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16:00
@Drise is what?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It was a "push away and look at me in disgust" go elsewhere.
@MohamedAhmedNabil I lost my train of thought. I also didn't want to mis inform you. Someone else needs to finish my statement.
@MohamedAhmedNabil the stream between the program and the file is closed. Files themselves aren't really "open" or "closed" so much as "being used"
@Rapptz I was afraid so.
@MooingDuck its the stream that gets closed not the object or the file themselves.
16:02
@MohamedAhmedNabil @MooingDuck is quite wise. Listen to him.
@MohamedAhmedNabil Correct.
@MohamedAhmedNabil the C++ object fstream represents the stream, which can be open or closed. So yes.
@TonyTheLion lol
@Drise I know that
@MohamedAhmedNabil Just reiterating. He's taught me quite a bit.
@Drise many others here are wiser
16:04
@MooingDuck so the object itself doesnt get closed
@MooingDuck You're the least likely to cut a bitch.
@Drise tuxpaint :) or rgbpaint or krita or kolourpaint4 or mtpaint or mypaint or gimp or pencil or openoffice.org-draw or dia or karbon or . If you are more archaicly oriented use xfig, dot (graphviz)
@MohamedAhmedNabil No.
Basically, what are you complaining about?
16:04
@MohamedAhmedNabil an object is a region of memory and a type and such. One of it's states is a "closed stream", much like a string can hold "no text"
Thanks @MooingDuck
@sehe dot's the coolest. Do you know you can get Google graphs to render dot files online for you?
@Drise that... might be the case. sehe's nice too, when he is bothered to answer
@MooingDuck One of*
@R.MartinhoFernandes No I didn't. I might use that sometime because I like dot for quick graphs
16:05
@MooingDuck Your answer about streams and objects explained alot. It cleared up my understanding. :D. People started saying that it was the file that gets closed and stuff and I was really confused
@Drise lol
@MooingDuck - are you calling me lazy? Let me remind you, as a pathological helper, you're biased :)
My PC put up a 7.5 on Windows Experience. I'm satisfied.
@TonyTheLion lol
@sehe :( true
ugh. markdown win
@R.MartinhoFernandes make it non linky.
@Drise And admit defeat?
Never.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not too pretty, IYAM. Quite granular. Can you use custom fonts?
Dunno, I haven't used it much.
16:09
Still nice gimmick
Nation Celebrates Full Week Without Deadly Mass Shooting | UPDATE: Never Mind http://onion.com/TXLchk
3
Ouch - that was exactly what I was thinking. Haven't read the backgrounder on it, but I'm so afraid that the 'innocent passer-by' that got killed might have got shot by someone 'trying to avoid further damage'
(I'm predicting that will happen sooner rather than later)
@MooingDuck If you said that files arent open or closed as much as being used
Dont they have to be open to be used?
@MohamedAhmedNabil I'm not sure if files technically have an open state or not, but the important thing is, the fstream object represents the stream between the program and the file, and not the file itself.
@StackedCrooked ooh your golden fallacy got tweeted by the ape
16:14
I love citing the onion.
Twitter just notified me of that. :D
:) just in case you weren't a twitter user
Apparently sleep deprivation makes me wittier.
@Mysticial Brings me to tears, usually
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@sehe CNN headlined "10 shot", then a German news magazine's website basically said "3 dead, killer among them", now you come saying only one passer-by. Let's give it a while, and it might turn into harmless fireworks.
16:15
When done reading or writing to a file, you should call the close function. This causes the program to give up ownership of the file so that some
other process can access it. C++ closes the file for you when the program exits successfully, but it’s a good idea to close files as soon as you no
longer need them.
@sehe Literally :P
@MooingDuck This is a quote i copied from my book
@sbi In CNN's defense, 10 shot does not imply 10 dead.
@sbi 3 people dead: shooter, victim and innocent passer-by. I don't rule out 10 have been shot but not killed. No contradiction yet
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@StackedCrooked It doesn't mean they are dead, but it implies it.
