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00:51
That feel when void return types stop making sense compared to objects returning themselves
channels.push_back(base_settings.mutate()); compared to base_settings.mutate(); channels.push_back(base_settings);
01:03
std::filesystem apparently took some of that same medicine
Are they still doing that retarded thing where division concatenates things?
(10/5) = 105
01:22
@Mikhail I'd expect that to come out as 10/5 (or perhaps 10\5 on Windows).
@sehe I was guessing that was what you were after, but thought it wouldn't hurt to be sure...
 
2 hours later…
03:14
Am I the only one seeing the similarity between the two?
Fashion wise that is ...
 
3 hours later…
06:42
Scientists spot a cosmic vampire - and watch it explode - But the dwarf sucks too much, gathering so much fuel that it explodes under its own weight ... we are not talking about Trump unfortunately.
Also anyone with mobile I can use for remote testing?
<-- desperately in need of an international guinea pig to test remote feature on.
 
2 hours later…
09:23
@JerryCoffin Actually the working draft of the filesystem proposal mentions that the "/" operator can be defined "so as to conform to the native file delimiter".
@Mysticial You saw this right? kinda cute: piotte13.github.io/SIMD-Visualiser
@Mikhail No I haven't. Holy shit, that's awesome.
 
4 hours later…
13:40
@Mysticial Despite feeling traumatized after ep1, I do think Goblin Slayer has some redeeming aspects.
sbi
sbi
14:00
Hi.
Can someone explain this compiler error to me? Why does f end up being const?
Lambdas have operator() being const by default, unless you make it mutable
like: return [f=std::forward<Func>(f)](const auto&& ...obj) mutable {
sbi
sbi
@milleniumbug Oh! You mean the classes that are generated from lambdas are const, and thus are their data members, of which f is one? OK, that would explain this.
Yay, this works!
Thanks, @milleniumbug!
The generated class from lambda has an return_type operator()(whatever) const
unless mutable
sbi
sbi
Yeah, I got that. I even remember having read that, now that you said it. But having never had the chance to seriously use modern C++, I forgot about it.
14:19
@sbi Are you finally allowed to use C++1[14]?
My boss decided that I should be present in job interviews for C++ roles. My only test is to see if they can quickly spot a violation of the old rule-of-three (C++98 style). At this point none of the candidates have succeeded in spotting it immediately.
I also found that their personality was a much bigger convincer for me than their C++ knowledge.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked I had a C++14 project dropped into my lap a while ago. However, that was a several 10kLoC project mostly done under pressure by developers who made their first steps in modern C++, so the code probably lacks a bit in sophistication. Add to this that I am under pressure, too, so I mostly just went in an manipulated existing code to adhere to changed requirements. But...
About a week ago we have been told by the vendor of our main platform that they will adapt a new GCC version to their platform, so we (having volunteered as beta testers) will get our hands on a new compiler for that platform. That made a splash and led to rejoicing here in the office.
@sbi no longer bound by GCC 4.8.1?
One of the candidates (who previously worked at CERN), literally said: I'm not difficult. I'll do what you tell me to do. That was after he disclosed his dislike for bad code (which is plentiful in science communities.)
@StackedCrooked just give them the FORTRAN to clean up
sbi
sbi
@Mgetz We are still bound to GCC 4.1.2, IIRC, on our main platform. I am, however, currently dabbling in a project deployed on Linux, and it's using GCC 6. Unfortunately, the current project will likely be the last one this code will be used in...
14:26
tell them you want it in idiomatic F77
@Mgetz He ended up working for our company, but not for the C++ team. (He joined the FPGA team.)
sbi
sbi
Anyway, I have been invigorated by Björn Fahller's talk at Meeting C++ about Higher Order Functions, plus the fact that we might be able to actually use this stuff next year, so I am currently playing with this.
@sbi That's good to hear.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked My most beloved interview question is to ask them to tell me what they know about function template partial specialization. :) So far (~15 years) I had one candidate looking at me strangely and saying "That doesn't exist, does it?" Still, I always found it a good starter for talking about what they actually know about C++ and what they don't.
@StackedCrooked What I look for in candidates is their ability to learn new stuff. There's no point in finding the perfect match for your team's current set of buzzwords, because that set will have changed in a few months.
I've only interviewed 3 candidates thus far. And I noticed (to my suprise) that I care much more about their personality than their C++ knowledge.
If the person seem like a good person to work with (and also not a moron), than I'm more than happy.
sbi
sbi
14:32
@StackedCrooked Yes, of course. They need to fit into the team. But ability (and willingness) to learn new stuff is also an important part of their personality.
(However, that's probably due to my very limited experience.)
@sbi Yeah, ability and willingness to learn new stuff is something I look out for.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked When I was teaching C++ to students there were always a few real good ones among them. The best one usually wasn't one I would want to work with, so I never asked them if they needed a job. I did ask others, though. :)
@sbi I understand :)
@sbi sometimes they need to find out the hard way they aren't god's gift to programming
sbi
sbi
@Mgetz They probably were, I dunno. They just weren't God's gift to their team.
14:37
I guess my point is that everybody needs humility
I'm smart but I've run into a lot of people smarter and better than I am
Erm, welcome to the club?
(I realized this at age 17, when I changed from a village school to city school.)
(Oh, that probably means I'm dumber than you.)
However, the point
Erm, never mind.
sbi
sbi
@sbi FWIW, I came out of Björn's talk on Friday and was convince I'll be writing different code starting the Monday after. And I did. On Monday I looked at some 12 line function and decided to do something about it. The result is this:
range_for_each( filter_plants<plant_type>(plant_status_is_ok), manipulate_plant(tp) );
One line is all that is left. (I changed some identifiers to protect my employer.)
And you, likely having no idea about the application domain, can immediately grasp what it's doing.
I love that.
15:11
@sbi You manipulated either the OK or the NOT-OK plants.
("filter" is ambiguous without context.)
15:39
can i ask some questions here?
15:49

