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04:00
Has anything *nix side implemented the PPL?
no
but there's a very similar library, TBB, published by Intel.
which is good for Linux, Mac, and Windoze.
I haven't done a lot of concurrent things beyond a webserver, but I do work for a supercomputing department so I'm always interested in writing little scripts to run in parrallel.
Of course, that's running Linux, but I figured I'd ask about what there is Windows side.
using std::thread and friends is like having to write your own allocator, and then using new and delete.
It seems better than using posix threads.
I used posix for my webserver project.
yeah
that's bad
04:07
Are you familiar with SQLAPI++, by chance?
I'm looking for a good database API. I use PDO in PHP which is pretty nice, but so far I haven't had to use a database for anything C related.
nothing in PHP is nice
You are certainly entitled to think whatever you would like and express it.
hah
I spent the last... however long we've been talking... trying to remember where I've seen you before.
04:10
I come in here infrequently, but I sit in the PHP chat room a lot.
but, we've already had the PHP discussion and I see no need to rehash it, so feel free to ignore my grumpings
the others in this chat would tell you that I have a low opinion of many things
Regardless, what would use suggest for a MySQL API for C++?
dunno, I've never had cause to use SQL from C++
I'm actually looking to implement a portion of the website I work on in C++ for fun.
I don't want to use a full webstack solution like Wt.
hmm
you could consider interoperating with C#, LINQ is sick.
04:17
I love learning more about languages but it's so hard for me to come up with things to make.
I'm making a language
@DeadMG I was about to and then Google made Dart.
It seems to be what I want.
a lot of people accuse me of being a C++ fanboy, but
truth is, I simply think it's the best of a very bad lot.
GGG
GGG
04:18
C++ connector
I thought they only had a C connector. Didn't realize they had an OO one.
Does it support named parameters? (SELECT * FROM table WHERE id = :id)?
It appears to not.
@DeadMG Thanks for your recommendations. Good night.
night
GGG
GGG
04:43
night MG
@LeviMorrison do you really need that as much in a strongly-typed language?
oh whoops, it was you that was going to sleep, sorry for pinging you
I'm still here.
I'm not sure what a strongly typed language has to do with named parameters being unnecessary?
GGG
GGG
well, just that the usual benefit is that it casts things to the right type for the database
not casts, but you know what I mean
"prepares"
oh I guess it won't quote and escape strings for you
but that's like 3 LOC
I dunno, it's late, lol... just seems less necessary in a strongly typed language
Like, in PHP it's pretty much a must, to avoid sql injection and stuff... but a big part of that is, someone could sneak quotes and sql commands into something that was supposed to represent a number value
so you need named or positional params
they take care of all that, and escape everything....
but I think the connector has a fn to escape and quote stuff
GGG
GGG
05:08
> warning: ISO C++ forbids braced-groups within expressions [-pedantic]
awesome, there go my macros
05:37
Yeah, I forgot to mention but (a) { foo, bar } isn't allowed, (a)({ foo, bar }) may have the meaning you intended (not that I checked though).
I actually would recommend a { foo, bar }. Same effect, different notation.
GGG
GGG
@LucDanton (a)({ foo, bar }) would be a function or ctor call, wouldn't it? Can't do it without initializer_list
First version uses cast notation, second is a constructor call. They behave the same.
GGG
GGG
(a) { foo, bar } is the compound literal from C that g++ supports through an extension, I wonder if msvc supports
std::initializer_list is irrelevant.
GGG
GGG
it's not really a cast
but yeah cast notation
yeah but variadic function support sucks
if I pass a list to a constructor I don't think I'll know how long it is
and it will have to be the second parameter
or would it be done with templates?
05:42
Are you aware that int i = { 42 }; is valid C++?
GGG
GGG
yes
What's wrong with a { foo, bar } then?
GGG
GGG
just like int i[] = {42, 24}
@LucDanton does that notation work in MSVC?
afaik it doesn't work without c++11
No idea.
