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12:00
is there a howto?
yea
1. download. 2. build. If something fails "well it's beta anyway, so fuck off"
I just got prebuilt package, it seems to work
@Nils generate projects with cmake and build?
or maybe generate projects for VS 10 and build in VS 11
Use commandline, cmake-gui doesn't work
and, if you don't have 12-core mainframe, don't click build solution
heh sryously?
I have high-end i7 and SSD, and after 1,5 hours I got somewhat impatient
12:04
Why would the cmdline work if the gui does not?
you tell me.
no idea
I get a feeling that passing by ref is bad practice. It breaks const correctness. Example:
Thing myThing;
book ok = doSomething(&myThing);
// Even if thing is just used read only below we can't declare it const.
you pass pointer here, @Nils
Also function [on] ( object ) is so C... you should say object [do/.] function
@StackedCrooked Wokay - I stand corrected (in fact, I sit)
28 mins ago, by daknøk
I want food.
^ Hiding topic changes is dubioius, @daknøk
12:20
That is unfortunate.
If you disagree with me, just send me an invoice.
@Nils That's not right. references are every bit as constcorrect as pointers. In fact, a reference 'behaves like' a const pointer that must be initialized
@daknøk Thinking something is dubious is not a disagreement
@sehe I never claimed it was.
@RadekSlupik What is tree-plastering anyway
@daknøk Screw it :)
:P
I want fried sheep cheese in dough.
@sehe No, but it's implied
So heavily in fact, that often people can't distinguish the two
12:27
@Neil He knows that
@sehe I know.
I'll just see myself out then. *kicks self*
I've CONFIG += lib in my pro file but it still complains that there is no main function in with qmake
12:50
You must be doing something wrong.
Z i n g
For Dutch-enabled readers:
Overigens creëert ook de PVV haar eigen toekomstig electoraat, door het hardst te bezuinigen op onderwijs. #cpb
PVV FTW
"Aside from it all, PVV is also creating her own future electorate, by making the largest budget cuts on education" ^ translation
Not my problem.
@daknøk Hey. You don't get to propose and vote your own stuff; I thought you were more of a 'Pirate'
@daknøk Are you migrating?
12:58
@sehe Nee.
Ik ga werken.
No need for education.
@daknøk When did you decide such?
@sehe One eternity ago.
Also, even if you don't have kids, statistics are strongly in favour of the possibility that others will, and you will still be feeling the backlash (sidelash) of the problems they create out of absolute ignorance
backslash
@daknøk I mean, you make it look like you're skipping Hogeschool Rotterdam
@daknøk Hey, slupik. Check your bedside table. I think you left your brains sitting there when you got up this morning
13:01
@sehe I am not, and that's exactly why I am voting for Wilders.
Rotterdam is crawling with lazy assholes.
what you Dutchies arguing about?
so I found out last night, cat's really don't like vacuums
But when I say who those assholes are, I am obviously a racist.
@thecoshman haha
@thecoshman and vice versa
13:10
@BartekBanachewicz Does it matter weather we take a ref or a pointer as arg? The Qt API design guide arguments that we should take pointers, because one can see that it is passed by ref when just looking at the function invocation (not the declaration or implementation) Also let's say I have myObject.doSomething(&myThing) ..
@daknøk huh?
@Nils The Qt API should never be looked at as a design guide.
This is a long shot, but I don't suppose this room has any Slovenians or people who speak Slovenian?
Jul 22 at 23:09, by Radek Slupik
Though I think I'm going to vote for de Piratenpartij if I'm 18+.
3 hours ago, by sehe
Uhoh. I have a premonition that @TonyTheLion will not be coming back. Just as he moves to Great Britain, this news arrived:
lol
I'm still here
unnoticed by the many
as a Lion in disguise
:P
13:12
@TomW Croation was represented recently
@TonyTheLion Stop scaring people :)
@Nils Passing a pointer is C. Period. The name of the function should state implicitly if it will modify the variables passed.
@sehe I was not referring to C++ references, but rather to pass object by reference (instead of copy to a function) as an out parameter. In my example you cannot declare myThing as const, even though it does not change anymore after initialization. const Thing MyThing = createMyThing(); would work.
