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11:00
@Neil It's the prio field in a VLAN tag. That's a number, not really a flag.
another reason strong typedefs are handy: typedef std::bitset<8> some_flag; typedef std::bitset<8> another_incompatible_flag;
@StackedCrooked Well then you just do some bit logic
The problem with uint8_t is that they are treated as character by ostream.
Why does it have to be encapsulated into an enormous wrapper class?
Oh wait, inheriting from bitset would give all its operators for free right?
11:02
Write a few static methods which read/write bits
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, bjam finished... now, why isn't there a boost/lib folder T_T
@Neil The bit logic is taken care of. I have a function int getPriority() and wondered whether I should change the return type to uint8_t. However, it is a bit problematic when printing.
Basically it's a value in the [0, 3) range. No need to use bitset.
Xeo
Xeo
Anybody here worked bith bjam before?
@Xeo I might have unknowingly invoked bjam when building boost.
That's how far my knowledge reaches.
@Xeo AFAIK, RUUUUN!
11:05
@StackedCrooked ^^
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked enum class priority : uint8_t { one = 1, two, three, four }; :D
@StackedCrooked Make it an int.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, it finished building, but I want all .libs in a boost/lib folder and I thought there was a flag to accomplish that
Isn't it stage or something?
Xeo
Xeo
oh
...
thanks for your kind support!
11:07
It's in the docs whistles
Xeo
Xeo
:(
Still not completely sure if I should write a simple chat or something else that involves network stuff
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why? (That's what I am inclined to do as well. Just like to know your reasoning.)
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked int is normally the fastest integer type on a given hardware, atleast that would be my guess
@Xeo I am using something like that for other fields (e.g. EtherType).
@StackedCrooked Basically, because you're looking at contrived ways to make it work less than int.
Seems like overengineering to me.
int just works.
Xeo
Xeo
11:13
Anybody got another idea than a P2P chat?
Or maybe I should make it client/server
since that's what I'd be working on there
@Xeo Yes. Don't use it.
Xeo
Xeo
heh
I don't like that kind of static assertion message.
I like to write mine so that they make sense in an error message and work as a comment.
Which assertion in particular?
Ah I see.
11:22
"Net16 is not a pod!" for example. When read in the code, it's a bit confusing.
You'd say: "Net16 must meet POD requirements.".
or something like that?
God point.
"Net16 is not a pod, idiot."
When I'm lazy, I use "!" as assertion message.
/confession-of-the-day
Xeo
Xeo
11:25
@StackedCrooked ""
Also you could encode the order in the type.
@Xeo I like a little impact.
Xeo
Xeo
"BOOM"
@CatPlusPlus How do you mean?
struct host_order; struct network_order;
template <typename Order> struct net16;
Or something. Probably with a different name.
11:27
@StackedCrooked "FUCK!" and "bananas" are cool too.
That way you always know the order and can do safe conversions between the two. :v
Bonus points if the Order structs are not just tags but actually hold the conversion logic.
In practice Net16 is sufficient. By consistently using the NetEncoded values for incoming network data I can assume that built-in type are always host-encoded.
Ok, dinner time.
hey, can anyone tell me why this one doesn't compile? pastebin.com/tN7eL1WM
It has an error.
11:30
the compiler?
Maybe you could share it with us.
Perhaps expected nested name-space identifier before 'A'?
That would mean your compiler is too old for template aliases
Use clang or gcc 4.7.x I believe
Give me a snapshot of 4.8 or give me mild annoyance.
I'll give you mild annoyance because that is easier to come by
Well that is annoying.
11:34
What the doctor ordered
Your friend is so gay, he has consensual sex with other men, and enjoys it.
That could be true of many girlfriends. That aren't very gay
@sehe I am using 4.7
@R.MartinhoFernandes The tweeter was probably confused...?
11:41
@sehe "error: expected primary-expression before ‘a’"
@BartekBanachewicz I'm pretty sure that means that your version still doesn't have template aliases, as that is the usual message I recognize
sbi
sbi
So I have tried to find out about the validity of those flags in the iPhone room, but I got lost in a maze of "message" on the level of "hi how r u mate ?" "5n & u ?" and still have no idea what they are about. I am now tempted to validate those flags just because I am so annoyed about those guys.
