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10:01
I notice that people have been sprinkling empty throw specifiers in our codebase now.
@thecoshman No.
@StackedCrooked throw ALL the things
@CatPlusPlus lazy trolling
Xeo
Xeo
Do you guys have some motivational letters to share? I just don't know how to formulate mine :s
@thecoshman Very weak.
Mine are usually very short.
10:03
ugh
how is that even possible? I lost a commit
You what.
11 hours ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
I swear that one day, I'll just write "I'm awesome. Hire me." in my cover letter.
I made a fix a few weeks ago, and now it's... not there
@jalf did you check behind the couch?
it was just a couple of lines, so I was able to recreate it in less than 5 mins, but worries me because what if I'm missing something else as well?
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman :p
@jalf Were you awake at the time?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes heh, I wish it was that easy
@Xeo oh, we can use punctuation as well?
Xeo
Xeo
10:04
I'm really bad with formal stuff
Am I right that you can't template argument deduct the type of a template parameter?
As in template<typename T, T *t> T f() { return *t; }
That's not deducible anyway.
Or is there some sneaky trick?
Well, sure, you call it int i{}; f<int, &i>(). But can I leave out the int in the call?
careful with templates dealing with T* and T&, you might not get the behaviour you expect
10:10
I'm not sure on the exact details, I just know enough that you need to watch out when you want your template to take T*
might be when you through const into the mix...
There's something about external linkage, definitely, so const might mess that up.
Xeo
Xeo
So no cover letter examples? Damn :(
your covering letter is a place for you to talk a bit about why they should hire you, on a more personal level
maybe explain a bit about why you want to work with the company
perhaps links to projects you have worked on
@thecoshman It's because it needs external or internal linkage.
@R.MartinhoFernandes those videos I watch with the STL guy explained it well... I just forgot :P
something like passing an int *i into a template might not match the one you expect it to. I think it was that template foo<class T&>() will match stronger than template foo<class T*> but it might depend on throwing some 'const' into it
10:17
void main() { int i; for(i = 0; i < 50; i++) if(false) break; } Can someone test this in VS?
(Yeah, void main, it's from this question stackoverflow.com/questions/11793197/…)
OP claims the debugger hits the break line.
@R.MartinhoFernandes not got VS to hand, but looks fine to me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that it should never do :S
though, it depends on how the debugger shows what is going on
second question today about russian
0
Q: Something with encode Russian letter in Visual Studio 2008

MariaI'm trying input symbol from console in Russian alphabet. This is code #include <iostream> #include <windows.h> #include <locale.h> using namespace std; void main(){ char c; setlocale(LC_ALL,"rus"); cout << "Я хочу видеть это по-русски!" << endl; c...

(seems identical)
@R.MartinhoFernandes hmm... I wouldn't have thought both would compile...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mehhh
10:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's irrelevant, because everything gets optimised out. I'd guess the compiler is sticking the main exit on the break line (because, hey, why not?)
@ecatmur OP claims it happens with i == 0.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I tested it with VS 2010 and it's doing the right thing
I guess it's operator error.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think he's just inspecting a variable that is never used. If I return i from main I get return code 50 (huh...)
10:45
does Java have an equivalent to auto?
Object
Not really the same, I know.
no not really
but is that the closest it can get?
to just ignore all notion of type?
Maybe with Groovy.
@thecoshman nope
@thecoshman No.
Just write the type and suck it up. :(
10:48
And the way they're going, it seems unlikely that they're going to be able to add anything this decade
¬_¬ gods damn java
Do edits still give rep after 2k?
@jalf Have you seen what they already implemented for Java 8 (expected next year)?
@yurikilochek No.
@yurikilochek It would be horrifically abused if it did.
10:50
thats exactly what i was going to do
@R.MartinhoFernandes no, I just know that they postponed the jigsaw thing (again), and lambdas have been pushed several times already, but don't know their current status
are you saying they've actually got some changes in for Java 8?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Don't leave us in the cold now!
obviously, I don't really keep up with java, but it's hard not to spot a certain pattern when all the news I do see are about "feature X won't make it in Java Y, we'll shoot for Y+1"
@jalf Lambdas are in the repo already.
int releasedate() { return releasedate() + 1; }
3
10:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes and they won't be taken out again? ;)
well, good for them
Ok, just seeing addActionListener makes me shiver.
you put the proposal in
you put the proposal out
in
out
in
out
you shake it all about
you have a few trade mark disputes, and set the project back a a good few years
that's what standardisation is all about
Great, changing IDs in WYSIWYG editor with RelativeLayout breaks the layout.
Thanks, IDE, for being so helpful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes and clearly they couldn't use the .NET => lambda operator, oh no. It has to be a single-arrow ->.
11:02
@ecatmur well, single arrow is kind of more conventional for this stuff
@ecatmur They considered it, but decided against it for some reason.
.NET didn't invent lambdas, you know
Scala uses the fat arrow as well.
but no clue what Java's particular rationale was
Clearly the type of the arrow is very important.
11:07
Fuck. MS stole my free 25GB Skydrive.
And I think there was more data uploaded there too.
@CatPlusPlus Yes. And with so many to choose from, they got it wrong! :D
Obviously it should have been RIGHTWARDS ARROW WITH LOOP.
yes
@DeadMG, you hearing this? You need to adopt that for your language
I had to read the alt text before I got it. That's pretty meta
6
Q: How to avoid "(void)a" cast causing side-effects?