Yes, I'm assuming C++11.
Note that alias<int[]> { 1, 2, 3 } is only available in C++11 anyway.
GGG
GGG
idk what alias<T> is
05:45
Disregard that. The important part is that you can't use brace initializers for temporary arrays in C++03.
GGG
GGG
like int i[] = {42, 24}?
No temporary is involved here, so it's fine.
GGG
GGG
not sure what you mean then, how would it look?
Sorry, don't really have all the terminology down
What you attempted to do with constructors taking arrays.
GGG
GGG
Sorry, I'm lost
I know I can't have classes on the left hand side
until c++11
05:49
1
Q: Concise initialization syntax for nested variants?

GGGI'm working a small C++ JSON library to help sharpen my rusty C++ skills, and I'm having trouble understanding some behavior with initialization lists. The core of the library is a variant class (named "var") that stores any of the various JSON datatypes (null, boolean, number, string, object, a...

GGG
GGG
if you mean the copy constructors
Is colledge about to start or something?
Your attempt made it look like you were using C++11.
GGG
GGG
I was, but I wanted to adapt it to work in 03
Brace syntax is too limited.
GGG
GGG
05:51
yeah it fucking sucks
I'm trying to wrangle it into something useful though
06:11
@melak what would I need octet pairs for?
06:26
you know
the BBC has really sunk to a new low
I'm currently watching a program about Lesbian Vampire Killers
filled with many topless women
Where are the good old days of Heterosexual Vampire Killers.
2
lol
it's kind of a pity, cause James Cordon is actually pretty funny
also, his attitude mirrors my own in a reassuring way
"It'll be shit." "I'm only being nice to you because I'm drunk."
@DeadMG Yeah, just like how China is a lot closer to America than the moon :)
@DeadMG std::sort returns void and mutates state. How can it be considered functional?
06:41
I'm not the one who said it
@DeadMG Are Wide classes open or sealed for inheritance by default?
I have types, not classes
but probably open
Because there seems to be a lot of discussion lately that sealed should be the default. You know, fragile base class problem, design for inheritance or forbid it and such.
I've nothing against that
it's just not a change I have actively considered
Or just get rid of inheritance altogether ;)
06:46
fraid not
How does a simple "Circle inherits from Shape" example look like in Wide?
type Shape {} type Circle : Shape {}
Ah, the good old colon.
I see no reason to change the syntax
...coming from C++, right? Because other languages sure have different syntax.
06:48
java and C# also use :
but yes
No, Java uses extends and implements keywords instead of a colon.
oh yeah
but that's even worse
I think it reads nicer than a colon. But having two keywords for that can be annoying sometimes.
GGG
GGG
I prefer extends but implements is horrible
GGG
GGG
06:50
extends A, B, C would be rad
I don't see a reason to add a keyword when a colon will do
But Wide is still in an early stage where you can reserve as many keywords as you want.
yes, it is
Wide isn't widely used yet so to speak (sorry for the pun).
but I won't do that without a good reason, and in this case, there is no ambiguity with a simple colon
06:52
Any estimates when the Wide compiler will be bootstrapped? :)
lol
probably a lot sooner now that llvm has an actual linker project which has a remote chance of outputting an executable
GGG
GGG
@DeadMG someone downvoted your answer on my question =p
I noticed
GGG
GGG
and someone left an answer around the same time...
<_<
oh wait no they didnt
man i need sleep
@GGG goto bed?
GGG
GGG
07:03
label bed not defined :(
I have a type which has an explicit conversion to bool and several non-explicit conversions. I get unwanted conversions to a type itself convertible to bool instead of directly converting to bool, including in a context apparently similar to if (e). Unfortunately I can't repro... Driving me crazy!
one would suggest that "apparently similar" is not sufficiently similar
I'm saying apparently because I'd wager that by the time I get to that contextually conversion there might well have UB. I'm basing the diagnostic on the fact that there is no operator bool instantiation, not from running the program.
