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18:00
@StackedCrooked Not all functions are meow, he also likes purr.
All files are named meow.cpp
Strong argumentation :D
...and now everyone's going out buying a kitten :)
2
Puppies are superior to kittens.
5
@FredOverflow ^ yea lol
18:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dems be fighting words.
Kitty!
@R.MartinhoFernandes But I guess robots are devoid of any sense of taste when it comes to pets.
std::cout << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
std::cout << __UGLY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
3
18:08
hmm, I'm debugging a class named ESPContextSessionRuntimeEngine It's a little verbose :(
find . -type f | xargs -I File sed -i -e 's/UGLY_FUNCTION/PRETTY_FUNCTION/g' File
@MooingDuck make it a ESPContextSessionRuntimeEngineFactoryFactory
@EtiennedeMartel I can't help it! I say anything and BAM! I'm all over the starboard.
Base* p = new Derived(args);
p->meow();
He did it again :)
I'm learning about the Evilgon.
It's pretty cool.
18:10
@StackedCrooked What's the Evilgon? A polygon with 666 vertices?
It has a virtual method with a subtly different signature than the base method and thus is misleading to the user.
I guess this will lead to override soon.
@StackedCrooked didn't C++11 add override?
Yes it didn't.
I mean it did.
Xeo
Xeo
lol Evilgon
IRTA "Evangelion" at first
Remarkably similar :P
Eva Braun is now Evagone.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You damn toaster.
I don't see much use for the final modifier though.
Public virtual methods make it hard to hold invariants.
18:16
@StackedCrooked it will drastically affect optimization of virtuals
How drastically?
Over 9000!
Under what situations do you get those optimizations?
Don't stress the dude now.
struct A {virtual dotask() const {};};
struct B : A {final virtual dotask() const {};}
void dotask(const B& rhs) {rhs.dotask();}
int main() {B b; dotask(b); return 0;}
//can all be inlined trivially
18:18
I remember a post about devirtualization. But iirc it doesn't really work.
@MooingDuck Without the final the inlining wouldn't be possible?
@StackedCrooked Watching the Evilgon right now :)
@StackedCrooked what if a dll made a object C that inherited from B, and passed it to that function?
@MooingDuck They can without the final.
STL video @23:25 mentions final and inlining.
@StackedCrooked Spoiler alert!
18:21
@FredOverflow He dies at 27:42.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, but the linker has to be absolutely certain that no dll will ever want to pass an object that derives from B to that function. final makes that check trivial rather than nigh-impossible.
Yes, but that's quite a limiting scenario.
More often than not, when you seal a method, you don't derive from that class.
@25:00 Non-virtual interface idiom!
how would you "seal" it without final?
final is much more helpful in something like Java where everything is virtual.
@MooingDuck Ah, but that's semantics, not optimisation!
18:23
@R.MartinhoFernandes the semantics allow the optimization
But only in rare cases.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's fine. I'm sure there's other uses too, but they haven't occured to me yet
The use of "drastic" was a bit of an exaggeration. That's what I was getting at.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh. hm, I think it would be drastic. Tests will tell. Actually, they won't, because virtual calls are rarely a significant slowdown. So it's nigh-irrelevant
18:25
I can't think of many reasons to mark a function final.
You're basically limiting future extensibility.
@R.MartinhoFernandes only reason the inline thing came to mind was I was trying to make a better/faster localization/stream concept, and was really really wanting final for the inlinability :(
Shape
    Polygon
        Triangle
            BermudaTriangle
    Evilgon
lol
> Fun fact: roach eggs look like coffee grounds! ENJOY YOUR COFFEE BREAK
4
@R.MartinhoFernandes Neither do I. I don't like to impose my idiosyncrasies on any users of my class.
And it reminds me of Java's culture of lecturing you on what is appropriate or not.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Alright, I'm gonna star you.
But it's not really you I'm starring. More like the guy you're quoting.
18:29
@R.MartinhoFernandes Asshole, starbait, hoo haha.
@EtiennedeMartel Remy Porter, from TDWTF (it's in the super secret HTML comments of today's post).
How's that guy we had flagged and confirmed so many of his flags?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, I'm starring that guy.
@Drise 90 days of suspension, I think.
@EtiennedeMartel Nice.
> Orthogonal is this sort of nerd-term, it means like sort of perpendicular.
lol
18:45
@FredOverflow not (cor)related is my intuitive thought
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Puppies are orthogonal to kittens [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [fun] [not-your-helpdesk] [nsfw]
> Hey, can we template this and substitute s/private email/SO chat room/ so we can reuse it for all the question-banned or just patience-deprivated people flocking into the chat rooms to get their 'help-me-first' thirst quenched?
