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00:00
@MohamedAhmedNabil they probably mean c-strings, yes
@MooingDuck is c-strings a correct name, because alot of people asked me what do i mean by c-strings
@MohamedAhmedNabil usually if you have the hyphen, then that's clear.
the trick is MFC has a class called CString, and I know another library on the net that defines a cstring class.
But with a hyphen, that always means char*
@MooingDuck is it technically formal. or is it just used in the programming community as a shorter version of char array
some people call them K&R strings.
@MohamedAhmedNabil If you want a pointer to the buffer of a std::string, you normally use your_string.data(). You can also use your_string.c_str(), but that give you a zero-terminated C string (and you probably don't care about the zero-terminator in this case).
00:02
@MohamedAhmedNabil it's informal. Formal name is char*. Doesn't exactly roll off the tongue.
@MooingDuck There's more to it than that -- a C string requires a zero terminator.
@JerryCoffin (char*)(&string) isnt that simpler
@MooingDuck Still better that lpszShit".
@JerryCoffin heh
@JerryCoffin true
@MohamedAhmedNabil doesn't compile... for any kind of string.
@MooingDuck ill check one sec
00:04
well, it's theoretically possible to make that compile I suppose. If the string overloads operator& to return something that converts to char*. But that'd be rediculous
string c="hello";
ofstream binfil ("h" , ios::binary | ios::out);
binfil.write((char*)&c, sizeof(c));
binfil.close();
ifstream binf("h" ,ios::binary | ios::in);
binf.read ((char*)&c, sizeof(c));
cout<<c<<endl;
@MohamedAhmedNabil A cast may be simpler, but is often just plain wrong. std::string often looks something like this:
template <class T>
struct basic_string {
size_t length;
size_t allocated;
T *data;
T short_data[20];
};
@MohamedAhmedNabil that's wrong
@MooingDuck It works
@JerryCoffin I know of no implementation that does that
00:05
@JerryCoffin Please no template. I have no idea what it is
@MooingDuck Does which part?
struct basic_string {
size_t length;
size_t allocated;
char *data;
char short_data[20];
};
@JerryCoffin IIRC, MSVC is the only one with SSO, and I believe they union the short data atop the pointer and allocated
@JerryCoffin Whats the difference, What did the template do?
@MooingDuck Whats wrong with it?
@MohamedAhmedNabil holds any type of character
@MooingDuck You've opened Pandora's Box.
00:07
And what is wrong with this
string c="hello";
ofstream binfil ("h" , ios::binary | ios::out);
binfil.write((char*)&c, sizeof(c));
binfil.close();
ifstream binf("h" ,ios::binary | ios::in);
binf.read ((char*)&c, sizeof(c));
cout<<c<<endl;
@MohamedAhmedNabil huh, it seems to compile and run. It... shouldn't.
@MooingDuck There are others with SSO, and the last I checked, they did not use a union (as I recall, Pete Becker said they tried, and decided it was too much headache).
@JerryCoffin k
@MooingDuck I write a std::string and read and std::string, same type;
@MohamedAhmedNabil You're reinterpret casting a std::string* to a char*.... OH! I see how it works. HAHAHA
00:09
@MooingDuck Im smart hahahaha
@MohamedAhmedNabil you can't do that with std::string
@MohamedAhmedNabil no, you have no idea how strings or streams or the heap work
@MooingDuck after casting
@MooingDuck I probably dont, XD
@MooingDuck Learning.... Still lots of books in my library, Im still young
@MohamedAhmedNabil alright, basically: some types are known as "standard-layout" They are very simple types, and you can just cast their pointers to char* and copy them around like you're doing.
all the primitives are standard-layout.
However: string is not standard layout
@MooingDuck I should go slow on this
@MooingDuck ok i read it, let me process
@MooingDuck Then why is this working?
@MohamedAhmedNabil mostly coincidence.
00:12
@MooingDuck i shouldnt use std::string with binary?
@MohamedAhmedNabil no, you saved the internal data of the string to the file, which does not include the chars representing "hello". Specifically, one of those pointers pointed at the word "hello". And then when you read the data (including that pointer) back in, by coincidence, that string was still in that position, so the string never realized anything was wrong.
@MooingDuck A little more than coincidence -- some designers work (sometimes pretty hard) at getting sane results if you display a string as if it were a char *. This can make life a lot simpler when debugging. Not everybody does it though -- some just make the debugger smarter so it can work with a string, no matter how it's laid out.
@MooingDuck which does not include the chars representing "hello". what??!!
@MohamedAhmedNabil a string is normally composed of a pointer to the characters, the number of characters, and a few other bits of data. The characters are not in the string itself.
@MohamedAhmedNabil The string has a pointer to the data. If you write it out, then read it back in from the same program, that pointer may well still point to that same data. If you write it out, quit, start the program back up, and read it back in, chances are much better that the pointer is now bad and will point to garbage (or may crash the program, etc.)