Not sure where to go. I originally wanted those implicit conversions to only be available for rvalues precisely to avoid wreaking havoc. But I'm using GCC.
07:20
implicit conversions to bool mostly suck
The implicit conversions are to a value_type of sorts.
Okay, got it. If you have both explicit operator bool() const; and e.g. operator int(); then the lack of cv-qualifier makes overload resolution favour it.
well, that's really strange
I should really check but I suspect that a boolean context really means 'consider both implicit and explicit conversions', not 'favour explicit over implicit'.
I'd really rather see wording that causes it to always favour explicit over implicit boolean
I'd like that naively, but I think it'd be a first.
07:29
@LucDanton Why is your operator int() non const in the first place?
11 mins ago, by Luc Danton
Not sure where to go. I originally wanted those implicit conversions to only be available for rvalues precisely to avoid wreaking havoc. But I'm using GCC.
Destructive operation that should only be available on an rvalue.
Then how about operator int() &&? Or does your compiler not support that syntax yet?
Also, destructive conversions seem like a really bad idea.
1 min ago, by Luc Danton
11 mins ago, by Luc Danton
Not sure where to go. I originally wanted those implicit conversions to only be available for rvalues precisely to avoid wreaking havoc. But I'm using GCC.
The problem would still have existed on an rvalue, since explicit operator bool() const; is still available though.
So I guess I'm glad I faced that sooner than later.
The worst is that Boost.Test is not using a contextual conversion. So BOOST_REQUIRE( e ); doesn't use that explicit operator bool() const;.
it's time for me and my bed to meet.
tartar
Humm where in the standard does it say that POD structs are zero-initialized when calling their default ctor?
I know I looked this up, but now I cannot find it anymore :(
07:41
8.5 I expect. Look for 'value initialization'.
Or perhaps 8.5 references where value initialization is defined.
@Nils One thing I noticed with PODs is that value initialization is not performed on its members if you have a defaulted constructor: struct Foo { Foo() = default; Foo(int n) : n(n) {} int n; }; // meets POD requirements, but Foo() doesn't initialize n.
nah this has nothing to do with references
@StackedCrooked Not a POD.
@StackedCrooked Yes that is correct, because it is no longer a POD then..
@LucDanton Static assert on is_pod does pass with GCC 4.7.
07:47
8.5.1 7
To value-initialize an object of type T means:
..
if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) non-union class type without a user-provided constructor, then the object
is zero-initialized and, if T’s implicitly-declared default constructor is non-trivial, that constructor is
called.
Humm but we don't do value initialization. What I want is to zero-initialize.
@StackedCrooked You're right, the trivial requirement is much more lenient than I thought. FTR though with your example default construction and value initialization work as expected.
5 To zero-initialize an object or reference of type T means:
..
- if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) non-union class type, each non-static data member and each base-class
subobject is zero-initialized and padding is initialized to zero bits;
Looks like in C++11 this works with normal classes too or did I misunderstand something?
@Nils This definition is necessary for static initialization.
Unless I misunderstood what you meant with 'this' .
After all zero-initialization is not new from C++11.
So I think aggregate is the term we are looking for.
"An aggregate is an array or a class (clause 9) with no user-declared constructors (12.1), no private or protected
non-static data members (clause 11), no base classes (clause 10), and no virtual functions"
not POD
I'm not looking for that.
08:00
Hum? 8.5.1 is about aggregates
What of it?
Nah maybe not lol
:)
8.5 paragraph 5 No mentions of pods or aggregates
While the Standard tries to be organised note that the name of clauses, sections(?) and subsections has no bearing on normative text. E.g. "int is an integral type" would have the same effect no matter where it appeared.
