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16:00
1
Q: C++ dynamic array without STL

user1617478This is part of an assignment however I just asking for clarification: Load data from ATM.txt and store them in a dynamic array (ATM type, not STL) when the program starts up. How exactly do I do dynamic arrays without STL? I thought perhaps the assignment means using pointers, the "ATM T...

What's an ATM type?
yeah I was just looking at that. I have no idea
when I googled I got "adobe type manager" but that doesn't make sense in context
@Drise start uncommenting individual lines from that function until you get down to just the ones that fail
I was slightly afraid to google since I'm at work...
But then remembered ATM also stands for the thingy that gives you money :D
Automated teller machine
mhm
16:02
heh, who knew...
@Prætorian seems to be the displayed[temp]
@R.MartinhoFernandes down to 4 characters. Beat that.
@Drise even if you change this std::map<std::tuple<int, int, int, int>, vtkSmartPointer<vtkActor> >::iterator it = to auto it =?
@Prætorian It's already like that
Xeo
Xeo
@ecatmur For what?
16:05
1
Q: Shortest undefined behavior sample in C++

Luchian GrigoreWhat's the shortest, well-formed C++ code that exhibits undefined behavior?

@Drise yeah, nvm. I typed that before your edit
how is temp defined?
std::tuple<int, int, int, int> temp = it->first;
Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz. Now please, don't come and tell me German isn't fucked.
Xeo
Xeo
@Prætorian I'm sure litb would have fun with that
@Cicada oh, the cicada has revived
I haven't died yet. But the time will come soon.
Back from a few days of holidays.
@Prætorian How can I get each piece out of a tuple?
16:09
what is NFDataActor ?
Not C++.
@Rapptz map<tuple<int, int, int, int>, vtkSmartPointer<vtkActor> > NFDataActor;
@ecatmur Nice.
@Cicada The bug is back.
have you considered using cbegin and cend instead of begin, end?
@Rapptz What?
16:11
const iterator
@Drise get<0>(tuple).
Xeo
Xeo
#define BOOST_ASIO_HAS_MOVE does nothing :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes Bring your debugger!
> The solar system consists of the Sun, Jupiter, and assorted rubble.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So it works if you reconstruct the tuple from the individual parts.
16:14
What do you mean?
what's wrong with this statement. it acuses (invalid initialization of non-const reference of type 'std::io_base&' from an rvalue of type 'int*') paste.ubuntu.com/1161055
Xeo
Xeo
gaaaah, I'm confused. Sources for the socket(base)s say that BOOST_ASIO_HAS_MOVE does what it should, but VS somehow accesses the wrong... oh
VS, why do you access the copy ctor?!
@R.MartinhoFernandes ideone.com/MsRmd
ubuntu pastebin. what.
@Drise Erm, that looks quite redundant.
displayed[it->first] should just work.
16:16
@Cicada whats wrong with ubuntu pastebin?
didn't know noobuntu had a pastebin
@Cicada oh.. yeah, a lot of people say it
does ubuntu support copy/paste?
@Cicada what?? what do you mean support copy/paste
lol
16:17
Hey guys, any idea what could cause valgrind to abort (cleanly) on a send() system call?
Why does ideone never save my default settings
@Cicada Oh, I see you're still the same.
I'd love to use valgrind to abort. Man, what a huge gain of time and money!
You don't need valgrind to abort if it's a legitimate leak.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I just spent the last hour discovering that it doesn't.
16:22
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, in that case the implementation has ways to try to shut the program down.
@Drise I missed the error message (if you posted it). Can you post it again?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's not really useful. It's down in some VC include header file.
Are you doubting my error decyphering capabilities?
Should I feel offended?
@R.MartinhoFernandes ideone.com/c6Gco
1 hour ago, by Drise
@Prætorian No bueno. http://www.ideone.com/n6MLJ
Have fun
16:26
The displayed[..] line is the one causing the error
@Prætorian Unless you manually reconstruct the tuple.
type of displayed is map<tuple<int, int, int, int>, bool>
But I don't know what the error message is!