16:16
@sbi How?
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@sehe Oh, there was a victim, too. sigh.
They were shot ... on camera.
@MohamedAhmedNabil it's very normal to talk as if the fstream represented the file, but really the C++ closes the file stream for you.
@MooingDuck oh good :)
@sbi Apparently, it was the case of an argument where one party happened to have brought a gun. So he followed the victim and won the argument shot him in the head. That's a victim, in my book.
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16:17
@sehe They didn't say "10 got shot", they said "10 people shot". Maybe it's just because I'm a non-native furriner, but to me that seems to imply that 10 people are death while leaving enough room to weasel out when challanged.
The passer-by was also a victim, jsut not the 'primary' victim
@sbi 'got shot' - headlines are supposed to be stenographic... or something
How silly the one-eye teaches: In C++ you have to be careful to cleanup after you're done.
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@sehe Yeah, that's what I understood form your statement.
@sbi Yeah, they do want to increase their click-through rates.
I'm pretty sure the usual idiom for that is 'were shot and killed', a.o.t. 'were shot'
16:19
@sbi According to the mayor, a number of people were shot, but only injured, not killed. When police are shooting people, they're generally supposed to try to injure rather than kill (e.g., shoot somebody in the leg where it'll stop them from hurting anybody else, but still not kill them).
@StackedCrooked Or perhaps they want to fit more items in the 'banner/tickertape' news bar online
It's like a puzzle.
You shoot 10 people. 3 of them die. How many remain?
@JerryCoffin Like the Terminator in the second movie!
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@StackedCrooked 7bn?
@sehe I think they have plenty of items queued up at all times. It suspect it's more a matter of selection.
16:21
@StackedCrooked 3 people shot. 10 got shot. How many survivors ? FTFY
@kbok 7 billion
@sbi Ah, I now realize what bn means. Silly me :p
@StackedCrooked Nice :p But I think "survivors" implies people who were at risk, no ?
Means "big number", aka "thousand million".
hii, anybody got idea about set data Structure
16:23
@kbok Programmers never assume anything.
7 is not a big number, silly.
I'm in a lol mood, so I'm mainly gonna say "lol"
lol
Nice, dev build of Chrome now fails to render favicons properly.
You're using a dev build and complaining about bugs. Hmm.
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16:24
@CoolEulerProject Of course, at least those who created it would be in the know about it.
@TonyTheLion That's 50% of what you utter here anyway.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's a regression, so they suck.
@StackedCrooked > To carry on despite hardships or trauma;
MEH. MD.
Also I'm using dev because stable ate all my memory.
Greedy bastard.
If favicons are using all your memory you should consider upgrading your computer.
I can't remember all those favicons.
16:26
lol
Don't make me link those logical fallacies thingy.
@CatPlusPlus Well, I'm running stable and it's only using 1.7GiB! And I have 20 tabs open!
fuck logical fallacies
this room isn't logical
@TonyTheLion They're not hot.
There's a Wikipedia page that list all kinds of logical fallacies.
16:27
Fuck, 1.7GiB is a lot.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, depends how you look at it :PP
There's a Wikipedia page that lists all kinds of Pokemon, too.
@StackedCrooked There's a poster about it also, it's quite cool
@R.MartinhoFernandes Psh. That's why I decided to go with 32 GB
There's a Wikipedia page that lists all the pages that lists pages of lists.
16:28
1.5GB with 32 tabs.
@Drise I'm fine, thanks.
How do you link to an answer again?
By linking to it?
@StackedCrooked "share" button
I still have 2GiB free.
16:28
@StackedCrooked share button?
You really should go to sleep now.
It's 17:30.
Oh, Stacked.
I never noticed that share button.
No worries, I slept 4-5 hours last night.
@sbi , then i request u to go through stackoverflow.com/questions/12112884/…....
16:31
Can auto be used a return type?
damn
Well, only as an introducer for new declarator syntax.
@Drise sometimes, but rarely
It doesn't infer return type.
