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13:00
@sbi because there is a chance, however small, that one day I will have to work with some of your code. Rest assured that if I ever do have to suffer such variable names, I will find your resting place... and do something to it
@sbi good for you.
@thecoshman yea, foobar would be so much more descriptive
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman And what's my code got to do with placeholder names used in example code snippets?
@sbi oh, you only mean for examples? few fucks given
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Phew. I was afraid for my hiding place. (Watch your capitalization.)
13:02
Does an auto generated copy ctor copy member pointers?
@BartekBanachewicz that's the point, what the function 'foo' does is a moot point
sbi
sbi
Anyway, I gotta go now, or I'll be late. See you.
@Nils it will shallow copy. so what they point to will be copied, but they not copy the objects pointer at
@Nils the pointers, not the pointees.
@sbi says the German?
@thecoshman badly worded :P
think of what happens if you copy struct foo { int bar } a copy of a foo will have a valid bar, with the same value
13:05
@Nils Remember the Rule of Zero.
if bar where to be a raw pointer, it will be copied in the same 'dumb' way, thus both instances of foo, will have a pointer pointing to the same object, so you will only have THREE objects
@ecatmur the rule of zero?
@thecoshman yes that is what I expected..
@R.MartinhoFernandes get the link!
@Nils <patronising pat on head>
13:07
@ecatmur Never implement anything yourself?
@sbi I respect that.
@ecatmur your not the robot o_0
Ah I know the rule of three, thx @ecatmur
@Nils Absolutely. If you only use member pointers for non-owned resources, you won't have to worry.
@BartekBanachewicz I meant when you use something as a class. Like template <typename T> class Foo{ public: T foo() {} } and then you make a new object like this: Foo<type> foo where "type" is the type of the function. If "type" is of type "void", can I omit the brackets like this: Foo foo, or do this Foo<>foo.
13:09
@David again, depends. (I guess)
@BartekBanachewicz How do I make a code block by the way?
@David No. Except inside class scope.
And then Foo means Foo<T>, not Foo<void>
There's nothing special about void; in fact C++11 makes it less special.
Wait, that made more sense before I wrote it down.
@ecatmur So when I want void I HAVE to do Foo<void>foo?
@David what are you trying to accomplish?
13:12
posted on August 22, 2012 by Charles

In part 4, Stephan teaches us about Virtual Functions. In parts 1-3, we learned about compile-time constructs. Now, we enter the realm of runtime. STL spends some time discussing inheritance and a bit about access control. Tune in. Learn. See part 1: Name Lookup See part 2: Template Argument Deduction See part 3: Overload Resolution

@rubenvb Well I'm just curious about the circumstances in which I am allowed to do something like this: Foo<>foo. I don't know what it means...
STL is a nice listen whilst at work... doing Java
@David that's usually a template specialization (the empty braces <>)
well kind of.
not really though.
As far as I know that's never going to match any template except a variadic one where the template args are unused.
@rubenvb Thanks. Also, what does this mean:

`template <typename...args>`

or something like that...
@David it's variadic template
13:18
@David a template that can as many (or none) type arguments as you like
@David The rapidxml parser uses this notation, IIRC. Maybe take a look at it's headers
Cool :)
@David It seems you want this kind of thing: liveworkspace.org/code/8181b946ffd0640a5831e3bca1314fac
But that will just use the first or no parameter of the template.
I'd ask a question, but I don't know if it's unix&linux, or SO. - "Can I change default make behaviour to automatically append "-std=c++11"?"
I want your job.
Oh wait, I really don't. It seems it must be the most relaxed job in the world, though
13:22
@BartekBanachewicz export CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -std=c++11"
or call make CFLAGS=-std=c++11
@rubenvb kthxbai.
@sehe it is... but it's like being paid to chill out and play games in the sewers
@BartekBanachewicz Or use a single defaulted template parameter:
Also C++11.
@ecatmur I'm trying to register for that site but nothing happens when I click "Registration"
@David you don't need to register at all.
It's free for all.
13:27
@rubenvb Can multiple people be on at the same time?
Except maybe Iran and China.
@David sure, it's just a web interface like ideone.com.
or even pastebin.com
@rubenvb The thing is, only the spoiled ones spend half an hour staring at the error messages :P
And FWIW, clang's errors don't help much in the case of template errors, since it boils down to the same: a stack trace of template instantiations.
@R.MartinhoFernandes including a list of candidates and reasons that substitution failed.
Why doesn't this work:

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

template<typename...Args> void foo(Args);

int main() {
foo(4);
}
@rubenvb Just like GCC.
13:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not before 4.7.
@rubenvb And that's for overload resolution, not templates in general.
@David please post links code instead of the actual code.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I've seen it for templates too.
@rubenvb There are no "candidates" except on overload resolution.
@David template<typename... Args> void foo(Args...);
@R.MartinhoFernandes You either edited that "in general" in, or I glanced over it XD
13:36
@rubenvb So what you're saying is that your arguments are outdated? :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes my argument was specific enough.
@rubenvb Yes, I edited it when I realized it would not be clear.
"I've seen it for templates too" --> "I've seen it for template function overload resolution too"
@rubenvb error: undefined reference to void foo<int>(int) ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes and with SFINEA, you have a kind of general template overload resolution.
@David You don't have a definition of the function.
and Clang shows all the candidates there, IIRC.
13:38
Should the rhs argument of the copy assignment operator be const here? stackoverflow.com/a/1457873/44232
@rubenvb Yes, and so does GCC. Claiming clang's error messages are wonderful by comparing it to an old compiler is not a fair assessment.
@rubenvb Can you tell what's wrong it this one.. liveworkspace.org/code/61370d8ace9225355bc5210af61a5c54 It says that it expected a primary-expression before ';' token
What are you trying to do?
Randomly mashing tokens together will get you nowhere.
@David please stop asking me directly.
13:43
@David go learn how to use templates properly. We can offer help when you get stuck, but we are not teachers
@David you can't pass varargs to cout
@BartekBanachewicz yes you can, if it is expanded to only one XD.
@rubenvb ... well whatever
hmm, guess I'm wrong though, nvm.
13:45
invalid conversion from 'int' to 'int' on line 8, and invalid type of argument unary '' on line 14. any idea? paste.ubuntu.com/1160822
Xeo
Xeo
@rubenvb Args is a pack regardless of whether it only contains 1 arg
Also, it's a type pack
@Xeo yeah, forgot about that.
@rogcg int* p, *q;
@LuchianGrigore why?
int* p, q; declares a pointer and an int.
Xeo
Xeo
13:46
Declare one pointer at a time, don't mess with C decl syntax
@rogcg You can't convert from int to int*, just like the error message says.
@rogcg int *p, q;
Aug 12 at 10:41, by Cat Plus Plus
If you are new here, read the code of conduct now. Thank you.
Xeo
Xeo
@ecatmur no
both p and q are pointers
Xeo
Xeo
13:46
no
@rogcg not the way the code is now.
@Xeo Fix the style, then the content :p
Xeo
Xeo
@ecatmur Err
Still, no :)
IMHO, anyways
still dont get it
and have the same error
1 min ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@rogcg You can't convert from int to int*, just like the error message says.
What are you trying to do?
13:48
yeah. how do I solve it
Xeo
Xeo
p = x; what are you trying to do here?
3 mins ago, by Luchian Grigore
@rogcg int* p, *q;
set the address of x to p
Xeo
Xeo
@LuchianGrigore Read the code, he's actually assigning ints to pointers
Oh wait
that's dumb
:))
13:49
@rogcg not currently, int * p, q; is the same as int *p; int q you need to either do int * p, * q; or the much neater int * p; int * q;
yup, my bad
Xeo
Xeo
@rogcg So, and how do you get the address of x?
&x
@rogcg you want to take the address of x? so you need to do &x
Xeo
Xeo
aha!
2
So what should p = x actually be written like?
13:50
this is awesome
now I see. whats the difference of doing int* p, q and int *p, *q
@rogcg constexpr int x = 0; int *p; p = x;
It's said above.
Xeo
Xeo
C declaration syntax mindbending
1 min ago, by thecoshman
@rogcg not currently, int * p, q; is the same as int *p; int q you need to either do int * p, * q; or the much neater int * p; int * q;
13:51
@Xeo mind-expanding.
alias<int*> p, q;?
Xeo
Xeo
dumb_ptr<int> p, q;
@ecatmur ?
got it. I'm a newbie in c++ . I'm studying it. sorry for bothering with stupid questions
Xeo
Xeo
get a book
13:52
Learn Haskell.
Xeo
Xeo
1468
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are released every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book...

i'm following the cplusplus site tutorial, but it's pretty bad
Xeo
Xeo
cplusplus.com is pretty bad
@thecoshman wrong response, sorry.
13:52
@Xeo thanks. =)
@rogcg if you are trying to learn c++ form on-line tutorials, you are going to have a bad time
dammit. Stupid default constructor is being called somewhere I can't see.
Xeo
Xeo
delete * (i->Object); wat
13:54
@Xeo Man, what about some warning?
Xeo
Xeo
:3
Oh gwad, newing up vectors.
@Nils No, that's fine.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait, what's the full source.
Top level const is ignored on parameters.
13:56
(That's about that retarded moron politician, right?)
What if you write Fixture myFix = someConstFixture?
@CatPlusPlus Yes.
@Nils That's initialization.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That is surprisingly brutal.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah but thins are different if you have a reference to the rhs..
@Nils No, they're not.
It does a copy or a move, and then swaps.
13:59
@EtiennedeMartel When I read that, I thought of my roommate in college. He always thought survival of the fittest should be encouraged however brutal that may be

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