter Also, where do you get the infinite paper for the Turing machine? I had no luck at the local shops so far.
user784668
If the universe is finite, why is there a notion of Turing-completeness if it's impossible to attain?
17:52
Again, the Turing machine isn't real, so it doesn't matter that the Universe is finite.
@Fanael who said that universe is finite? Is cosmos space fininte?
user784668
If the universe were infinite, so would be urmoma.
When you say that a language is Turing-complete, you mean that it doesn't impose any additional computation limits besides those implied (and unavoidable) by the hardware.
@Fanael where it's not finite? deep in cosmos , deeper and deeper, there is no end
In Big Bang cosmology, the observable universe consists of the galaxies and other matter that humans can in principle observe from Earth in the present day, because light (or other signals) from those objects has had time to reach us since the beginning of the cosmological expansion. Assuming the universe is isotropic, the distance to the edge of the observable universe is roughly the same in every direction—that is, the observable universe is a spherical volume (a ball) centered on the observer, regardless of the shape of the universe as a whole. Every location in the universe has it...
17:53
@user1131997 If you believe in the Big Bang Theory, the universe is expanding, but finite.
@FredOverflow don't believe
@user1131997 Feel free to believe anything else, then.
The observable universe is a finite part of what may be finite or infinite… so far, there's no way to know.
user784668
I don't believe in universe.
@FredOverflow as I think it's like limit functions, and always limits to smth, but has no end
17:54
@FredOverflow Oh what, there's a Karel++ as well.
user784668
Why should I, anyway?
@user1131997 sum over 2^-n for n going to infinity is still finite.
@EtiennedeMartel So what? There are thousands of programming languages.
user784668
@FredOverflow We need PHP++. evil laughter
This looks fun.
http://www.emil.input.sk/info_en.htm
@FredOverflow there are small additionals, which make loop inifinite, if even it has finite value
17:57
@JimNorton Yes, that looks very interesting.
also finite value is just definition, you could define some Infinity ( to what must going on )
There are no infinities in the real world. Infinity is a purely mathematical construct.
@FredOverflow well, there are multiple infinities in the real world. If you can't prove there's a limit, then it's assumed to be infinite.
@jweyrich Give me one example of an infinity in the real world and I'll shut up. Since matter and energy are finite, I'd be really surprised.
@FredOverflow there is: cosmos, reproduction of biological cells, many process in the real world
17:59
@FredOverflow No way to know that either. Is there a smallest measurable distance? What is the density of an electron? Perhaps infinitesimal/infinite.
@user1131997 Reproduction of biological cells will stop when the sun explodes.
@FredOverflow I mean, there was Karel, which is procedural, and Karel++, which has OO features.
process of DNA for example are inifinite as process, but requirs resources as cell
@EtiennedeMartel I don't think OO is such a good idea for programming novices.
@FredOverflow duration of time? volume of space?
18:00
@FredOverflow if people would save Sun , there wouldn't be any explodes
@FredOverflow Or they might just spring to life somewhere else.
@jweyrich What exactly do you mean by that?
@user1131997 Too late to safe the sun, already taken over by Oracle. Sorry :(
@FredOverflow I mean you can't quantify those, therefore they're infinite.
@EtiennedeMartel Are you saying OO is inevitable? :)
18:03
@FredOverflow Well, OO does kind of make sense from a "human" point of view.
@jweyrich Time being contiguous doesn't mean it's infinite. Time being infinite would mean time never stops. I don't know enough about physics in order to tell whether that will happen or not.
@EtiennedeMartel I think some aspects of OO are extremely confusing and unnatural. Especially inheritance. If you think about it, OO inheritance has absolutely nothing to do with real world inheritance. There is absolutely no real world analogy to OO inheritance.
And all those Animal/Dog/Cat examples are extremely contrived and irrelevant to real programming.
@FredOverflow Scientific consensus is that it won't. Either way, it doesn't need to go on forever, you only have to be able to find the halfway point between any two points in time for there to be infinite points.
@FredOverflow would be fun for inquisitive people.
A chronon is a proposed quantum of time, that is, a discrete and indivisible "unit" of time as part of a theory that proposes that time is not continuous. While time is a continuous quantity in both standard quantum mechanics and general relativity, many physicists have suggested that a discrete model of time might work, especially when considering the combination of quantum mechanics with general relativity to produce a theory of quantum gravity. The term was introduced in this sense by Robert Lévi. Henry Margenau suggested that the chronon might be the time for light to travel the classi...
interesting
@FredOverflow Not a theory with any serious support.
The universe might be discrete in terms of wavefunctions, but that doesn't imply discrete time.
18:07
@FredOverflow quantifying time is like counting. You will spend a gazillion light years counting, and you won't stop. As far as we (humans) are concerned, time is ∞ exactly as numbers. The interval between 0.0 and 1.0 is also ∞.
@FredOverflow I agree.
user784668
@Potatoswatter I'm gonna port GCC to that theory, it'll then have some serious support.
@Fanael But the support won't last forever ;v)
@FredOverflow That's a nice one.
18:08
Anyway, I don't really know what time is, so yeah, you might have caught me there with infinities in the real world. I simply don't know :)
@FredOverflow I feel subtly offended :(
What is the best way to check "does compiler have support for C11?"