00:18
@MooingDuck :O My life is a lie
@MooingDuck Thats too advanced for me
@MohamedAhmedNabil For the most part: if it has a constructor, you can't merely copy the bytes around. You have to use it's members to do stuff.
@MooingDuck If that is true, why are strings used like variables at alot of times and i can also edit the contents of a string
@MohamedAhmedNabil Because they go to a lot of work to make it so you can use them that way, largely by overloading operators to do the right thing, even though they often use pretty convoluted logic internally to do it.
This is way to advanced for me right :/ ???
Bottom line: (as I said before) use your_string.data() to get a pointer to the data, and your_string.size() to get its length.
00:22
This makes no sense right now, there is alot of the language i didnt learn yet
@JerryCoffin this is simpler
@JerryCoffin binfile.write(your_string.data(), your_string.size())
this right?
@MooingDuck Where did you learn all thoose little details and advanced things
@MohamedAhmedNabil Yes, should be.
@MohamedAhmedNabil even that is dangerous really, unless you first safe the size of teh string.
@MohamedAhmedNabil it's just obvious, once you know how classes work.
@MooingDuck is there a book that goes into the details of the language?
@MohamedAhmedNabil why are you doing stuff with binary files again?
@MohamedAhmedNabil the C++ spec, I linked it to you a few times
@MooingDuck ok, i didnt think that a book like that would be there
00:24
@MohamedAhmedNabil it's very advanced reading though.
@MooingDuck I wont read it now :/ Ill need to learn alot more first
@MohamedAhmedNabil Until you know how std::string works, don't mix classes and binary files, it's just too easy to screw everything up. :(
@MohamedAhmedNabil A few of them, to varying degrees. The standard is not really a good starting point for most people though. I'd consider starting with something like Programming Principles and Practice Using C++.
The moral is: dont use std::string with binary files
@MohamedAhmedNabil right
it can be done, but there's tricks to it
00:27
@MooingDuck i know how to use std::string not how it works. I didnt fully understand it. I saved what you said for later
is there a better way of initializing maps as dictionaries (in python) with C++11's initializer lists?
@MooingDuck When righting to a binary file i should know where one thing starts and another ends. Std::string seem hard to manage for something like that making c-strings a better easier way for me since it is limited to a certain amount of chars
@Rapptz in python with C++11?
@MohamedAhmedNabil right
@MooingDuck Dictionary is the term for associative arrays in Python.
I'm just asking for a better way to initialize it.
@MooingDuck btw i only learned so far std::string and binary files. I didnt learn classes but i know what they are
00:29
std::map<int, char> dictionary = {{3, '3'}, {4, '4'}};
ah so it does work like that, neat. Just making sure.
thanks
@Rapptz Just realize that it's fairly new, and some compilers don't support it yet.
I'm using gcc 4.7.1
@Rapptz doesn't work in Visual Studio
@Rapptz good enough
@Rapptz Should be fine there.
00:32
@MohamedAhmedNabil ahem. I posted that only 7 messages before your question?!
And now, for something completely different: everybody who does 'leetspeak and looks at my current rep will immediately get hungry...
@MooingDuck perhaps it is time for a room again :)
@sehe I'm about to go home: someone else's problem :D
00:34
@MohamedAhmedNabil I answered your question. Follow the reply-to arrow link
@sehe saw it thank u
@JerryCoffin lheeee?
@MohamedAhmedNabil Cheers
eeeeAt.
guys do you buy programming books or do you pirate them, but honest now ^.^
00:35
@MohamedAhmedNabil Buy. Have never pirated one yet.
I like paper books.
But I have digital copies of them too
so both.. I guess
@Rapptz References work well digitally (easier to search). Paper is much better for books you plan to read through, not just look up bits and pieces.
@MohamedAhmedNabil I paid
@Rapptz I like paper too ^.^
@JerryCoffin True
references are free too
00:36
What does it matter. You do what you want, right
I never pirated books. Because I like my books in paper form. And nicely bound. and lots of them :)
If there was a book talking about pirating, would people buy it or pirate it ?
You would
What do you guys use for cloud storage? If you use any
Dropbox, Google Drive, etc
@Rapptz I use dropbox
Steal This Album! is the third studio album by Armenian-American rock band System of a Down, released on November 26, 2002, on American Recordings. The album was produced by Rick Rubin and Daron Malakian, and reached #15 in the Billboard Top 200. Album information This album was released shortly after a collection of medium-quality MP3s found its way onto the Internet under the unofficial name Toxicity II, a year after the release of the group's multi-platinum record, Toxicity. The band issued a statement expressing their disappointment that their fans were hearing unfinished material, ...
@Rapptz Amazon S3, several VPS instances
00:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh but you did disappoint him! People expect nothing short of stellar from you.
@MohamedAhmedNabil Long before "Steal this Album" came "Steal this Book":
"with over 200,000 copies sold" - cant they read.....
that's pretty rad
@joschua011 They were hippies, so in many cases...no (not very well, anyway).
@Cheersandhth.-Alf so now we know that Alf doesn't use a login password or his password consists of nothing but instances of the letter q ...