@R.MartinhoFernandes KITTEHS
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Who else? (Capitalization is rather important in German.)
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
19:05
truest thing ever
Luckily, there are alternative PDF readers that aren't half as obnoxious.
oh
so it seems I missed an important conversation of puppies and kittens
damn
@TonyTheLion On Windows, I think I used Kamasutra PDF.
was it a bitch fight between @CatPlusPlus and @DeadMG? :P
Apropos, bitches are dogs, right? :)
19:07
Yes
@TonyTheLion It's mostly security updates, you know.
@CatPlusPlus yes I know :)
PDF format is being updated, too.
they seem to create an awful lot of security vulnerabilities, measuring by the number of updates they put out.
maybe the hackers pay them for it?
Hi
19:09
to keep the feud going.
In computing, s-expressions, sexprs or sexps (for "symbolic expression") are a notation for nested list (tree-structured) data, invented for and popularized by the programming language Lisp, which uses them for source code as well as data. In the usual parenthesized syntax of Lisp, an s-expression is classically defined inductively as # an atom, or # an expression of the form (x . y) where x and y are s-expressions. The second, recursive part of the definition represents an ordered pair so that s-exprs are effectively binary trees. The definition of an atom varies per context; in the or...
is assume( true ) part of the c standard library?
I like the short way of saying this: sexprs
LOL
prs = pointers ?
sex powers!
donno
hahah
19:10
@Papergay It's a GCC extension AFAIR
@FredOverflow you are quite horny lately lol
msvc has __assume
@Papergay Woman is on vacation, sorry ;)
haha
you mean wife?
No, I just don't like the GF word.
19:11
did he say wife?
shhh
Why ?
Is that bad luck?
@sehe what, something wrong with saying WIFE?
19:12
@TonyTheLion nah. they keep implementing more attack vectors to keep the security advisors busy
@FredOverflow Well, why don't you like the (oooh - hush - I don't say it outloud) GF word (oops, I said it, sort of)
Is that bad luck, then?
@DeadMG May it breaks your WiFi?
Stephan T. Lavavej y u no use std::unique_ptr instead of std::shared_ptr.
lol this must be how metal sounds to normal people
It's what the rest of the universe knows their significant others of the female variety as.
Using common vocabulary tends to facilitate effective communications. [Oh wait...]
Hmmm. My fish is swimming upside-down. Is that normal ?
19:16
@kbok No.
Is it in an aquarium or a bowl?
@sehe I don't know, I just don't like it.
@RadekSlupik It's an aquarium. Maybe he's just bored ?
Ah. Bowls are bad.
Depends on the orientation of the aquarium, it's angular momentum relative to the containing gravitional field, the presence of optical devices in the path light traveling from the observed fish and surroundings to the eye of the observer, as well as the sanity of both the fish and the observer.
Among others
Why ?
19:18
why would a fish want to keep itself right-way-up?
I can't see what particular significance that would have to a fish.
@DeadMG Not looked at many aquariums to date
The "I can't see" fallacy
there's nothing fallacious about that statement, unless you want to believe that I know exactly why a fish would want to keep itself right way up and am just lying to you
@DeadMG If this would have no importance they wouldn't have a flipper on the back
19:19
In Germany fish bowls are illegal, IIRC.
@RadekSlupik What.
@RadekSlupik Those crazy Germans.
Is there a fish bowl police in Germany ?
@DeadMG It is just an empty rhetoric gesture. It means very little towards answering the question whether you 'can see' reasons or not.
@kbok Presumably, if the fin were pointing down it would be equally effective.
19:21
@kbok I don’t know. Probably they will just not sell them.
@kbok That looks like the same fallacy. I like to just observe that the vast vast majority of fish (observed in captivity...) keep their bodies aligned in the same orientations. It is also this property that allowed you to conclude that your fish was in fact deviating from this observed pattern...
@RadekSlupik Why is it bad ?
@sehe That's true
@kbok Inconsistent temperature, less oxygen, they get confused because everything looks so weird due to the shape of the bowl.
@kbok If fish didn't generally like to keep upright, how would you have reached the conclusion that yours was... 'upside-down' :)
We should experiment with fish in zero gravity environnments
19:23
@RadekSlupik Meh. experiments (even in humans) show that the brains will adapt in a matter of minutes.