@BartekBanachewicz heh
@Nils ever heard of const &?
http://doc.qt.nokia.com/qq/qq13-apis.html#pointersorreferences
Of course you can also write __in or __out.
@Nils ? where is the reference in your example?
13:14
@BartekBanachewicz Sure that's what I use for larger things as input parameter.
@Nils I am not clicking on that link, ever.
?
Thing myThing;
book ok = doSomething(myThing);
// bool doSomething(Thing& something)
@Nils So what's the problem with it in your example? Can you post it as a more complete on pastebin or somewhere?
@Nils What's the issue with that?
@Nils I think you maybe missing that a Thing& is implicetly convertible to Thing const&
@Nils That's still ok.
13:16
The problem:
- Takes more lines
- myThing can't be const, even if it is only read after being initialized by doSomething(..)
@sehe No I do not I know const correctness.
@Nils If it's initialized by doSomething, doSomething should use Thing's constructor, i.e. act as factory
@Nils Huh. Initializing it is a misnomer (the reference was initialized before the call). Initializing the referred-to object is obviously not read-only access
const Thing myThing = createSomething(...);
yes ^ that is what you can do, as long as the function creates/modifies just one object.
@sehe yup. It's just modifying the object.
13:21
guess you maybe should pack things in std::pair or std::tuple and just return it if needed
but you also require exception handling then
@Nils but what the heck you really want to do?
So when designing your functions / methods you should not have out parameters in modern C++ but just return everything?
@BartekBanachewicz Just thinking about software design.
@Nils depends on what do you want to do. Sigh.
No you can do everything both ways.
Certainly using pointers isn't a remark of good design. Qt sucks, by the way, if I didn't mention that
13:26
Why not?
Qt does not suck it is the only C++ toolkit available.
@sehe lol
@Nils That's not true.
well have fun with MFC then :P
Being the only one doesn't mean it doesn't suck.
:)
13:28
I didn't say MFC is good/better. Also, I don't know what you mean by toolkit.
ur like a "I don't do gui" developer? ;)
I am like "I do good code" developer. Or I least try to.
So I do :)
Qt certainly isn't good code. I've found a few nice C++ gui libraries lately; they were only for windows, though. eGUI is nice, yet a bit outdated.
C++ for GUIs? Ha.
13:31
@EtiennedeMartel sad, but true.
@BartekBanachewicz What specifically is not good about it? It helped me getting gui work done in reasonable time.
It isn't modern. It is good. Way good. We'd just prefer better since the language has progressed
Pointers as parameters -.-
Yeah, well they also have to support every platform. Even Blackberry I read this weekend.
Ok, can we all agree that Qt sucks and change a topic (at least for a while)? I have something really tough right now.
badum-ts. Placement-new is not constexpr. Why?
13:33
We can change topic, if you agree that it does not suck :P
Heh well let's just say I am quite happy with it.
Good for you.
Everything is there: Localization support, network, shared memory, clipboard, etc :)
@BartekBanachewicz Well. Because... they didn't think of it. Also, most implementations would never actually be compile-time evaluatable...
@Nils No, most of their design decisions were done because when they started back in 1995, nobody knew how to write good C++ code. And now that the whole C++ world has progressed forward, they have to stick to their crappy style because of backward compatibility.
@Nils Qt is great. If you like it. But it doesn't interoperate too well with anything else (and by that, I don't mean, the clipboard, but e.g. std::map<t,y>)
@EtiennedeMartel The style could be much worse, but it is tedious, to say the least.
Explicit management of ownership, to make sure refcounts work...
13:37
@sehe I thought the only non-deterministic part of creating a trivial object is where it will be constructed. The placement new I was talking about was to target specific hardware mapped memory in embedded systems (nvm) - so in form of new (0xdeadbeef) Obj
Non-generic callbacks
It feels old, to say the least.
Anyway, gotta get to work. See y'all in 30 minutes.