Oh gwad. "5n"? WTF.
@sehe I tried to compile it with 4.7 with -std=c++11
:5037279 Clang 3.1 says :
test.cpp:27:13: error: unexpected type name 'A': expected expression
            A a(5);
            ^
test.cpp:30:1: error: expected ';' after top level declarator
^
;
sbi
sbi
11:43
@R.MartinhoFernandes See here. Mustn't expose this room to such "content".
Missing parentheses on main.
@sbi I had a fit when I read your retweet this morning:
#Akin on rape:'the female body has ways to try and shut the whole thing down'. Today he's claiming the medical term for that is "Pussy Riot"
So much for clang's magnificent error messages.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh wow. Completely missed that.
I'm filing a bug report to Clang.
@R.MartinhoFernandes wow. Didn't see that coming
sbi
sbi
11:44
@sehe And have you seen Alf's message?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Missed it too
@sbi Yeah I did. I thought, though, the background seems to suggest it was a place in Rome instead of Russia, AFAICT :)
@sbi Did you see mine:
yesterday, by sehe
^ I guess it must be, then, Akins daughter has never told him the real reason she went to Mexico in the summer of 2003? How surprising <whistle/>
sbi
sbi
@sehe I don't care, it's still great.
I'm a bit hesitant to tweet that ^
@sbi Yeah. Putin's facial expression is the best match for this
11:46
@rubenvb The compiler won't write code for me. Fix that ASAP! ;)
sbi
sbi
@sehe Haha! No, I had missed that.
@sbi There is so much venom in that one... And it is so utterly beautiful in that nearly everyone will instantly get my implication
I think I'm tweeting it anyway. Get me a profile ... :)
@BartekBanachewicz Clang is proud of decent diagnostics. This is clearly a fubar'ed diagnostic. They don't like that, and probably will fix that, as the problem is bound to be more general.
sbi
sbi
@rubenvb You kids are so spoiled nowadays! How is that "totally messed up"? That's the kind of error message we had to put up with for decades — only the formatting wasn't as nice.
@sehe Yes, you are a true genius.
@rubenvb I hope they do, I then can always say, that my code helped fix clang xD
11:49
@sbi check the second error: it's pointing at the filename saying there's a missing semi-colon. That's just an internal bug.
@sbi Trolling?
@BartekBanachewicz oh, and btw, Clang has fixits it can apply while compiling, so it can write code for you in some limited circumstances.
sbi
sbi
@rubenvb I can't check. I don't have clang.
@sbi I copied the error in the bug report.
@sbi Hey, the kid here figured it out.
sbi
sbi
11:51
@sehe Oh, I'd never! 'twas just that you praised your own ingenuity, so I thought I'd post something reassuring...
@sbi Thanks a million
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought you did?
@sbi you think he's old?
@sbi So, I'm not a kid any more?
sbi
sbi
@rubenvb Oh that. What's so surprising about it? I mean, the compiler got confused, after you threw it a subtle, but effective syntax bomb. So? Also, it points at the first column of a non-existing line, pointing out the semicolon missing there. Isn't that obvious? (And I have never looked at clang's error messages.)
11:54
Don't worry, they're overhyped by spoiled kids.
hello guys :)
I need to ask something about arrays
@R.MartinhoFernandes Rite of passage has been completed
@sbi no it's not. The error has absolutely nothing to do with the problem. If you can't see why a compiler writer should fix that, please leave us spoiled kids with our toys and keep staring at GCC 4.2's template errors for another half hour.
@mekici I doubt that
They say const int ARRAY_LENGTH = 5;
int MyNumbers [ARRAY_LENGTH] = {34, 56, -21, 5002, 365};
sbi
sbi
11:56
@R.MartinhoFernandes Uh oh. Has nobody told you that? Damn, so I am the one left to break it to you, right. :( Well, here it is: As a robot you have never been a kid. You are manufactured Yes, that's true. No, really! What memories? Ah, those. Well, they put 'em in afterwards. Yes, I am sorry, but someday the truth had to come out, right?