@Prætorian Not accessed through a ref-to-const in the function?
it's in the second ideone link
`error C2440: 'initializing' : cannot convert from 'const std::tr1::tuple<_Arg0,_Arg1,_Arg2,_Arg3>' to 'int'`
16:27
Thanks.
@LucDanton he tried making a copy of it->first, that didn't work either
That wouldn't help.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Along with like 5 million others.
i think the problem boils down to this, there's map1<T1, T2> and map2<T1, T3>. He wants to index into map2 using map1::iterator::first
Which is problematic if map2 is seen through a ref-to-const.
(Which isn't likely to be the case though.)
Xeo
Xeo
16:37
gah, I know why BOOST_ASIO_HAS_MOVE does nothing... basic_socket relies on generated ctors, and VC++ doesn't generate move members -.-
fffffff....
when i use ifstream does it move to the next line after every call by itself?
no
It does if you use std::getline and if it succeeds.
use a while loop with getline
Xeo
Xeo
Back to make_unique<tcp::socket> ;_;
16:46
std::ifstream hello("porn-sites.txt");
std::string site;
while (std::getline(hello, site)) {
  download(site);
}
Xeo
Xeo
@RadekSlupik What do you want with the html source of a porn site?
@Xeo Who says download downloads the HTML?
Xeo
Xeo
The naming :)
It could download anything from that site. :P
Including the whole site.
@RadekSlupik if i use getline it will go to the next line with every call?
16:48
@RadekSlupik Stuff like that is quickly done in bash.
@MohamedAhmedNabil you need to use the while loop
@RadekSlupik So, it's wget?
@MohamedAhmedNabil Yeah, streams pop their data.
and how do i set a delimeter isntead of just a newline
You need a crawler to download a whole site.
16:51
RTFM
Awww man, they picked another Mars lander over the Titan boat :( Fuck you NASA. I'm tired of seeing Martian rocks.
@MohamedAhmedNabil the third parameter
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, and they all look the same. What's so fucking interesting about it?
I wanted to see the seas of Titan.
How can I play an anime in C++?
16:53
@StackedCrooked what
system("open anime.mp4");
@StackedCrooked system("open hentai.mp4");
Damn. Too late.
We both thought of the same joke. How lame.
We both use a Mac. :P
std::istream("anime.mp4", ios::binary) >> video(); // or something
16:55
system is silly.
System is something to keep newbies occupied.
It opens /bin/sh -c and passes the argument.
You could just as well open the program immediately.
fork-exec ftw.
Poco::Process is afaik the only cross-platform solution.
I once used exec in a Ruby web app. I forgot to do fork first, and I was always confused by why my server stopped.
@StackedCrooked Unless you write your own! :D
@RadekSlupik I guess that's true.
16:59
#ifdef __WIN32__
#error No fork-exec for you, your system sucks anyway.
#endif
#include <unistd.h>
// cross-platform fork-exec
I've been thinking of using multi-processing as an alternative to multi-threading. It would involve the application to re-launch itself with a parameter indicating worker-modus. The main process could then use the workers as threads and transfer data using ipc (boost serialization or protobuf).
I would use ØMQ for the IPC.
Ah yes, I recall you mentioning that.
ØMQ has built-in support for workers, fans and sinks.
@RadekSlupik Windows has mailslots
17:02
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Not cross-platform. :)
The only problem is that if you have only one worker running, and the ventilator starts to send messages, the one worker gets them all until you start the second worker, so you have to do some synchronization (which is not very difficult, fortunately).
Experimentation with STM made me realize that multithreading is often not about memory. Locks can be used to protect access to devices, IO, control mechanisms. Things like that can't be modeled as transactions with rollback option.
0
A: Which Cross Platform Preprocessor Defines? (__WIN32__ or __WIN32 or WIN32 )?

Billy ONealDon't see why you have to. You might have to remember to specify the definition manually on your compiler's commandline, but that's all. For the record, Visual Studio's definition is _WIN32 (with one underscore) rather than __WIN32. If it's not defined then it's not defined, and it won't matter.