@BartekBanachewicz I understand: that's why I said, they didn't think of it. There is no very good other reason I can see. Also, static char buf[1000] = {0}; new (buf) Obj; should work as constexpr too, since taking the address of static globals should be constexpr
@EtiennedeMartel Ciao
@sehe Wow, that would be even better; I didn't even dream of it. Maybe I should post a standard's proposal :O
@BartekBanachewicz That would be a Defect Report. You might. If it is worth your time
13:41
@sehe If they actually used it, I could put it into CV/resume :3
@sehe There are toStdString() and fromStdString and also to toStdVector and from StdVector, not sure about map
"Collaborated in creation of newest C++ standard"
@BartekBanachewicz So they know you are a standards wanker :)
@Nils do these functions copy?
@BartekBanachewicz I think so.
13:42
@sehe Duh. I don't find it that bad actually, but maybe it's just me being nerd.
@Nils well...
@Nils Ahem. So, there's your level of convenience.
@BartekBanachewicz Hey, I don't think it's bad at all. I'd hire you. But I'll probably never be in that position:)
@sehe Haha, I'm so young that I can't really predict where I'll end up in these 4-5 years
woah... this song is so strongly associated with being out in clubs, I can almost smell and even feel being there
@BartekBanachewicz Me neither. But in absense of ambition to become an employer, I think it is safe to assume I won't be one
Oh, It would be nice to create a startup and earn a few millions.
13:54
Most startups crash and burn.
They don't waste many resources in the process, though.
That's the point of the startup. 1 in 1000 is successful, but you can try out many ideas.
Until you're broke
oh, don't be so pesimistic
Even if you don't earn millions, you can always earn something
@BartekBanachewicz false
the only two things that are certain is death and taxes
and I am starting to doubt the former
that's BS. I know plenty of people who have never died!
14:12
I'm just looking at a dissasembly of the constexpr new I've just tailored. If anything is being called, it means constexpr wasn't properly evaluated, right?
Depends.
It is possible to write a constexpr function that a particular implementation will be unable to call at compile-time, so it's hard to say anything.
so how can I check if the constexpr works as intended?
with -O2 my objects are completely eliminated. I tried adding a variable and setting it, but it doesn't help much
@BartekBanachewicz constexpr works as intended.
If you want something compile-time, write a metafunction.
@BartekBanachewicz The startups I saw failing burned a lot of resources. Venture capital, but still
@thecoshman You can earn respect. But not of many :)
14:27
That's the code I'm working on.
I took the challenge of writing something like this, but I am starting to think I really know too little to do it properly.
The point is - will the static approach cause any overhead in runtime, compared to simple placement new on fixed (const) address.
constexpr cannot guarantee that. It's not a great tool for giving hints to compilers.
That's too bad -.-
Well, the addition of the value in static table is done in compile time, as I found it when diffing the static and dynamic dissasembly
Can I use this in an initialization list?
@Nils what exactly?
14:44
MyClass(): m_undoStack(new QUndoStack(this))
{}
There are limitations on what you can do.
One might argue that the object does not yet exist, but it might work.. wondering if it is legal.
They are too numerous for me to enumerate tbh.
@Nils Seems moar like a bad design to me.
Just storing it is safe.
@Nils It does exist, but is not yet usable.
14:49
@CatPlusPlus Well, you might strip cv-qualifiers.
ok
Hi
And you have to be careful that 'it' in 'storing it' really means this. Some conversions of this are not allowed.
Just a quick question : I'm digging into our codebase to fix a silly bug, and I just encountered a lot of lines like:

data = reinterpret_cast<void*>(Value);
And the implementation doesn't have to warn...
14:52
Does this cast have a point ?! Is it even valid ?
I know one should use static_cast to cast from void*
How, exactly, can we tell?
Forgot to say : Value is a pointer.
reinterpret_cast is in the language and as such as uses. What more to say?
@LucDanton :)
Shouldn't a cast from any pointer to void* be direct, that is : without a cast ?
14:55
If it is an object pointer then it might be equivalent to using static_cast, or else it's doing something implementation specific.
@ereOn Not enough information.
Is it an object pointer? What are the guarantees of the type being pointed to? Is the pointee alive or is it dead storage?
@LucDanton: Okay. Actually I don't have much more information. This code is a mess. Just wanted to make sure it wasn't a silly construct.
@ereOn If you have to use ANY casts, there's a reason to investigate more. That's why the C++ casts are so bulky.