I'd rather be spoiled than deal with subpar tools.
upss They say that this is static array
const int ARRAY_LENGTH = 5;
int MyNumbers [ARRAY_LENGTH] = {34, 56, -21, 5002, 365};
@rubenvb Well, read what the compiler sees: int main { stuff ...; How could this not be int moan { 5 };? Or int moon { somefunc() + expr3 * 8 };?
@mekici Don't do that.
@sbi Gawd, you sound like GladOS.
11:57
std::array<int, 5> numbers = {...};
but
@mekici std::array<int, 5> MyNumbers { 43,56,-21,5002,365};`
sbi
sbi
@rubenvb See @sehe's analysis. It's plain and simple.
@mekici Invalid/non-standard.
Please post snippets on ideone.com or pastebin
sbi
sbi
11:58
@mekici They are wrong. It's an automatic variable, not a static one.
std::vector<int> something(that_int);
i can use as dynamic, so num variable get value in runtime
@sehe so you are now agreeing it should have noted the missing parentheses?
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes "GladOS"? Is that what your brain's running on?
@rubenvb Shakes head, showing a sad expression.
GLaDOS, short for Genetic Lifeform and Disk Operating System, is a fictional artificially intelligent computer system in Valve Software's Half-Life video game series and the main antagonist in the video game Portal and remains a main character in Portal 2. She was created by Erik Wolpaw and Kim Swift and is voiced by Ellen McLain. She is responsible for testing and maintenance in Aperture Science research facility in both video games. While she initially appears to simply be a voice to guide and aid the player, her words and actions become increasingly malicious until she makes her intenti...
11:59
@rubenvb No, I'm telling you why it doesn't have a clue how you expect parens there, and why it should expect them
@rubenvb as a convenience, clang might add a helpful diag, but it is a rare corner case and it is certainly not a deficiency
@sehe well, for one, because main has to be defined with parentheses. Sheesh.
@mekici please post snippets out-of chat. This one was even not relevant
ok sorry
@sehe very well, the place pointed at for int whatever{0} is still wrong. And this is only in C++11 mode.
for C++03 and below, it's fine.
sbi
sbi
Aug 12 at 10:41, by Cat Plus Plus
If you are new here, read the code of conduct now. Thank you.
12:03
@rubenvb like i said, the 'magicness' of main might call for a 'courtesy' diagnostic. But as a parser it is doing precisely what you'd expect: parse an expression, which declares a variable of type int and subsequently followed by an initializer expression
@sehe so the semicolon pointer should in general be after the closing brace.
@rubenvb Does it point at the wrong place? I don't think so: it points at the place where it expected an initializer expression
@sehe have you ever used Clang before? It points at places in files
not at the first letter of filenames
@sehe Maybe it should just say "was the int initializer list the intent"?
@rubenvb This is probably due to the nature of error recovery: parse has already failed, and it wasn't clear what to expect. So instead of { it suggests simply ; to end a simple decl like int main;?
12:05
C++ grammar is hell, be glad they're able to tell anything from it.
@sehe but he decided it's int initialization already.
@BartekBanachewicz I think the parser already backtracked out of the possible initializer list and subsequently mentions, that instead of 'garbage' it expected (most likely suggestion) the end of declaration: ;
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz He?
@sehe check my new comment on the bug.
The compiler is a 'she', obviously: she keeps nagging about the same things, that should be obvious!
@rubenvb Woof
sbi
sbi
12:07
@rubenvb It does so by printing the file name, then the line it failed at, and an indicator for the column. And it did exactly that in its second error message — only the line was nil.
someone is in a bad mood today...
The funniest thing in the whole ordeal is that Clang uses Bugzilla.
@sbi which is not right.
@rubenvb I agree with that remark
@rubenvb How so? You vehemently try to get us to agree to your complaint. "Wie kaatst kan de bal verwachten"
@sehe it's the same issue in the original code. Just a bit bloated.