@Cheersandhth.-Alf IPC using free online webmail services :)
IPC over email would be slower than yo momma.
Can anyone tell me how did the map<tuple> discussion end? It got pretty fascinating
17:04
@StackedCrooked he he. well they ain't mail messages really
Wow, i see zeromq marketing here
Hackers sometimes use IRC channels to communicate with their botnets. I guess webmail is also an option.
@StackedCrooked This might be interesting if you want to use ØMQ. You can use ØMQ in-process, between processes or over a network (just change the address you bind/connect to).
@RadekSlupik Parallel work-stealing queue?
But that is only fun when doing parallelism. For doing concurrency it’s quite boring and useless. :)
@StackedCrooked What? :P
17:08
Wtf, everything is a void pointer? Is that an idiom?
@StackedCrooked And what's the benefit?
It's idiotm.
@CatPlusPlus Your mom.
I like to try stupid stuff. That's my thing.
Or: "we don't know how to make good C APIs".
@StackedCrooked I think that’s only with the C API. Let me check.
It disables the little bit of type safety that C has to offer.
17:10
Oh lol it has no C++ API. xD
You can write a little wrapper, though.
Oh wait it does have a C++ API.
Oh wait no. Meh.
@CatPlusPlus A benefit could be that you can be sloppy. If a process dies, just relaunch it.
Erlang-style.
If a process dies, your code sucks.
That's a given.
It is also more easy to do it distributed over multiple machines.
And you lose easy shared memory, and introduce more overhead.
Making program distributable over network is hard whether you've used multithreading or multiprocessing.
17:15
It depends on the use case guys.
Did I ever say it wasn’t?
So no, it's not "more easy".
The point is that multiprocessing sucks and you should use green threads.
If you want distributable app, just use Erlang.
Lightweight.
Duh. Threads suck. If you have more threads than cores it isnt lightweight anyway
17:17
Sometimes you need threads.
Like, 2. Keeeewl
There are use cases where multiprocessing is useful. I had an application that uploaded user videos to an online website. The user could select the videos which would then be converted to .flv by multiple MPlayer processes managed by my GUI app. A multithreading approach would involve my app linking with ffmpeg and shit. No way hosay.
Ever heard of coroutines?
17:20
Ever heard of continuations?
I came up with some old code That is giving problem while compiling in VS
What exactly is "old code"
What does const Selection<U>* const & selection mean ?
bool operator()(const Selection<U>* const & selection){
return selection->_weight >= _value;
}
One problem with threads is that you aren't allowed to kill them. So if a thread is non-responsive then there is nothing you can do about it. Processes however can be killed without much worry.
@NeelBasu it's a reference to a constant pointer to a const Selection<U> named selection
17:26
@MooingDuck const reference ?
wow! it seems that MSVC2012 now respects UB when comparing signed and unsigned values, I just got that (int)-1 >= (size_t)1
:5041892 technically all references are const, since they cannot be reseated, so "const reference" is redundant/meaningless. It's a reference to a constant pointer.
@MooingDuck So const Selection<U>* const & selection is same as const Selection<U>* & selection ?
@NeelBasu no
:)) "respects ub"
17:27
um, lemme think
@NeelBasu const Selection<U>* makes sense to you right?
@MooingDuck Yes thats valid its a pointer to const Selection<U>
typedef const Selection<U>* sel_ptr; //pointer points to a constant object
const sel_ptr& selection; //a reference to a constant pointer
@MooingDuck Yes so the const & is not doing anything at all ? Its same as just & ? This part is confusing me
@NeelBasu in the context of your particular function then yes
yep... just duplicated it... int main() { assert((signed)-1 >= (unsigned)1); }
that's great - it's almost like the Hell++
17:30
reference to -> constant pointer which points at -> a constant Selection<U>
@NeelBasu the const& is not doing anything in your function, your function might as well be making a copy of the pointer.
Usually when one takes a pointer by reference, it is so they can change the pointer. I don't know why someone took a pointer by const-reference.
algorithm(1740): error C2664: 'bool gcl::Selection<T>::Predicate::Filter::Less::operator ()<T>(const gcl::Selection<T> *const &)' : cannot convert parameter 1 from 'gcl::NestedSelection<T,C> *' to 'const gcl::Selection<T> *const &'
lol the room topic is still the same as yesterday... what have I done >_>
I am seeing this error in VC but not in GCC
is there a C++ version of cdecl? Sadly when I google "C++ gibberish ↔ English", most of the results simply link me to cdecl.org, which is only C, not C++
17:35
I know its not understandable unless I give some context
@NeelBasu There are more lines below it