@Nils Just to be sure you're not confusing something: zero-initialized syntax involves syntax with explicit (), e.g. T(). So int n = int(); means that n will be zero initialized. But int n; will not. "Default constructor" is not part of the definition.
@StackedCrooked That's value initialization. Note that int n; at namespace scope results in zero-initialization, too.
08:09
@StackedCrooked sure
goto is excellent.
0
Q: C++ SDL Breaking out of while loop

user1534664I've been messing around with C++ SDL for a few days now and I've come across an interesting problem. SDL_Event event1; while(SDL_WaitEvent(&event1)) { for(size_t i = 0; i < MainMenuOptions.size();i++) { if(event1.button.x > MainMenuOptions.at(i).GetX() && event...

I have some meds left over from when I pulled a disc, should make for some interesting code. PHP and Vicodin, what could possibly go wrong?
08:28
@LuchianGrigore Sure it is. Wow, I actually got accepted with it, instead of the guy who suggested another variable.
I actually can only see the problem with goto if the main while loop grows painfully big. However, if it grows to such size, probably it's contents are bad, right?
Yay, I fixed my unit tests.
@LucDanton Grats!
And from that I learned that conversion operators that 'overlap' are problematic, even when using explicit.
@BartekBanachewicz And profile. The compiler might not contain proper special casing for goto's (since they are so rare). Then again, a good compiler would have such optimizations in a later stage, where it doesn't matter how a branching condition was originally worded in source code.
@LucDanton Erm. How? I'm interested.
I was thrilled to learn c++11 added explicit user-defined conversion operators. If that is just a pipe dream, I'd like to know :)
Sorry, I meant to say even when some of them are explicit.
08:36
@LucDanton Ah. That clears up a lot :)
In this case I had explicit operator bool() const; (nothing to say here) and additional implicit conversions.
Arguably, 'explicit' should have been the default - and the language could (optionally... ) have used a keyword implicit :)
At first the problem was that the implicit conversions were not marked const (they're destructive) and were preferred, even in contextual conversions to bool.
@LucDanton Contextual meaning - 'as in if(...)` etc?
But marking const merely makes the conversions ambiguous rather than preferred.
@sehe Yep. exceptional<int> e; if(e) ... would not have the semantics of if(e.valid()) ... as desired.
08:38
@LucDanton Yeah. One of the unintuitive, rough edges of 'const' in C++
@sehe Why should we care for bad compilers? Their code will be slower anyway.
In addition to that Boost.Test does that weird thing with e.g. BOOST_REQUIRE( foo ) where it attempts an explicit conversion to a type that's not even bool.
So, madness everywhere.
@BartekBanachewicz You shouldn't. You should profile, that's what I said, by the way
We live in the middle ages. I got back to my desk after 1 month and am missing a monitor, 1 xbox controller and god knows what else...
@LucDanton Oh. I have a love-hate with C++'s ability to 'infer' (jargon missing) chained implicit conversions. It is absolutely fantastic and "like magic" as long as it happens to do what you expect :)
08:41
@sehe That I agree with, of course. But the point is, the goto isn't any worse than other approaches.
@LuchianGrigore You use an Xbox controller at work?
@sehe yeah
can't play fifa on the keyboard
@sehe Exactly yes. I thought I could let my guard down when mixing explicit and non-explicit conversions, but you really shouldn't.
well, you can, but it sucks...
@LuchianGrigore You work for EA studio?
08:43
Yeah
My permanent fix will be to avoid overlap completely by discriminating on value category, when GCC supports that.
@LuchianGrigore way to go.
@BartekBanachewicz Conceptually, no. I was responding to your implied query in "I actually can only see the problem". Of course, you should always profile, but the thing is: you should be aware of the possibility that the optimizer might handle one code variation better than the other, even if the object might be identical in the unoptimized version
@LuchianGrigore Woot indeed. However, common thiefs at the workplace? Not so good.
@sehe Thanks for that one.