C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
thank u:)
16:43
Hello, whoever understand data structures, especially Binary Search Tree, Can you visit my question ? stackoverflow.com/questions/53572840/…
 
3 hours later…
sbi
sbi
19:49
@StackedCrooked Yes, indeed. filter_plants filters out a type of plant from the set (which is a compile-time list of run-time lists of plants of different types), passing a predicate to it will further filter down the set. On that we act. I agree that "filter" by itself seems suboptimal as a verb, but, hey, the code fell into my lap, and I had deadlines to meet... :-/
@OzanYurtsever -1 from me for posting a C question in this room.
 
2 hours later…
22:07
ar
sbi
sbi
22:36
@Puppy You sound like you are getting strangled.
wrong ofcus
or talking about augmented reality
sbi
sbi
22:49
@Puppy I could have thought of this myself, ofcus!
@Borgleader Contrary to popular believe, dropping buzzwords is not "talking about" something.
23:42
@sbi Why were you using gcc 4.1 at work? What was the stated technical motivation?
sbi
sbi
@Mikhail We mostly program for a semi-embedded, proprietary platform. The vendor only switched from VxWorks 5.5 (that's from 1996, I think) to VxWorks 7 two years ago. They haven't updated to a new compiler yet, but will do so next year.
@sbi Did you folks consider using gcc 4.x to build a later version of gcc?
I did something similar for NIOS II, mostly because I was bored
Or I use a newer version of gcc for my Arduino' projects
sbi
sbi
@Mikhail Uh, what? The vendor considers making a new (cross-)compiler available a project they'll spent months on, so I presume it's a bit more work than just compiling the code. And we do critical infrastructure (power plants), so we're very wary of any quick hacks.
So, the problem might be that the architecture target isn't upstreamed?
sbi
sbi
Some months ago some contractor switched my project (which runs on Linux and uses GCC6) to the newest GCC version and was proud he did. I asked him whether he ever had a look at the test coverage in this project (abysmal by our standards), and how he's going to convince the team that this won't turn off the lights (and make freezers thaw) for the 5k people on the island the code is supposed to control all power plants. And what about short circuit current? That could actually kill people.
23:56
So, that question is answered by having tests?
sbi
sbi
What question?
"Will it produce valid code"
Which I believe you asked
But from a technical perspective, having cross compiled gcc, this isn't too hard. Typically the harder problem is that embedded systems have targets that aren't up-streamed, or certain libraries, like pthreads are missing, non-functional.

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