Is this code valid for the check of C11?

#include <threads.h>

int main(void)
{
return 0;
}
@ManofOneWay Yes.
@thecoshman Why?
@RMartinhoFernandes I guess that initializer list lives as long as I'm in that scope which are calling the method then
18:12
@user1131997 Well, a lot of OS probably already have a file named threads.h, so not a very good test.
@ManofOneWay It creates a temporary vector.
@user1131997 You don't need the return 0; in main anymore since C99.
The initializer list constructor is implicit.
@ManofOneWay The initializer list lives as long as the vector constructor. The vector lives until the semicolon.
As any other temporary it lives until the semicolon, more or less. (yes, I know there are exceptions, don't bug me)
18:13
@RMartinhoFernandes Sure, I meant the temporary vector is live until the scope is reached
Hmm, maybe the initializer list lives until the semicolon. That makes more sense.
#if __STDC_VERSION__ >= 201112L
puts("yay C11!");
#endif
@FredOverflow not sure id Discreet ¬_¬ or discrete
But the vector lives until the scope is reached? Right?
@FredOverflow no... I need C11 check exactly
18:14
@FredOverflow This is interesting: Infinity, by Hector C. Parr.
@ManofOneWay What do you mean "scope is reached"?
@user1131997 How hard is it to replace >= with ==?
@FredOverflow Zing!
@user1131997 What does that even mean?
Not counting lifetime extension by binding to a reference, and assuming it's not in a constructor member initialization list, it dies at the next semicolon.
18:15
Yay for 51 rep users pestering lounge users!
@RMartinhoFernandes
int fun()
{
ArithmeticInstruction a({rax, rcx, rdx},nullptr,nullptr);
} <- vector is dies here (so is the Instruction but that's not important here)
Do you somehow know you've already broken forward compatibility before they even started on the next revision?
@RMartinhoFernandes Dies at the next semicolon at call site.
@Potatoswatter I think he meant C11 as apposed to C99 or later.
@Potatoswatter case I need C11 exact check without including C99 posibilties
int fun()
{
ArithmeticInstruction a({rax, rcx, rdx},nullptr,nullptr); // <- vector is dies *here*
}
18:16
@Drise Uhuh, I can totally do 51 reps. Just watch me.
2 mins ago, by FredOverflow
#if __STDC_VERSION__ >= 201112L
puts("yay C11!");
#endif
@RMartinhoFernandes So then it's pretty much useless do to that?
The ArithmeticInstruction could copy it.
Anyone else preordering the Nexus 7?
18:16
Or just not store it.
I'm using a reference now in AritmethicInstruction, that's no good then?
If I want to store it
@RMartinhoFernandes Is that a compiler/assembler that calls malloc for every instruction?
That's a good case for passing around initializer_list without building a vector
Overdosed on asm today. Glad to be here now, need to rest. <3
18:18
@RMartinhoFernandes The sad part is it gets copied 3x if I use an initializer list -> temp vector -> copied vector in ArithmeticInstruction
Does TLS is implemented for one of the compilers of C11 or C++ 11 ?
@ManofOneWay If you want to store it, pass by value.
@ManofOneWay Reference members are very rarely a good idea in C++.
I mean this:

Multithreading support (_Thread_local storage-class specifier, <threads.h> header
including thread creation/management functions, mutex, condition variable and thread-specific
storage functionality, as well as the _Atomic type qualifier and <stdatomic.h> for uninterruptible object access).
@DomagojPandža xchg eax, eax
does it implemented by at least one of the compiler's developers of C11/C+11 standarts?
natively
@RMartinhoFernandes Can I reduce the number of times it gets copied?
@ManofOneWay Yes, make moves.
@ManofOneWay You can move the first vector into the second if you pass by value and store by value.
The temporary is moved automatically if you pass by value.
Inside you need to move manually.
18:20
Right, move manually from parameter to member.
@ManofOneWay Don't construct a vector unless/until it really needs to persist. initializer_list gets shallow-copied.
The list is too short-lived. He has to copy.
The list lives forever.
Are initializer lists static?
I'm pretty sure the list lives as long as an equivalent explicit object definition, but I'm not sure if that means the called function or the full-expression.
Perhaps it depends if the parameter type is initializer_list<T> const &… don't know if that participates in overload resolution properly, though.
18:23
@FredOverflow Hah, that one is epic, but necessary at times. I love how they figured out the mnemonics for opcodes, xchg is just gold.
@FredOverflow Constant initializer lists may be static at the compiler's discretion, but otherwise no.
@FredOverflow WTF did I say. Don't mind me.
@Potatoswatter It dies at the semicolon.
> The lifetime of the array is the same as that of the initializer_list object.
My cat just exploded.
18:24
@DomagojPandža Damn. Unlucky, aren't you?
@RMartinhoFernandes That doesn't say when the initializer_list object dies.
@Potatoswatter When does your average object die?
@Potatoswatter That's obvious: it's a temporary.
@RMartinhoFernandes Now where did that std::move cartoon go? I know I put it somewhere
18:25
It's not magical.
@RMartinhoFernandes Not if the function parameter object is list-initialized from the contents of the braced-init-list.
I need to improve upon that cartoon with more style.
Which, I think is the case.
15
Q: Lifetime of temporaries

FrunsiThe following code works fine, but why is this correct code? Why is the "c_str()" pointer of the temporary returned by foo() valid? I thought, that this temporary is already destroyed when bar() is entered - but it doesn't seem to be like this. So, now I assume that the temporary returned by foo(...