@sehe meh... I'll get them back
08:45
When I arrived back after 3 weeks, I had suddenly moved workspace. Luckily I carry my own eSata SSD drive so I was up to speed on another desktop in about an hour
@sehe You don't, like, own your machine? I mean, did you need to migrate the data?
Luckily I have still have 2 monitors :)
Wait. You somehow think that removing a variable is good? You introduced evil code duplication, for no reason. This is inviting bugs when the condition needs to be changed. (Not to mention this breaks down if the condition expression has sideeffects.) — sehe 7 secs ago
@BartekBanachewicz No my data lives on my SSD. We don't own work spots. Apparently. Also I carry the SSD out of annoyance with crappy dev PCs. For clarification: we're deployed on-site with a customer and the infrastructure is provided by them...
I take it they don't pass the joel test?
Aww man, I hate making decisions.
08:50
@sehe Ah, so yea, the mobile disk is lifesaver. Especially if you work mainly on virtual machines.
@sehe I knew at once that something is wrong with this answer, but I just couldn't express it ^^
@R.MartinhoFernandes All humans do. Oh wait...
@LuchianGrigore Not in terms of infra
@DeadMG Vampire Killers - as in "Killer of vampires" or "Killer that is a vampire"?
sbi
sbi
1
A: C++ SDL Breaking out of while loop

sbiThe common solution is to put this stuff into its own function and return from that: inline SDL_Event do_it() { SDL_Event event; while(SDL_WaitEvent(&event)) for(std::size_t i = 0; i < MainMenuOptions.size(); ++i) if(/*...*/) return event; ...

Is move_val(foo) an acceptable name for val(std::move(foo))?
Yeah not one of my better mornings when it comes to names.
@sbi And that also helps to keep the while loop contents small. +1
However, notice how the return statement actually resembles the goto
@BartekBanachewicz And if you want to bring it back inline you can use a lambda!
09:00
goto may seem ideal here, but it only hides the bigger issue: the code is trying to do too much.
@ecatmur [](){}();
@BartekBanachewicz Actually the first set of parens are redundant.
[]{}();
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, of course. And so do if, while, break... And that's the point, really: Replace goto by specialized constructs that do one thing, so that the code becomes easier to read and maintain, and less error-prone. Much in the same ways C++-style casts are better than C-style casts.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, considering the OP is a beginner, it can be too much at once. Despite of sbi's solution being the most elegant, however, it will take time for him to figure it out. Trying to compress X years of expertise in one answer has really pros and cons, IMO.
I mean, I was helping some of the fellow students of mine last semester. You can laugh at my un-knowledge, but they were all my age and realy much, much worse. If I tried to show them the perfect solutions, but they sometimes really require experience to grasp on them. I mean, I can see that the inline or lambda solution is great; however, I highly doubt the OP (beginner) can fully understand what's being proposed to him.
And there's the problem - should he receive the sub-optimal solution which he is able to understand, or should he just copy the perfect solution, assuming he will understand it in the future.
Personally, if I'm going to hide some bit of knowledge, I'd rather hide the one that is less good.
09:12
Unless the knowledge that you know well puts you in a bad light.
@BartekBanachewicz More pros than cons! Not a reason to not mention it. This is how Stack Overflow jumpstarts learning, in a way that 'apprentice-ship' does!
@bobobobo I don't like to assume total strangers are incapable of understanding "advanced" things. I find that condescending. — R. Martinho Fernandes May 30 at 20:25
:5003373 Nothing in particular. But I could come up with a some stuff.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What does "condescending" actually mean?
> displaying arrogance by patronizing those considered inferior
09:15
@BartekBanachewicz It doesn't need inline nor lambdas. Function extraction is peanuts and is about the first thing you'd learn (main is also a function, if a bit magic)
@sehe It always makes me laugh how I really learn to put into appriopriate words something as simple as "function extraction" every day here on SO. It also shows me how much more I really need to learn, actually.