IIRC, you're right, reinterpret_cast to/from void* is wrong. That should be a static cast. Reinterpret is from non-void* to non-void*
but look it up if you want to be 100% sure :)
in any case, I'm guessing it works fine in practice. If it compiles, I can't imagine how it would practically speaking go wrong
@ereOn In C pointers will implicitly be casted to/from void*
C++ requires a cast
@jalf Converting object pointers should very much likely be done via static_cast via void*, not reinterpret_cast.
Typical cases are storage and e.g. reading the bytes.
15:12
So, what do you think. Am I an evil person for taking a little malicious amusement in finding a fairly reasonable excuse for calling Java a "lower level language" (not mention at least implying that it lacks "advanced features")?
0
A: Bitwise AND XOR on conditional statement

Jerry CoffinAs others have already pointed out, this code is based on the fact that as you increment a number, the least significant bit of its binary representation alternates between on and off. IMO, the lack of readability is largely a symptom of a larger problem: the logic of the code isn't really the b...

Oh, and by the way: hi all. :-)
Okay I could get some information :

enum MyEnum { ME_FIRST, ME_SECOND };
void* _private = reinterpret_cast<void*>(ME_SECOND);
Actually, the _private field is provided by libxml2 as a way for a user to store user data in an internal structure.
You can't name a variable private.
Flee for your life.
@LucDanton: Forgot the _. Fixed :)
@LucDanton You can in C.
@CatPlusPlus Which, if you were Linus, would be enough to "prove" that C is drastically superior to C++.
15:16
@CatPlusPlus reinterpret_cast<>?
reinterpret_cast is the only cast that can make sense here, so that's not the question. The question is how you use the result (and the answer will rely on the implementation).
libxml2. vOv
@JerryCoffin I like to call my variables auto and register.
If the callback restores the result of MyEnum (or alternatively, to its underlying type), then you're good to go.
@sehe register is reserved in C. But auto my_car; is clearly better than int my_car;!
15:18
Or maybe use XML library that doesn't require stupid type-unsafe tricks.
@CatPlusPlus: I don't have control over that. :)
@LucDanton: Ok, so the fact that the enumeration size might be smaller than the pointer type would cause no harm here ?
Technically there's no way to tell if the pointer type is large enough to hold ME_SECOND, but given that it's 1 well.
@JerryCoffin std::list<boost::any> my_car, my_cdr?
I suppose one could compare the size of the underlying type to std::intptr_t.
@LucDanton: Thanks. I guess I will have too keep looking for why this affectation causes a SEGFAULT on my AIX machines...
God, I hate those untraceable bugs.
15:22
intractable or untraceable
TRWTF is AIX.
@sehe: Thanks.
@sehe I guess that's the new "Inversion of data structures" design pattern?
u need to check boxes_left after each move. — Cheers and hth. - Alf 19 secs ago
@CatPlusPlus Not really. But it is unlucky
@ereOn You're out of luck in terms of valgrind:
15:24
@sehe: Yep. Sadly.
@JerryCoffin Ah well. I didn't have to time to think it over. You got the point, nonetheless. Yeah, my quick line is a bit dodgy
@ereOn Back when I did AIX development (using XlC++ 8 - Visual Age, YAY!) I expressly ported the software (legacy) to linux, not because it was a supported platform (those were Windows 32/64 and AIX 32/64 only) but just to have better tooling....
By the way, that as ~2-3 years ago
@sehe: The software works on several platforms, including flavors of Linux but the crash doesn't seem to happen on those.
Which makes things quite hard for me.
@ereOn You might still run it under valgrind. I did that and caught many 'latent' cases of uninitialized data bugs. These could cause a crash on one system, and 'appear to work' on others.
@sehe: I did that this morning actually. Fixed 2 uninitialized variable issues. Really thought that would do it but it didn't.
It was even surprising that there was only those 2 errors : noone had put the program under valgrind before.
@sehe Wow -- somebody was still using VA C++ 2-3 years ago? They made kind of a splash ~10 years ago (or more), but it had been so long since I'd heard of it that I figured it must have been gone much longer than that.
15:33
@JerryCoffin: I know people that still do.