Johannes Schaub - litbI have this code and GCC prints "what!?". How can I avoid that, so that the void cast simply has the C meaning "Ignore the lonely 'a;'"? #include <iostream> struct A { template<typename T> operator T() { std::cout << "what!?"; } }; int main() { A a; (void)a; }

AAHAHA
Why can't I overload on return type. ;_;
Stupid Java.
AFAIK C++ doesn't allow that either.
In Java you can't overload on argument type if the overloaded arguments are both derived from the same base class.
E.g. Having two methods String toString(IPv4Address) { ... } and String toString(IPv6Address) { ... } won't work if both classes derive from IPAddress.
IPv6Address is derived from IPv4Address? is this really sensible?
No, see edit.
ah, i see
11:38
Which is kind of lame if you ask me.
Actually, I could be wrong. But I definitely remember encountering something like that.
Wtf. That's just impractical
Yeah, just tested myself. I wish I could find the original problematic code.
11:49
@StackedCrooked You're missing some context.
@R.MartinhoFernandes is supposed to be a joke?
lol
@StackedCrooked No, it doesn't.
Stupid C++, too.
But template<typename T> T operator() is supported, which seems to be pretty much the same thing to me.
12:03
not at all
0
Q: Difference between pointer and array version of strings

venkysmartyI am reading about strings. It is mentioned as below Strings can be referred as arrays and pointers. These two ways of referring to strings are equivalent, but may lead to code with different performance properties on different machines. We generally use the array version for clarity an...

help me explain why this question should be closed...
@StackedCrooked context-free grammar? :)
Because it's a terrible question.
Not constuctive 4 to go
Is it bad to answer -1 questions?
Not if it's a good question for sure
12:09
What if it's not that good
Wtf - this question has nothing to do with programming whatsoever?
0
Q: Less people on page after migrate

Timár MátyásI migrate a Facebook profile to page. I have earlier cca. 5.400 people, but after migrate I have only 506 people on page. Why?

Word of the day: Hemipygic – only having one buttock, half-assed
Xeo
Xeo
@KianMayne If you have a good answer, you could get the reversal badge if the question goes down further :)
Meh, not really, in this case. The question was written in a way that it was hard to understand what they were doing and how they were doing it
@ecatmur good workaround, that's what I had in mind too
@jalf Dammit these jokes are getting too advanced for me. (Needed to lookup context-free grammar in Wikipedia.)
12:22
@ecatmur now, there is one answer left which will be accepted!
unsigned u;
(i >> n) << n;
is this guaranteed to clear n lower bits?
damn wrong order
fixed
I think you mean (u >> n) << n;?
yes, fixed
with the u, not i
yes
too late fo edit
to*
12:30
Anyknow know a link to that pointer tutorial that begins with Don't f*cking use pointers?
As long as questions like this one exist, we know that the programmers’ teaching material is shit:
1
Q: C++ Detect dangling pointers when they are going out of bound without knowing the size

mkhan3189Consider piece of code > int main(int argc,char* argv[]){ > int *arrPtr = new int[4]; > for (int i=0;i<4;i++) > arrPtr[i]=i*2; > > for (int i=0;i<10;i++){ > arrPtr++; > cout<<"a...