But it's getting pretty late here.
18:27
@Potatoswatter The expression { 1, 2, 3 } creates a temporary initializer_list.
It makes an array that lives as long as that one.
Then the initializer_list gets copied into the parameter.
That doesn't affect lifetime of the array.
@FredOverflow +1 for funeral. It was a worthy temp.
Ah, 8.5.4/3: — Otherwise, if T is a specialization of std::initializer_list<E>, an initializer_list object is constructed as described below and used to initialize the object according to the rules for initialization of an object from a class of the same type (8.5).
@DomagojPandža No, you have to finish the Kyro website.
@EtiennedeMartel That too. :Đ
@DomagojPandža No. That's art and not released under a CC license or similar.
:P
It doesn't need "improving".
18:29
@EtiennedeMartel Male or female?
Well... You have a lot of scifi stories on the same theme. Some do it better, some do it lousy... Star Trek... Star Wars... Cough, cough.
@Potatoswatter A woman in a man's body.
@EtiennedeMartel What did she put in there?
And then you get Mass Effect, 99.9% awesomeness, 0.01% kills everything.
@Potatoswatter Are you sure you want to know?
18:31
@EtiennedeMartel You mean a woman with a strap-on?
@FredOverflow No, I mean a man who's going to be incredibly unhappy until he changes sex.
@DomagojPandža Oh, didn't they finish the "fixing" already? Or did I misunderstand something?
@FredOverflow Next worst thing to a woman with a knife.
@EtiennedeMartel xchg sex, sex
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, simply put. You have shit. You have sprinkles. You put sprinkles on shit. What do you have?
18:32
@RMartinhoFernandes Damn, I could have persuaded you to change that, but I'm all out of ICBMs.
INTERNET.
@EtiennedeMartel Well, I usually release anything I make into the PD, but thinking you can "improve" upon my art is offensive to me, so I made an exception for this one.
@DomagojPandža Oh, I don't have high hopes (on the contrary). I'm merely asking if the sprinkles are ready :)
@CatPlusPlus Oh, hi, @Cat. How's it going?
@RMartinhoFernandes Yup, they're ready. Some even cut into the shit and chemically react with it creating even more plotshit. Watch it on YouTube, you'll feel better for not downloading it.
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, I see. What does that have to do with the lifetime of initializer lists?
18:35
Slowly.
@FredOverflow Absolutely nothing. Ask @Potatoswatter, he's the one who started the whole thing.
11 mins ago, by Etienne de Martel
@Potatoswatter When does your average object die?
7 mins ago, by Potatoswatter
@EtiennedeMartel Male or female?
I just wanted clarification because female objects tend to live longer.
Lifetime should be scope-bound not gender-bound.
@Potatoswatter Would be hard for you to argue that you're not currently objectifying women.
@EtiennedeMartel touché
18:38
I see them as functional beings.
I see them as people.
Objectify, is that like what the lawyer shouts when he doesn't agree with something in the court room?
@EtiennedeMartel Hey now.
@StackedCrooked No. You're watching way too much anime.
(Generally) good looking people, also.
I feel happy because my teeth just got taken care of by an attractive female student dentist.
Happiness, it takes so little.
Did you get her number?
18:41
Lol
No, I didn't ask.
I was just being a good patient.
There are not less copies with std::move in this case :( ideone.com/TyG2Z
Am I doing it wrong?
Would be hard to ask while your teeth are being taken care of.
@ManofOneWay Yes, terribly. You should get drunk.
@DomagojPandža Wait, what. Now you can explicitly choose to lose the game.
What.
Well, at least that's better than losing without choosing to.
In a way.
And then you get a "Congratulations on bringing an end to the Reaper threat." message. After you explicitly choose to not bring an end to it. lol
@EtiennedeMartel Could you please tell me what I'm doing wrong there? =)
18:46
I can say it's an improvement.
It improved on ridiculousness.
@ManofOneWay A is not movable.
Well, technically it is, but a move has the same semantics as a copy.
Oh, wait. I need to pay more attention.
Do you mean I have to allocate the A's on the heap?
In order for move to work?
No, no, forget I said that.
std::move({a1,a2,a3}) is a GCC extension and is not supposed to compile.
So, I moved the initializer list before and not the vector?
18:50
All those remaining copies are due to: #1 copying the As into the array backing the initializer_list, and #2 copying the As from there into the vector storage. The vector is not copied anymore.
Yes. std::initializer_list is cheap to copy, too.
@ManofOneWay The constructor of B was making copies of its argument.
@LucDanton Cheap to copy, expensive to construct.
Note so sure about that. It's minimal.
Could I have done it using even less copies? No?
18:53
@ManofOneWay This has slightly different semantics: ideone.com/itau9
@LucDanton Once constructed, you can't move from an initializer_list.
@Potatoswatter Most of the time.
@LucDanton Not meaningfully, anyway, because it only provides a const access path.
@RMartinhoFernandes So if I create them within the init list they won't get copied? Are they implicitly moved?
@ManofOneWay They're created directly in the array.
18:58
gcc -std=c1x 1.c -o 1

why does it compile?

LOUNGE(C);

A room to hang out and chat. The primary focus is on the C lan...
I think there's a bug in that GCC, I had to manually define B( B&& ) = default to eliminate the last copies: ideone.com/zdj2x
@user1131997 Talk about a vague question…

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