12:08
@sehe can you help me pls?
sbi
sbi
Aug 12 at 10:41, by Cat Plus Plus
If you are new here, read the code of conduct now. Thank you.
@sehe I tell you to look at a new finding, to which you agree, and you act as if I'm commanding you to do something you don't like. I don't follow your reasoning here. Either you're interested in this and keep discussing it, or you stay silent and I'd shut up after that.
FFS.
Talk about moods :)
I'm always in a bad mood. Barking at me makes it worse.
sbi
sbi
@rubenvb Yeah, and if this regression was the error message, I even would have agreed with it. But you kids first file a bug and then start to create a repro...
12:10
@sbi well, sue me.
I'm amazed that you managed to fill a bug without getting a headache.
Ah, the good thing about living in Italy is that you get to eat Italian everyday
sbi
sbi
@rubenvb Will you stop it? First you accuse others of being in a bad mood (which isn't true), and then you start attacking them.
@Neil The good thing living in France is that you see French girls all day.
Who wants Italy now?
@sbi you have been condescending ever since I posted the bug link. I did not start this.
@Neil Is that legal?
sbi
sbi
12:13
@rubenvb Yawn.
@sbi I do, assuming I want to see Italian girls all day
@sbi On that note, could it be arranged that, when in France, you get to eat French (girls) everyday?
@sehe Probably not, but then I think everything is illegal here, and it simply isn't enforced
sbi
sbi
@Neil Uh, but they are catholic! Um.
@sbi inb4 Billy Joel again?
sbi
sbi
12:14
@sehe I avoided using that metaphor for a reason, you know.
@sbi Now we're digging into weird stereotypes
Hmm. Hope I didn't offend your sensibilities then
Besides, I thought there were a lot of catholics in France
sbi
sbi
@sehe I fail catching that ref. :(
@Neil "Um."
@sehe Gorillas aren't as sensitive.
@sbi "Only the good die young" (with a stretch: meets "Italian Restaurant")
12:17
@sbi Not like catholics?
@sbi is a grumpy old ape. 'nuff said
sbi
sbi
@sehe Oh, I didn't know that one. I shall remember "I'd rather laugh with the sinners than cry with the saints." I like that.
@Neil Sigh. I knew the French are catholic, too. That was built in. ("Um.") 'twas a joke.
@sbi Very catchy song as well:
@sbi I figured it was a joke, but I'm afraid I don't get it still. Um. is short for something revolving around French catholics that I'm not aware of?
sbi
sbi
@Neil Um. I don't think so.
12:24
@sbi Um. Okay
sbi
sbi
@Neil It's that sound you make when you don't know what to say. For example, when you realize you just said something embarrassingly stupid.
@Neil :)
@sbi Erm...
@sbi Like, "Uhmm, maybe I really shouldn't try to use Fedora"
sbi
sbi
@sehe That's one of those other sounds you can make in such a situation.
I'll let that one slide
sbi
sbi
12:27
If we were at a party talking, I would have taken a couple steps back from you just now
Get on mumble! Teach me the difference. I'd love to have a wider palette of stop-sounds, onomatopeia and generic interjections!
sbi
sbi
@Neil "You" being who?
Erm...
:)
12:28
@sbi *takes another step back*
sbi
sbi
@Neil You step back from whom, dammit?!
@sbi Erm...
@sbi *tries to avoid eye contact and begins whistling*
@Neil like that will work. You were at a party, remember. Noone will hear the whistling and the very act will make you look very very awkward
You really should get your poker face repaired
@sehe I don't think I could make it more evident without actually writing it.
12:33
Yeah, it worked better already
man, I'm really impressed by how git detects file renames. Anyone know how it's done?
@jalf it knows because you git mved them?
@rubenvb no, if I don't do that, and just use regular mv and i change the file at the same time
@jalf Probably because files are identified by an id, not a name
12:34
it still goes "oh, this new file looks similar but not identical to that old file which is no longer there... I'm registering this as a move"
@jalf it might just do that: minimize diffs.
rewriting is better than delete+add a whole file.
yeah, I guess. Just seems like it'd be hard to do in a scalable and reliable manner
but impressed at how well it works
8
Q: How does git detect similar files, for its rename detection?

