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00:41
@Mysticial Somebody answered my question: mathematica.stackexchange.com/q/186683/3068
 
2 hours later…
03:07
You know what's worse than spending days trying to resolve a memory issue in a heavily multi-threaded program - spending days try to re-align items on a gui interface.
xcode's ios auto layout is so bad and full of bugs, it's not funny.
03:23
03:35
04:35
404 - intelligence not found
^ how I feel when using some 'auto' system.
More confusing and work then manual system sometimes.
 
9 hours later…
13:33
9 hours later
 
2 hours later…
15:59
@BartekBanachewicz And have it gather all the types the return statements use? That would be cool. — NathanOliver 1 min ago
I wonder what are the odds of such proposal getting through
it would have to work for all templates, not just variant though, which makes it a massive undertaking
 
2 hours later…
17:52
@TelKitty Intel quad-core floof!
18:25
What was that tweet about storing video in subtitle tracks!? I cant find it anymore
19:24
thx
sbi
sbi
Hi.
I am fighting with fold expressions and I am losing. I want to create a function that returns a lambda which evaluates its argument with all the predicates passed to the function. This fails and I don't understand why. Can somebody shed some light on this?
@sbi I think you need to use (const auto& ...obj).
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Why? There's only ever one object per call, but many predicates.
Oh wait.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Well, that certainly compiles. It's just not what I want.
19:33
yeah, just realized you want to expand on p, not obj.
sbi
sbi
So why would it even try to expand obj, when that's not a even pack?
Hm, capturing as [=] seems to work.
But that's not perfect forwarding.
@sbi It won't try to unless it's a pack. (Basically ignore my earlier suggestion.)
Maybe you're hitting a limitation of lambda syntax.
Might need to replace it with a plain old function object.
I would love to be proven wrong though :)
sbi
sbi
Interestingly, this compiles:
template<typename ...Preds>
auto all_of_(Preds... p) {
    return (p() && ...);
}
This, however, doesn't
template<typename ...Preds>
auto all_of_(Preds... p) {
    return [p=std::forward<Preds...>(p...)]() {
        return (p() && ...);
    };
}
OK, so I think the culprit is this in the capture: pred=std::forward(p...). It seems the compiler can't tell that pred is supposed to be a parameter pack.
It seems there currently is no solution for this, @StackedCrooked:
1
A: Capturing a copy of parameter pack

Shafik YaghmourIf we look at proposal p0780: Allow pack expansion in lambda init-capture it covers this problem and possible solutions: With the introduction of generalized lambda capture [1], lambda captures can be nearly arbitrarily complex and solve nearly all problems. However, there is still an awk...

19:51
Interesting.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Mhmm. This might be a solution I can live with.
Seems reasonable.
sbi
sbi
This seems to compile. Ugh.
It needs at least GCC 6, though. I'm afraid I'll have to install a new GCC then. Sigh.
I think you need to use a placeholder for obj.
Oh wait. Forget that.
Actually, you may need to.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked ???
Oh.
Yeah, you're probably right.
20:04
I mean like this.
I suppose smart people like @Xeo would be a better help than me, lol.
sbi
sbi
Well, while the function template now compiles, all hell breaks lose when I try to actually use it.
I know. I tried it :)
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Ha! I think I got it.
Look at where the ellipsis is in the forwarding.
That's one hell of a workaround for what I thought would be a simple problem. :)
@sbi Yep. That seems to work.
If you add -O2 to the command line then it calculates the result at compile time. And changing the return of func1 from true to false does make the lambda in g() to return false. So it seems to be correct.
sbi
sbi
Oh. Thanks for checking this out!
 
1 hour later…
sbi
sbi
21:37
@StackedCrooked I can actually confirm that this is not true.
21:51
@sbi Just for what it's worth, that's how things typically look when you're forwarding a parameter pack.

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