@NeelBasu Saying what T and C are
Nope
Yes there is more
@NeelBasu wait what o.O this is VC++, right?
@NeelBasu the "error window" merely gives summaries. The rest of the details are in the "output window"
@NeelBasu Yeah, see the output window I mean, thanks @MooingDuck
17:36
@Mehrdad Yes this is VS 2010
@NeelBasu Cool. Paste the output window contents here, there might be something wrong with the template type parameters here :P
It expands all [ ] and it becomes so big that its not understandable anymore
@NeelBasu Don't worry, we can understand it :P
@NeelBasu apperently you have something using a predicate less, which takes two const Selection<T>*const&, but you're giving it a NestedSelection* as the first parameter instead.
@NeelBasu ideone.com
But how its working in gcc
17:38
@NeelBasu we can't answer that until we know what the code is
@NeelBasu both compilers have various "extensions", possibly GCC has an extension that makes it compile.
@NeelBasu Not sure, but if you don't give that piece of information we might never find out... please just paste the [ ] stuff the output window displays! I swear it's often helpful...
I am trying to recreate same in ideone but its okay with gcc I am trying to receate in VC
@NeelBasu or possibly the standard library is programmed differently, and so it compiles
@NeelBasu just put the error message in ideone for now :D
17:39
@MooingDuck Yes thats the thing. ms std::algorithms is different that gcc's
@FredOverflow Looking forward to seeing that one!
I wrote a nice little parser thingie in Scala, around 7kb compiled. If I want to ship it, I have to include the Scala runtime library, which is 9MB, so my actual code is not even 0.1% of the shipped payload :)
well I am posting the error . message I donno whether its leagal or not actually
@NeelBasu lol... I don't think displaying us your error will give Microsoft a disadvantage at selling VS lol
17:40
why does your predicate take pointers by const reference anyway?
I believe I'll need 9 more heads to understand this error
because it doesn't alter
@NeelBasu Thanks, lemme see...
@NeelBasu why doesn't it simply make a copy?
"Standard conversion of pointer to derived to pointer to base
followed by
Binding to reference"
@MooingDuck because This is not pimpl and making a deep copy will waste memory
17:42
@NeelBasu what? no! make a copy of the pointer! A shallow copy. It's like the fastest operation a computer can do.
Ahh, (I think) I see the problem
@MooingDuck but then it will be able to mutate the object it points to
@Mehrdad I wasn't aware that was illigal
Is this class doing multiple inheritance?
@NeelBasu no, because it's still a pointer to a const object
@Mehrdad obviously
17:43
Oh! you meant removing the ref ?
@MooingDuck Yeah, that make sense to me. I don't know if it's illegal or not, but I can see why it's causing the problem
@MooingDuck are you talking about removing the & ?
@MooingDuck Because the conversion is more than just a cast, it's an actual conversion
@Mehrdad because you can't pass a pointer to a derived class to something expecting a pointer to a base class if the pointer is passed by const reference
@MooingDuck Well yeah, but the question is, why, and I believe it's because of the pointer adjustment
17:44
@NeelBasu and one of the const. There's no reason for the pointer to be const
@Mehrdad I dunno. Probably.
Yes thats where I was confused. I donno why its const &
@NeelBasu there's no reason that I can see
@NeelBasu If you remove it it should work, yeah
@Mehrdad Because Derived*& is not a subtype of Base*&, just like Derived** is not a subtype of Base**.
only reason I can think of is if you need to track the address of the pointer itself, which you don't appear to be doing.
17:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes WOW. LMFAO that is sooo WIN
@FredOverflow makes sense.
@FredOverflow Great point, but it's const
I didn't know Derived*& is not a subtype of Base*&
why ?
bool operator()(const Selection<U>* selection){
return selection->_weight >= _value;
}
@NeelBasu same reason as for the double pointer version
17:46
@NeelBasu It lets you break the typing by assigning another Base* to the Base*& that doesn't point to a Derived value
@FredOverflow I see.
wait, that very much appears to be modifying a const object.
Xeo
Xeo
hmmm
something's wrong.
@MooingDuck Yeah, that's why I said "great point, but it's const" to @FredOverflow... I'm not sure that reasoning applies in the const case
@FredOverflow but stl often returns a & to const T*
Xeo
Xeo
17:47
My server receives client messages, but the client doesn't receive the welcome message :(
@Mehrdad doesn't seem like it would
Xeo
Xeo
@NeelBasu Where?
@Xeo at() method in vector<const T*>
@NeelBasu It's to let you take the address of the pointer.
Xeo
Xeo
d'oh, great example...
17:48
5
Q: Conversion from Derived** to Base**