Never heard about function extraction.
Does it mean eliminating duplicate code by putting it in a function?
You did, of course, but never named it as such. Yeah.
In my school they called that modular programming.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I noticed that you used emplace_back on the vector<unique_ptr<...>>. Does it really make sense? I mean, it's pointers anyway...
09:25
@BartekBanachewicz It saves me writing unique_ptr again: emplace_back(new T) vs push_back(unique_ptr<T>(new T)).
(And also saves a move, but that's negligible here)
wowowow.... wait a little.
std::unique_ptr<int> p = new int; is an error.
emplace runs a move constructor for unique_ptr, that's ok.
int* is not convertible to std::unique_ptr<int>.
@BartekBanachewicz No it does not
emplace calls the constructor of unique_ptr with the arguments you passed to emplace itself.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Except that push_back moves a temporary
@KillianDS that was pretty much what I wrote.
@BartekBanachewicz I learnt it on SO too. Not the jargon, but to use it. Communication is hard. Written communication is harder (everyone who uses email knows)
@BartekBanachewicz No it wasn't, forwarding arguments and a move constructor are really different concepts.
09:29
@KillianDS As long as it runs a constructor for us, does it really matter?
I thought the point of emplace was to hide all the burden with em.... emplacing :P
@BartekBanachewicz In the wording. Yes. In the reduced confusion, Yes. :)
@BartekBanachewicz Yep, and not by moving
@BartekBanachewicz Yes it does, because two different constructors are being called.
@Xeo No idea what you're talking about (I suspect your browser may be broken; try refreshing the page) :P
I gotta draw it on paper, still not getting it.
@BartekBanachewicz Scroll up? Do you have images blocked? Or do you mean (like me) you'll understand better when you've drawn the sequence/process yourself?
09:32
@sehe the latter.
Only then I can be 100% sure I did all the compiler does.
Count the constructions.
@BartekBanachewicz I remember doing that, back when I had no computer and I had to 'debug' my programs on paper, waiting for the day I could try them out on a computer at a friend of my parent's house
@sehe I actually experienced that, but quite for different reasons. My parents were very strict when it came to me using the computer. For like, 4-5 years I was limited to 3 hours... a week.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes hrhr
@BartekBanachewicz When we finally got a computer (years down the road) I had similar restrictions. But, we didn't have internet. So when my mom found out I was trying to help people and writing useful stuff, she started asking me to help friends and she couldn't really limit my time :)
It's also how I ended up in computer prostitution programming for a living :)
blog.jgc.org/2012/08/why-dont-they-just.html <-- nice "Why don't they just..." regarding Curiosity Rover
2
09:42
@sehe Heh, at some point they finally realized that it doesn't quite make sense. But hey, what a cool episode of my life was to get out of the house and go to my grandparents; they had 486DX with 24 megs of RAM. Not only the asm was cool these days, i moved back in time with games too.
@sehe ;)
@sehe I was actually more interested in getting amateur rover to some desert. Nice project!
@BartekBanachewicz 24 Megs?!?! I'm trying to recall when I've ever had more than 2Mbs. I think that was after I was in college
goo' mornin' gals and pals
@sehe I actually knew how powerful it was. Heck, we even put a 1GB CF card via the IDE adapter as a startup in it. Probably the first SSD-run machine in my town ;)
No that can't be right. I must have had more memory back than becuase I quite distinctly remember buying a motherboard upgrade with a Pentium II from a house mate
09:58
O. M. G. if((float)totalChars > (0.75f) * (float)ReadBufferSize)
0
Q: "Buffer too small" error on resized array (C++ / Win32)

GrahamZI'm resizing an array. The resize (doubling the size) appears to work correctly, but when I send more text into the resized array, when it reaches what would have been the limit of the array before it was resized, I get a "Debug Assertion Failed! Expression: (L"Buffer is too small" && 0)"...

Didn't see that coming.

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