@ereOn I'm not sure whether to be happy it's still there to provide a little more diversity, or saddened to hear that people are still stuck using it (unless, of course, it's drastically improved since the last time I looked).
@JerryCoffin Well the platforms are still running. Multibillion companies still sell services/platforms...
@ereOn Oh I found some more than only just the 2 :)
@ereOn Alternatively run your program through something like viva64.com/en/pvs-studio or clang-analyzer.llvm.org or even just lint
Just found this discussion about reinterpret_cast<> and enum. Seems everybody agrees it should not be accepted by the compiler or am I missing something ?
@sehe Is clang-analyzer an option for C++?
I love meetings the run till just after you where planning to get the bus ¬_¬
15:39
@JerryCoffin I must admit I tried to move away from their compiler by using 'homebrew' gcc (it exists) but the toolchain had 'breaking points' AFAIR so I never actually did. I did come a long way to building the Windows binaries from Linux, though, which was nice for speed and not having to update the VS solutions every second (and running the test suites from a single dev environment)
@LucDanton Erm. Why not?
@thecoshman Poor you
> The Clang Static Analyzer is source code analysis tool that find bugs in C and Objective-C programs.
@sehe serious problems
@LucDanton Oh. can you tell I never used it... :(
AFAIR lint had the same limitation. I wouldn't be surprised if that pvs-studio thing is also more adept at C than C++
@ereOn Oh, it seems this doesn't have the semantics I expected. Note that it doesn't mean the compiler has to reject it though. As a fix you might want to make an explicit conversion to an integral type.
Wait, no. The conversion is allowed for an integral type or an enumeration type.
> A value of integral type or enumeration type can be explicitly converted to a pointer.
Good day folks
15:49
@LucDanton: Have you found that in the standard ?
@Drise hello.
(Ouch I just realized this enum matches a list of strings constants in a different file and that those two must have the same order, or hell will happen. What a maintenance nightmare...)
@EtiennedeMartel I can't play any music that involves flash. It's starts hiccuping and skipping all over. Fuck flash, use HTML5
@ereOn Yes.
@LucDanton: So, what about the discussion I found. Are they talking about something else or just mistaken ?
15:53
@ereOn Notice how the wording I quoted applies to a conversion to void* (which you are doing). In your link it's the reverse conversion.
@LucDanton: Is there a point being able to do the conversion in one direction but not the other ?!
Amazingly there is no wording for a conversion from void* to enumeration type. You might want to try using an integral type still, just to rule out the possibility.
@LucDanton: I probably will yes. I will just try to compile a small sample that does that and run it on AIX.
See how it ends.
For doing it quick and dirty you can do reinterpret_cast<void*>(+foo) on one end and reinterpret_cast<int>(bar) on the other.
I need to store strings and integers simultaneously on stack. Now I can create a structure and put both of them in it, and then create a single stack, or I can create 2 stacks and store them separately. Which one is better? The former definitely seems more elegant.
16:02
@VinayakGarg What do you mean by creating stacks?
stack<int> myStack;
@VinayakGarg struct is better if they go togeather
@VinayakGarg boost::any
Then your two options are wildly different: e.g. if you have two different stacks they can differ in size.
@TonyTheLion Problem is too small for Boost
@LucDanton I will be pushing and popping simultaneously so the size won't differ.
16:05
@VinayakGarg If the 2 are related, keep them together. You can always use pair or tuple to group them
@VinayakGarg: So it may make sense to enforce that.
@VinayakGarg are you storing a string and and int, or is it a string xor int?
@VinayakGarg Then the option with only one stack is obviously and objectively better in the sense that there is one less thing that can go wrong.
@MooingDuck string and int
@VinayakGarg yeah. A struct or pair or tuple then. But only one stack in any case
16:06
If you need e.g. contiguous storage of either types of objects then you can have more elaborated setups though, in which case I'd recommend not using std::stack altogether.
@LucDanton I was thinking on the same line, but didn't know if that would make any difference
[user@aix]$ cat test.cpp
#include <cstdio>

enum Foo
{
VALUE1,
VALUE2,
VALUE3
};

int main()
{
void* foo = reinterpret_cast<void*>(VALUE2);
Foo foo2 = reinterpret_cast<Foo>(foo);
}
[user@aix]$ xlC_r -q64 -qthreaded -D_REENTRANT -qmaxmem=50000 test.cpp
"test.cpp", line 13.34: 1540-0216 (S) An expression of type "void *" cannot be converted to type "Foo".