16:31
> 12:46, 4 August 2006 Xezbeth (talk | contribs) deleted page List of lists of lists of lists (nonsense)
Look, curiousguy was on wikipedia!
If you want real inference use Haskell.
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@CoolEulerProject Thinks twice thrice before requesting anything from a grumpy gorilla.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ??
Return type inference could never work for function declarations, only for definitions.
@sbi He often dismisses contrary arguments with a reply consisted of nothing but "nonsense".
ptr = (int*) new char[sizeof(int)];
delete [] ptr; //is this UB or safe or Do I have to cast it first?
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16:33
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nonsense!
@MooingDuck Ew.
@MooingDuck UB.
@R.MartinhoFernandes thought so, but delete [] reinterpret_cast<char*> ptr; didn't compile
What is the ` (int*)` for?
when I write " public static void testBoardInitialize();" it gave me an error expected : — Masoud 1 min ago
16:35
@StackedCrooked I have a pointer to a variably sized object, but it was mixing new[] and new and delete, so I'm trying to fix it.
@MooingDuck You need a static cast I think
@MooingDuck Missing parentheses?
@kbok Can't static cast there. It's a reinterpret.
Struct or Class? Just as a simple container.
There's no difference.
My favicoooooons.
16:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait, isn't (int*) a static cast ?
How can I tell tabs apart if they all look the same.
@Drise POD struct
@CatPlusPlus Do you want favicons or memory?
@kbok No.
Why do people always say this?
oops wrong one
16:36
C-style casts are above reinterpret_cast in power.
@R.MartinhoFernandes trying that now
@kbok No. It can be many things (which is why it's so evil). In this case, it's a reinterpret.
Ok.
@kbok Dude.
You should know that.
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@MooingDuck Whatever you're doing with accessing objects allocated in raw memory is already weird and error-prone enough. Why don't you at least store the raw memory in a std::vector<char>?
16:38
@CatPlusPlus sometimes it's a static_cast though right? When you do derived to base or something?
It's not safe either way.
It will mask casts that aren't static.
@sbi I'm delving in code that's not mine, I'd rather do minimal changes.
How do I merge elements in a vector?
When ` (int)mydouble;` is a static cast.
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@MooingDuck And why don't you create real objects in your raw memory using placement-new, rather than resorting to UB by casting?
16:38
@Rapptz say what now?
@sbi I do use placement new on the next line
Use std::vector for the buffer dammit.
@Rapptz std::for_each(v.begin(), v.end(), &merge);
:P
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@MooingDuck Then there is no need to cast the result of new char[].
@MooingDuck Then... char* x = new char[blah]; int* ptr = new(x) int(); delete[] x; would work.
I just need to merge 2 adjacent elements though.
16:39
@MooingDuck If you want to allocate raw memory, use ::operator new instead of new char[whatever] (or use an Allocator).
@CatPlusPlus That does address my current problem
@StackedCrooked True that. But in my defense I don't use C casts a lot.
@R.MartinhoFernandes delete[].
@MooingDuck Man, they are tearing you apart today lol.
16:40
@Rapptz C++ objects don't have a "merge" operation.
@CatPlusPlus whistles
@Drise :/
I use C casts a lot. :)
@Mysticial you use C a lot too, don't you?
@MooingDuck ya think? :P
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16:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wouldn't that, officially, need a ptr->~int()?
It seems so me that new and delete don't even need to be part of the language. They could be implemented as library features.
@sbi I think there's an exception for PODs
@StackedCrooked they could be yes
Does ~int() even compile? Apparently, yes.
2
@sbi Destructors with no side-effects are allowed to be skipped (i.e. nothing forbids you from leaking).
@StackedCrooked I think it does, I know it does if int is a template parameter
16:42
I've seen people doing int *i = new int();.
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@StackedCrooked No. new does two things: It allocates memory, and invokes the ctor, thereby converting raw storage into an object. How do you propose to do the latter in a library?
@kbok That was on a question recently.
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@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, Ok. Didn't know that.
@sbi placement new?