@sehe Not to a lack of oxygen.
Meer rode bloedlichaampjes!
Why would you ever use final on member functions?
@RadekSlupik A lack of oxygen doesn't lead to worries about strange visuals. It leads to loss of conciousness, loss of organ function and death, IIRC
@RadekSlupik In the final countdown
Damn edits
btw thx for the answer eariler @whoever it was
19:26
@RadekSlupik 1. Because you're a prick. 2. Enable inlining.
class clock {
public:
    void countdown() final;
};
@RadekSlupik It doesn't make sense to do so on non-polymorphic objects.
@StackedCrooked I can happily derive from clock.
That doesn't make it polymorphic.
I know, but it could make sense.
19:27
As you probably know.
@RadekSlupik prevent overriding of virtual functions
This particular example not so much, though.
@RadekSlupik Yes, it even has a name: static polymorphism :P
@StackedCrooked good point about optimization.
Not that I often use polymorphism. :P
Policy-based design also relies on inheritance.
19:31
@StackedCrooked I don’t even know what that is. .-.
It's described in the first chapter of Modern C++ design.
@StackedCrooked Not necessarily. Am I wrong?
@sehe You're right.
Policies and traits are not strictly defined and have some overlap in their meaning.
Oh good. I always thought that policy based was hailed just because it could remove the runtime cost of dynamic dispatch. Maybe you intended 'Policy-based design also relies of (static) polymorphism)
@StackedCrooked Ah, so you'd take traits to be entirely 'static' and policies to be 'mixed' (possibly dynamic)?
Or right parenthesis, whatever.
19:35
In Modern C++ design the policy-based class design is described as a combination of templates and multiple inheritance.
What would you use it for?
@sehe No both are static. But usually Traits are containers for typedefs and Policies have behavior.
@RadekSlupik That one was to balance this one:
Feb 22 at 20:07, by R. Martinho Fernandes
(The "well documented" part is a lie, btw :(
But the standard iterator traits also contain some behavior. So the distinction is not so strict.
Hello everyone.
19:36
@StackedCrooked Ah. Makes sense.
My challenge for the day is getting libFLAC to cross-compile.
Sounds not fun.
It's tricky because it actually compiles a static library without error.
But it absolutely refuses to compile a shared library.
@GeorgeEdison Q. How many chat users does it take to screw in invent a lightbulb? A. Just one, id #193619
19:38
I wish all libraries were static libraries.
@GeorgeEdison Should be relatively straightforward, as it is autoconf IIRC
Shared libraries are always a hassle. Either they link incorrectly, do not build, they can’t be found at runtime, they have wrong data inside them, …
Cross compile from host(?which) to target(?which)
19:39
"straightforward" is not the best word to describe autoconf IMO.
But as you can see it fails miserably.
@sehe 64-bit Linux to 32-bit Windows.
(The results should be a 32-bit Windows DLL.)
Which compiler are you using? The standard mingw32 packages?
Nope, Mingw-w64's i686 compiler.
It works a lot better than Mingw32 IMHO.
@GeorgeEdison Huh. How's that? Do you have a different version or something?
gcc version 4.6.3 (GCC)
If it helps, I'm using whatever is in the Ubuntu archives.
Let me find the page for you...
@GeorgeEdison I have it too
@GeorgeEdison Did you see this patch: lists.xiph.org/pipermail/flac-dev/2012-June/003427.html ?
Ah, good catch.
19:45
@MooingDuck How are you :)
Oh no wait.
@GeorgeEdison And the associated thread
The version of FLAC I'm using is 1.2.1 which was released in 2007.
That thread mentions some very recent commits.
Do any of you use Code::Blocks
@Rapptz I do a little bit.
19:47
<ducks/>
I'm having a hard time setting up search directories.
@Rapptz That thing is made with pain and despair.
It's somewhat irritating
@Rapptz It helps to remember there are no fewer than three places you can specify search directories - 1) the compiler settings page 2) the current project 3) each target.
Yeah, I pretty much included it yet it keeps telling me I have an undefined reference to the function calls.
19:50
That's a linker error.
Do I need to have my base class have a virtual member function if I want to use typeid later?
I've included the lib directory as well under Linker
@EtiennedeMartel What does @Chimera have to with hacking?
@Rapptz But you must not be linking with the correct library that exports the functions you need.