Funny how it can go one direction but not the other.
@LucDanton what? Doesn't stack just use the container you give it? isn't it just a wrapper?
@ereOn too much code: ideone.com
By the way, @LucDanton thanks for the quick fix. I will try that.
@MooingDuck: How much code is too much ?
@MooingDuck I meant e.g. contiguous int objects. You could design a container compatible with std::stack, but by that point you might as well write your own abstraction on the same level as std::stack.
16:08
@LucDanton ooooh
@ereOn 6 lines or so?
@StackedCrooked I still need to exit Chrome for it to update.
@MooingDuck: Can't edit now. It's too late :/
@ereOn it's not that big a deal.
I think the implementation of tolower is guaranteed to be wait-free. — Kerrek SB 2 mins ago
@Prætorian heh
16:14
Well, that's enough crazy-blind debugging for tonight.
I bid you good evening gentlemen.
Ell
Ell
hi
This is a video all 4 year olds should see. It gets better as it goes along:
Ell
Ell
16:30
haha "it's not so fun no more"
huh, I just got a Allocation Conflict: Attempting to call global_operator_delete on 0x0A04D0F8; pointer was allocated by malloc. in some member function of std::string
Ell
Ell
o.O I didn't even know that diagnostic information was available. wow
@Ell valgrind on linux, or BoundsChecker (not free) for windows
also custom allocators can find some of that for you.
Fuck. Qt, why won't you let me edit my tree items?!
ugggggggh
-1
A: c++ getline() with strcuts

klutuse cin.getLine(variable, length) as per c++ reference. So your getLine would look something like this: cin.getline(cars[i].name, 256); make sure you remember: #include<iostream>

That's the first time I've seen someone recommend cin.getline when they were already using std::getline.
16:48
More C++? Damn.
Hi @Drise. How goes it?
@Chimera It's alright. My new computer is the shit.
@Drise Glad to hear you finally got it!
@chris how strange. The answer was also completely wrong
So I have to write a slot machine application.. woot
Now the bad news... have to use GTK
Three words that strike fear for developers: GTK, pango, cairo
Best part about it is that I'm able to run a minecraft server and play simultaneously, without resource conflicts. Plus a SSD helps
16:53
@Drise How do you like the SSD? Are they useable now?
@Chimera 256GB, and blazing fast. Windows is usable in less than 30 seconds cold boot
Xeo
Xeo
aaaargh
Ell
Ell
:O really?
From BIOS POST to useable.
Xeo
Xeo
I want a working router T_T
Ell
Ell
16:54
thats crazy fast
@Drise Nice! My computer has an Adaptec hardware raid card that takes 15 seconds to boot it's kernel.. I never got quick boots.
Ell
Ell
booting to any os takes ages for me. the BIOS, POST or whatever it's called
boot time is once though, the real advantage is how quick things open after you've booted
Xeo
Xeo
@Drise For my PC (64gig 2y (I think) old SSD), the BIOS startup is actually taking the longest time when booting
@Drise Talk to @Nils, I think
@Ell The BIOS is your motherboard's "OS". Each BIOS has specific start times based on some of the checks it does, etc. So you can't really count it./
16:56
3 hours ago, by Nils
Qt does not suck it is the only C++ toolkit available.
@sehe Hmm GTKmm doesn't count?
@sehe Yea, normally I'm the Qt guy around here.
Do you all want to vote on a photograph of mine over at photo.se?
@Chimera up or down?
@Drise NO! YOU ARE THE MAN!
16:57
@Ell I did say usable. Chrome comes up instantly, Crysis 2 take about 20 seconds or so to load.
@MooingDuck Well it's kind of contest, so only upvotes are allowed. If you like the photo, upvote, if not don't vote.
don't = down
:)
@Chimera What if we don’t like the photo?
@daknøk Then don't vote on it.
Indeed. Flag it!
Flagged for karma whoring.
16:58
What is flagged?
Countries.
@Mysticial upvote everyone else = down?

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