Only placement-new (i.e. the ability to invoke a constructor) is fundamental.
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16:43
@MooingDuck Yeah? What about it?
@MooingDuck Some fancy terminology to confuse you.
@sbi malloc and placement new? I guess placement new should be a language feature at least.
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@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, now I see.
@sbi oh, we were removing that too? Then no, we'd need named constructors for that.
@StackedCrooked Yes. It's called a pseudo-destructor call. Mostly allowed so a template can do things like x->~y, and it won't fail just because you instantiate it over a built-in type.
16:44
@JerryCoffin wish they did that for inheritance as well
@JerryCoffin Ah. Similar reasoning as to why zero-initialization was introduced.
@StackedCrooked Isn't that ~ int(); i.e. inverse of default value of int ?
@MooingDuck At one time I though that would be really cool, but I haven't really felt much need to in the last, say, 10 years or so. Not sure if that's because of better alternatives, or just getting used to its absence.
@kbok Now don't confuse me :P
@MooingDuck std::accumulate worked fine.
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16:46
@StackedCrooked But what syntax would you propose? If one of those two is still within the language, then creating free storage object either becomes a two-step procedure, or you need to bundle the two in a language feature — which is what we now have. Am I missing something?
@StackedCrooked ideone.com/tQE79
@JerryCoffin it's also fakable with a reference class. It also never comes up. I see it as a "moral" thing. THe language ought not do that.
@sbi it'd be two-step
@MooingDuck That's a pretty serious loss, IMO.
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@MooingDuck But avoiding that was the very reason new was introduced into the language!
@StackedCrooked ~int() and ptr->~int() are very very different.
16:47
@sbi In Objective-C you need to call [[MyClass alloc] init]. Or something like that.
~int() is just an alternate notation for -1.
0 becomes -1 after destruction?
@JerryCoffin it could be made two step by adding a function to the standard library, just like many other things
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@kbok Yeah, but not when preceded by an int*, followed by a ->.
for(auto iter = vec.begin(), iter != vec.end; iter -=~int()) // much more readable
16:48
@JerryCoffin Two-step encapsulated as a library function seems not such a big loss to me.
@MooingDuck If memory serves, Bjarnes discusses the possibility in the D&E. Most of the difficulty was that the built-in type system is enough of a mess (especially conversion rules) that trying to tack something with simple rules like inheritance on top would just turn into a nightmare (I don't remember for sure, but it almost seems like he implemented it at one point, but it caused enough problems that he tore it back out -- but I could be remembering wrong).
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@MooingDuck But we had this in C, and we're sneering at it, because it's so error-prone!
@sbi hm, true
brb restarting... as soon as visual studio decides to respond...
@MooingDuck See you next week.
This boundschecker plugin makes VS crazy slow
16:51
Boundschecker plugin?
Is it a static analysis tool?
Or something like valgrind?
@StackedCrooked valgrind
So it makes your app slow, not VS, I would assume.
@StackedCrooked you'd think that wouldn't you?
But when I hit the boundschecker debug thing button, VS locks up for about 100 seconds before compilation begins.
(and yes, the app crawls)
@MooingDuck It inserts instrumentation into your code before it compiles.
@JerryCoffin ah
that explains why "rebuild all" took me five hours yesterday
16:54
If I develop a GUI application I value not-freezing the UI very highly. I don't understand why major companies don't seem to care about that.
@StackedCrooked here here
@StackedCrooked Yeah, VS tends to do that a lot.
@MooingDuck Sounds about right. Just think was it was like on, say, a 33 MHz 486...
@JerryCoffin programs were also smaller at the time
16:56
@StackedCrooked Microsoft did once know about things like that, but when they converted to .NET, they apparently lost their collective memory (or maybe just quit caring).
I heard that you can put a dll in your application directory to override memory allocations and stuff.
@StackedCrooked sometimes
@JerryCoffin Ah. That explains.
@MooingDuck Many were, yes. I can, however, remember a program that took about 2 days to build with BC back then. It was worth it though -- on the first run, it found a bug I'd been chasing for months.