19:59
@GeorgeEdison I just successfully crosscompiled using i586-mingw32msvc
on Mint (basically Ubuntu Oneiric Ocelot with the default mingw32 package):
tar xf flac-1.2.1.tar.gz
cd flac-1.2.1/
./configure --host=i586-mingw32msvc --target=i586-mingw32msvc --build=i586-linux --disable-ogg

make
Let me try it with the --disable-ogg switch.
I was lazy, so disabled ogg to reduce dependencies here. Also, I 'fixed' one missing define (include/share/alloc.h) before disabling ogg, let met check whether it is still relevant
Yep, still relevant: http://paste.ubuntu.com/1161484/
@GeorgeEdison I replaced '#error' with the commented bit
sbi
sbi
> Implementing a programming language is the geek equivalent of building your own lightsaber. — Greg Spurrier
4
@sehe I didn't mention this, but I was applying a patch myself: paste.ubuntu.com/1161417
@GeorgeEdison Wokay. Looks harmless. I didn't run into that snag, though
20:05
It isn't really related to the error I'm getting at all since the problem is in one of the examples.
...and it gets build loooong after the library.
@sehe Do you end up with a DLL?
...or just the static .a?
@GeorgeEdison erm. looking for it.
It might be in src/libFLAC/.libs.
(At least, that's where the static lib ended up.)
Erm. Nope. Bummer. That was the point of course
--enable-shared doesn't help
afk brb
Try running configure with the --disable-static flag.
In the meantime, I'll try compiling the latest code from CVS.
Hmm... the SourceForge download keeps stalling at ~2 MB...
20:21
@GeorgeEdison Tried that at the same time
I went through the trouble of installing CVS on this machine so I could test the latest sources.
examples/c/decode/file/Makefile.am: installing `./depcomp'
test/Makefile.am:33: required directory test/test does not exist
Wow... just great.
This isn't going very well.
Is it normal to spend ~3 hours reading and lolling at Chuck Norris facts?
@GeorgeEdison grab mine from downloads.sehe.nl/stackoverflow/flac-cvs.tbz2 (also installed CVS for the purpose)
@GeorgeEdison do ./autogen.sh && autoconf first
@ApprenticeHacker Chuck Norris does that in 3 seconds
Wait - I found this: git://git.xiph.org/flac.git
@sehe lol. And he spent the first 2.5 seconds roundhouse kicking himself.
20:27
That seems to be the most up-to-date.
@GeorgeEdison can't get it configured here, either
> Chuck Norris's girlfriend once asked him how much wood a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood. He then shouted, "HOW DARE YOU RHYME IN THE PRESENCE OF CHUCK NORRIS!" and ripped out her throat. Holding his girlfriend's bloody throat in his hand he bellowed, "Don't f*ck with Chuck!" Two years and five months later he realized the irony of this statement and laughed so hard that anyone within a hundred mile radius of the blast went deaf.
chuck norris is a n00b
woo I just need to have 1000 reputation to be able to start blackmaling all those downvoters who dont comment
I only have 85 rep
Repwhores.
20:43
I don't have enough rep to be a whore unfortunately
Whores usually have a low reputation.
@StackedCrooked I read the URL and I thought it would say “how_do_you_find_motivation_to_stop_masturbating”, since you mentioned Tony.
I guess there is overlap there.
Are unicorns horny?
20:50
@StackedCrooked I saw that :)
I invented my own Chuck Norris fact:
Chuck Norris plays Wii games on a Gameboy Color.
Radek Slupik does not star Chuck Norris facts.
^ Radek Slupik fact.
I don't even like Chuck Norris
@TonyTheLion You didn’t lol.
20:52
Chuck Norris wouldn't star his own facts, the stars can't handle Chuck Norris
2
i think chuck norris wouldnt like you either
:P
@RadekSlupik I did
@TonyTheLion lol
Your eyes are like stars; the distance between them is just as big.
^ How to pwn a girl.
20:52
hair hair
Wow, that is a beautiful solution.
6
Q: detecting protected constructors of (possibly abstract) base class

Grzegorz HermanI am experimenting with the new features of C++11. In my setup I would really love to use inheriting constructors, but unfortunately no compiler implements those yet. Therefore I am trying to simulate the same behaviour. I can write something like this: template <class T> class Wrapper : p...

C++ has so many different contexts of evaluation.
AbstractSingletonFactoryManagerProxyBuilderPrototypeAdapterBridgeCompositeDecora‌​torFacadeInterpreterObserverVisitorBase
Seriously, who'd have thought that decltype resolution had different rules from function overload ambiguity resolution? Apart from @JohannesSchaub-litb, obviously.

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