NarekI was reading this and unfortunately could not understand in depth why the compiler does not allow conversion from Derived** to Base**. Also I have seen this which gives no more info than the parashift.com's link. EDIT: Let us analyze this code line by line: Car car; Car* carPtr = &a...

@NeelBasu It's not like they predicted you'd be storing a pointer
vector<const T*>::at(size_t i) returns const T* &
@FredOverflow Doesn't Derived* const* implicitly convert to Base* const*?
Xeo
Xeo
Genericity, man.
sorry brb
17:49
@Mehrdad no
@FredOverflow Hmm... why?
I don't know, I didn't design this crap :)
@Mehrdad nobody bothered to make that a loophole in the rules
@FredOverflow lolll
Multiple inheritance.
Xeo
Xeo
17:51
client, y u no receive message from server -.-
When you convert Derived* to Base*, the address may be different.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So? Then let the address be different..
Oh D'oh
wait
I misread... lol yeah
@R.MartinhoFernandes Derived** -> Base** would still be dangerous without MI.
Xeo
Xeo
now that was a dumb error on my part
asio::read(socket, buf) reads until the buffer is full /facepalm
And what did you expect instead? A buffer overflow? :)
17:53
To make Derived* const* convert to Base* const* it would need to return a pointer to some not-yet-existing pointer. That would be either too complicated, or just plain insane to spec.
Xeo
Xeo
I don't know
I expected something, apparently
I don't know myself
so I had a problem
and decided to use regular expressions
@Mehrdad hehehe
... but it didn't turn out half-bad (well, maybe it did, idk): gist.github.com/3427777
> We continue exploring what happens when you call a function.
yay
Xeo
Xeo
17:56
Why didn't I notice that Core C++ 4 is out?
@MooingDuck It substitutes in values for '#' and expands templates like they're variadic, for compilers that don't support variadic templates yet
@R.MartinhoFernandes Couldn't you simply garbage collect the intermediate pointer? ;)
@Xeo Because you don't watch the starboard often enough!
@Mehrdad Oh gwad. Isn't there an option to make groups non-capturing by default?
My colleague asked if STL has a cat fetish because all his functions are meow. :P
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow Well, normally, the Feeds guy should post it some time soon :/
17:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes Probably, didn't bother lol
@StackedCrooked He has a cat named "peppermint".
I didn't know that :)
@Xeo Is the video tagged wrongly again?
Xeo
Xeo
nope
Let's just wait and see
@R.MartinhoFernandes Take a look at what it outputs! ideone.com/UKYvS
17:58
I haven't seen @Feeds posting a C9 video ever.
Xeo
Xeo
My RSS feed picked it up atleast
@R.MartinhoFernandes It did dump all the vids when I added the feed
@R.MartinhoFernandes It still needs some hand-editing, but it's much less than doing it manually obviously :)
http://nuwen.net/stl.html
He is cat crazy

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