@sbi make_unique<T>(...)?
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17:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't know that except from hearsay. And in its innards, it will call new somewhere.
@sbi But it can do with placement-new only: ::new (allocate(sizeof(T), alignof(T)) T(...).
(Obviously, needs a custom deleter too)
static_cast<T*>(static_cast<char*>(malloc(sizeof(T))))->construct(); // user *must* provide a method called construct
However, constructor arguments...
Dammit.
Variadic templates could work.
However, default construction of member variables still won''t work.
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Ok. What do we have now? We can hide two-step initialization behind a library interface. Creating objects would then have a slightly different syntax. Parameters are passed forward to some create function using rvalue references. So what would that gain over the current new? Because I know a few things we'd lose — like sane error messages when you pass the wrong parameters.
Well that was a fun thinking exercise. But I'm getting scared now. Goodbye!
Are questions that ask how to use a feature of an IDE allowed in SO?
17:09
Yeah.
@sbi mostly trimming things from the language that could have been library features.
@yasar11732 Yes -- use of tools commonly used by programmers is explicitly included among topical questions (per the FAQ).
@sbi To be fair, the error messages would actually be the same, but with two or three instantiation contexts extra.
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@R.MartinhoFernandes Which makes them horribly in current compilers.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's what I thought.
A working implementation should quench all complaints.
@StackedCrooked no it wouldnt
@MooingDuck Well, perhaps could be now -- but keep in mind that new has been around since the beginning, long before things like variadic templates, or templates of any kind, for that matter. In fact, placement new wasn't added until quite a bit later (in early C++, you got roughly the effect of placement new by assigning the desired address to this in the ctor).
This is the Lounge! Enough with all this C++ code stuff! :-)
4
@R.MartinhoFernandes Silly me I forgot that I could rely on implicit move. ::operator new(sizeof(T))) T(std::forward<Args>(args)... is quite clever I think.
17:11
@R.MartinhoFernandes I didn't know there was a global deallocate function
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@MooingDuck The reason we don't want to burden the language with new features is that those might render existing code incompatible and that it might hinder further evolution of the language. Removing a language feature yields none of those advantages, but it does bring disadvantages.
@MooingDuck No idea what you're talking about. :P
@sbi Origional discussion was "They could have been library features". I agree that removing them now would be a terrible idea.
Why are you no longer using ideone?
17:13
@StackedCrooked Template aliases :P
@StackedCrooked LWS provides a newer version of gcc.
@R.MartinhoFernandes also boost right?
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@MooingDuck As @Jerry has just explained, originally it couldn't have been a library feature.
@sbi true
@MooingDuck Yeah, that too.
17:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why did you write deallocate(ptr) instead of delete ptr?
Dammit, I didn't :P
operator delete. ah.
@StackedCrooked ::operator delete
17:21
My silly mistake.
if I have a type that encapsulates a bounded integer, and the constructor argument is out of bounds, what's more appropriate to throw? invalid_argument or out_of_range?
Today @R.MartinhoFernandes was not a faggot.
The Friday mood is overwhelming me a little.
Btw, that thing is missing includes for <utility> (forward) and <new> (placement new).
17:25
@Prætorian out_of_range is clearer I think
I have a spambot calling me on my cell phone several times a day and neither my operator nor my phone can block calls. What should I do ?
@MooingDuck That's what I was thinking too but then I saw this on cppreference for out_of_range
>It reports errors that are consequence of attempt to access elements out of defined range.
The phone ? :p
17:26
@Prætorian wait, wrong exception. give me a sec
@Prætorian you want std::domain_error
@JerryCoffin > It reports errors that arise because floating point value in some computation could not be represented because it was too large or too small in magnitude. If the value has integral type, underflow_error or overflow_error should be used.
That's the description of range_error
@Prætorian Should be range_error. std::out_of_range is a logic error, but this is really a runtime error.
Oh please don't throw logic_errors.
> The class out_of_range defines the type of objects thrown as exceptions to report an argument value not in its expected range.