mahemoffWikipedia explains the automatic rename detection: Briefly, given a file in revision N, a file of the same name in revision N−1 is its default ancestor. However, when there is no like-named file in revision N−1, Git searches for a file that existed only in revision N−1 and is very simil...

@rubenvb TL;DR - "Git uses certain algorithms and a threshold limit to see if this is a rename."
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, idd :P
12:36
Can someone answer a short simple question for me?
@David depends. Cookie?
@BartekBanachewicz Sure
@BartekBanachewicz ah yeah, the threshold makes sense in order to keep it scalable, I guess
@David bring it on then.
@BartekBanachewicz When calling a function that uses a template, and when you do foo<type>(). When "type" is void can I omit the brackets? Like this: foo(). It works for what I'm doing.
12:39
@David Types are usually deduced anyways, so you could leave them out even for other types
@David If your compiler's template deduction allows this, sure.
@BartekBanachewicz Okay cool. Here you go: (*)
@David coo-ookie. Nom
@David template<typename T> void foo(T val) { /*bla*/ } can be called as foo(42), foo ("Hello world") but void needs an additional overload
well, "void Var;" hardly makes any sense
12:41
@BartekBanachewicz that's illegal IIANM.
@David To catch all cases, use variadics:
#include <string>

template <typename... T>
  void foo(const T&... args) { /* bla */ }

int main()
{
    foo(42);
    foo(std::string("hello"));
    foo("world");
    foo();
}
@rubenvb consider void f(void a, int b); Should the call be f(,5)?
@sehe +1
@BartekBanachewicz that's illegal too under the same reasoning.
@rubenvb Well it was supposed to be an example to why it should be illegal, actually ;)
void is incomplete, thus you can't create instances thereof.
12:43
even better.
@BartekBanachewicz ah yes. Examples don't always fly too well in the Lounge. Standard quotes do a lot better :)
@David for that to get useful (variadics, I mean) you'll have to do some more wizardry, so I generally recommend straight overloads:
#include <string>

void foo(int i) { /* bla */ }
void foo(const std::string&) { /* bla */ }
void foo() { /* bla */ }

int main()
{
    foo(42);
    foo(std::string("hello"));
    foo("world");
    foo();
}
Why do people use foo as the name of an arbitrary method?
I mean, what was going through the head of the first person to use foo? "Hmm, we'll call it 'method'.. nah.. too generic.. how about 'foo'.. ah yes, I like the ring of it."
it pairs nicely with bar of course
The terms foobar , fubar, or foo, bar, baz and qux (alternatively quux) are sometimes used as placeholder names (also referred to as metasyntactic variables) in computer programming or computer-related documentation. They have been used to name entities such as variables, functions, and commands whose purpose is unimportant and serve only to demonstrate a concept. The words themselves have no meaning in this usage. Foobar is sometimes used alone; foo, bar, and baz are sometimes used in that order, when multiple entities are needed. The usage in computer programming examples and pseudo...
12:52
@rubenvb That doesn't really explain why though
I mean it derives from FUBAR, but why?
@Neil because people.
Also, I've heard baz before, but I didn't know it was part of the whole "foo, bar" set
More specifically, MIT hackers.
well, they are a short word, so easy to type and say
I think we need better names than that
12:54
they are clearly nonsense, so will not be confused with actual language stuff
Next time I need to make a random name for a method, I'm going to call it "gandalf" because gandalf kicks ass.
ah, but the whilst the origin may be lost to the mists of time, they are here now
and if there is one thing harder then getting something to stick, it's getting it unstuck
but people can derive some sort of meaning from a a function called 'gandalf'
sbi
sbi
@Neil I sometimes like to use wrxl, prxl, and xrxl. Better?
2
@sbi I hope you are being sarcastic with that :O
@sbi Why in God's name?
sbi
sbi
12:57
@thecoshman Why would you hope that?
@Neil This has nothing to do with God's name. I'm rather atheistic.

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