this is simply a code pattern that should never have been taught in the first place
I’d hate to say that indexed loops are evil but indexed loops are certainly overrated and have a much too prominent place in programming lessons.
As a core language construct. Which they shouldn’t be.
@yurikilochek yes, as long as n < sizeof(u) * CHAR_BIT. You could also write u & ~(1u << n - 1) and see what the compiler comes up with.
@ecatmur thanks
if it would be allowed, would overloading "op." be triggered by "pointer->foo" ?
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Isn't that @Konrad's?
12:38
Not that I'm aware of.
no, it is
Xeo
Xeo
I know what you mean, though
(link courtesy to somebody else, not me)
I think it might need a sequel, called “fuck explicit loops”
You created that document? :D
it says so on the cover, no?
Xeo
Xeo
12:39
Told ya so.
@KonradRudolph I don't think the problem lies with explicit loops in the OP's case...
@Xeo But the general error class is due to indexed iteration (or indeed explicit iteration at all)
@KonradRudolph pointers are god-sent
@JohannesSchaub-litb Heretic!
anyway, could anybody please check the code I’ve posted? Is the mutable necessary there?
I thought so, but it compiles just fine without it on GCC 4.7
what code do you refer to
@KonradRudolph i would agree that mutable is superfluous
@JohannesSchaub-litb Ok, when do you need it then on lambdas? I thought it allowed you to modify closed-over variables
12:48
@KonradRudolph you have closed-over a reference to a variable
you cannot modify references anyway
ok, that makes sense. But again: when would you need it then?
if you captured by value, it would prevent you to modify it
it just makes the "operator()" const by default
no magic involved
ok, so in my case, the way to go is: capture by value, + mutable, right?
no, no magic, I agree
12:51
yes, that would work too
hm. Lambdas need local static variables
they do have them already if i'm not mistaken
yup, just noticed
(tried out)
but what I actually meant: without syntactic overhead :D
@KonradRudolph Slide 8 relies on NRVO. Maybe it's better to use std::move to make it explicit.
@KonradRudolph That's outstanding. I might turn it to a PG version and teach it to my kids.
12:52
the return type will not be deduced then cause the body is not simply "return .." anymore. but this has been "fixed" in a DR for post-C++11
@StackedCrooked Nope, move makes no sense there
i suppose that impls will implement that retroactively though
@JohannesSchaub-litb Dang. It works on GCC 4.7 though, no return type provided:
std::generate_n(std::back_inserter(arr), 4,
        []() { static int current = 0; return current++ * 2; });
i'll go to the hospital if my ear doesn't stop hurting soon... i guess the swimming pool i was in had some evil stuff in it
@KonradRudolph Jason (GCC C++ maintainer ) was the one who proposed that extension to the committee first. so that doesn't surprise me
another question: does the whole […] syntax make sense in retrospect? It allows very specific control of what is captured how, but the consensus seems to be not to use this, just capture everything (or this) and to let the compiler figure out the rest
@JohannesSchaub-litb Hospital for an ear infection? Seems like overkill.
Xeo
Xeo
@JohannesSchaub-litb Psh, I just wanted to post that :P
@KonradRudolph It also doesn't allow capturing move-only variables by-value :(
@SamDeHaan i was at the normal docs yesterday but it won't get better :/
Xeo
Xeo
But I think it's good. If you want some things by-value and some by-reference, you need to explicitly mention them
12:56
@Xeo Okay, but that’s orthogonal to my comment, isn’t it?
the original lambda proposal allowed for [y = move(y)] { ... } IIRC
i.e changing the initializer used in the lambda internal constructor
@JohannesSchaub-litb /shrug. Most of the ear infections I've had took 4-7 days to get better. I got a lot of them when I was young, so don't seem like a big deal to me. YMMV, of course.
OHH I see
i will wait then!
You can device a CopyMover, which moves another variable when it's copied

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