The standard exception hierarchy suxorz.
17:32
It seems out_of_range is the one to throw, even though it derives from logic_error
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, it is a convoluted mess
Fuck it, I'm throwing out_of_range. That's most descriptive of the error anyway
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BTW, regarding this, I mailed Scott a link and asked him to comment. He answered (I am translating this from German): "The excerpts from my errata list that you quoted match my current thoughts on the issue, which is why I don't see any reason to add my own answer."
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, .NET's is much butter.
But, it's Scott Meyers! He'd get a ton of rep!
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@R.MartinhoFernandes He has real rep, he doesn't need SO rep.
There are people on SO that are much more knowledgeable than him.
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17:39
@StackedCrooked Of course!
He's best at explaining basic and intermediate concepts.
I think.
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@StackedCrooked I agree that his main strength probably is i´his ability to inform himself about complex things and explain them (in an entertaining way) to John Doe Programmer.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The worst thing is that they don't inherit virtually from each other. That makes it impossible to create your own exceptions inheriting from multiple bases — which is one of the examples Stroustrup gives to demonstrate the versatility of of C++' exception mechanism.
Boost.Exception is nice though.
@sbi not impossible surely
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@MooingDuck Oh, you can derive from multiple exception classes — only you can't catch such a beast as std::exception&, which makes it utterly useless.
17:44
@sbi oh, right
struct my_error : std::runtime_error, std::logic_error {}; can't be caught as a std::exception?
@StackedCrooked There are two std::exceptions there.
I know. So it should catch one of them.
At least.
Which one?
I derive everything from std::exception and boost::exception virtually.
I don't care which.
17:46
@StackedCrooked But the compiler does. It's ambiguous, so the compiler won't allow it.
Ah.
Define a std namespace in your own namespace and reimplement the standard exceptions with virtual inheritance :P
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@StackedCrooked Look up "unambigous base class".
@StackedCrooked Don't use standard exceptions and inherit from std::exception and boost::exception virtually.
The ability to carry arbitrary data is awesome.
You can inherit std::exception virtually indeed. I don't see much of a problem actually.
@StackedCrooked The problem is that is the only one you can use. All the others are verboten.
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17:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have started writing my own exception hierarchies in the late 90s. :( And I came up with complicated schemes for creating exception interface and implementation types through template machinery so that they can be caught as std::exception, but still can employ MI.
But could those carry arbitrary data? :P
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@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, of course.
// you can still do things like this
struct FatalError : virtual std::exception { ... };
struct SystemError : virtual std::exception { ... };
struct HDFailure : FatalError, SystemError {};
Yes, but system_error already exists, so it's not optimal.
Lol.
I see what you mean.
Well, fuck that.
And only inherit from std::exception.
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17:52
The thing is, the only explanation I ever heard about why the std lib's exceptions do not inherit virtually is that this would be an additional run-time cost. WTF?!
And the worst part? While making the others virtual is a breaking change, system_error is new so they could have it inherit virtually. They didn't.
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@R.MartinhoFernandes What would break if you changed their inheritance to be virtual?
@sbi I don't understand why that is a big problem for failure scenarios.
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@R.MartinhoFernandes Hence my "WTF?!" A platform that cannot afford virtually derived exceptions, cannot afford exceptions at all.
@sbi Code that expects some class to have two std::exception objects?
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17:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes I seriously believe that there's more code out there that assumes auto to be a storage class than code that assumes multiply-inheriting from std::exception makes your class have two instances of it.
Well, it is an excuse.
There's no excuse for not making new exceptions right.
You can adopt a convention that says the standard exception classes are only to be used within the standard library, and that the users must create their own exception hierarchy with std::exception as virtual root.
It's a bit of a pretend game.
Dammit, I fear my code is putting GCC into a mode that always counts errors in units of 100.
curses. my BoundsChecker program says "Bad Pointer: Attempt to dereference a pointer; no read access to memory at 0x000FECA8." at a line with no pointer dereferences. Actually, no pointers at all.

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