01:07
lol
unordered_map is a hash table right?
hmm
std::unordered_map<Kty, Valty, Hasher, Pred, Alloc>.
I wonder
lol
@Rapptz well, if you pass a hash functor that hashes every possible key to 42, it will in effect be an implementation defined 'list' or 'array' style container
And it won't meet the average complexity expectations. And you'll get a rather high load factor
01:24
I have this fun issue. Protocol class takes a lower-layer Protocol object in the constructor. One of the "protocols" is the VLAN tag. VLAN tags are stackable. This means a signature VLANProtocol(VLANProtocol&) can happen. The compiler thinks this is a copy constructor and refuses to compile it because the base class is non-copyable.
well, it has a good point
it's a pretty ambiguous constructor
VLANProtocol(Protocol &inLLP) : BasicProtocol(inLLP) {}
VLANProtocol(VLANProtocol &inLLP) : BasicProtocol(static_cast<Protocol&>(inLLP)) {}
^ My workaround looks like this.
@StackedCrooked yup. follow the lead of std::piecewise_construct or make stacking more explicit (e.g. by doing a 'fluent' member: vlanproto = vp1.stack(vp2);
Adding an overload to disambiguate.
perhaps you should use a pointer for stacking and a reference for copy construction
01:27
BTW. Does adding explicit to the 'default-looking ctor' help?
Ah, forgot to make them explicit. Let me check if that helps...
scrub
I wager it doesn't really matter. The signature should be what counts, I feel
template<class LLP> explicit VLANProtocol(LLP & inLLP) : BasicProtocol(static_cast<Protocol&>(inLLP)) { }
^ This also works.
Yeah. Good to make that explicit, or you'll have hefty problems with silent unexpected conversions :)
01:29
what's with the static cast?
It emulates the overloading that is in my previous snippit I posted.
TLA;DR
TLA;DR?
I know about TLDR.
@StackedCrooked Too Long Ago; Didn't Read
There seems to be no end to these acronyms.
01:33
Hi Scott. Thanks for the help
ROFLMAOIRL srsly
After heavily investing in improving genericity and granularity and I can implement a protocol in one line of code: PROTOCOL(VLAN). However, nobody will understand what's going on under the hood. So I'll have to cut back and make sure there is some manual work involved in defining a protocol class.
So that the code flow becomes visible.
@StackedCrooked Oh. You ought to have made that expression templates. A beautiful use case <whistle/>
Make it even more complicated heh :D
I had SFINAE'd the crap out of it.
But I'm returning to more conventional mechanisms.
Never tried Proto? Anyways, it is you who is turd polishing maximizing user experience error-message overload by quote [improving genericity and granularity]
What is Proto again?
01:39
Boost Proto: expression template library for easy DSL creation
Sadly, I was just going to leave you guys. @ScottW: Just an update, since you got me to try the Indie bundle, back when:
2 days ago, by sehe
Jun 28 at 21:56, by sehe
@Cicada Not hardcore? I just recently bought the Indie bundle 5, but if I got more than 3 hours of gameplay out of the total, it will be a generous estimate
2 days ago, by sehe
^ I haven't revisited a single game ever since that moment
Sadly, it is safe to call the experiment a failure (if the objective was for me to discover gaming and gain a new hobby)
I started every game. Woot
Bastion seems fun.
@ScottW I cudda finished Bastion, I reckon. Amnesia: props. I tried it. I loved the physics/control. But I couldn't really get out of the first level (challenge, whatever it's called)
@ScottW Somehow, I went through all the rooms and got stuck. I got stuck at some 'lever' that you could pull down, but it would slowly 'flop' back up. Tried to 'fix' it in the down position using books, but that didn't work. I suspect that was opening some possibility to continue the 'quest'
02:01
Hey, what happened to Wikipedia's logo?
Nothing?
There's a woman (a dancer?)
nothing
@MarkGarcia I don't see it
wait i'm uploading the screenshot
Please look at the img's source.
02:11
I don't see anything
What do you mean that you don't see anything?
I don't see the woman.. It's the same Wiki logo
Is it just on my IP?
Take a screenshot
I swear! I'm still uploading the screenshot!
Sorry I have such a slow connection.
Could you please connect to Wikipedia using a proxy in the Philippines? (Yes it's my location)
02:16
cba
a screenshot is like 300 kB though
more or less
Wait, flag fox says the server is in US.
^ Appropriate.
The uploader has not made this video available in your country.
Sorry about that.
02:20
lol.
You see the screenshot?
yes
Might be a long shot, but check your hosts file? Maybe someone's messing with it
@MarkGarcia Lol, took me a while until I noticed what was wrong.
Sorry. Got disconnected. I don't know! Flagfox says it's server is from the US!
Here: 208.80.152.211
@chris: 73) sizeof(bool) is not required to be 1. However, all compilers I know of use 1 though. — Jesse Good 8 mins ago
How do you use blockquotes in comments?
02:31
Hehehe. I think they're just messing with Asians.
Isn't sizeof(bool) required to be equal to sizeof(char)?
bool is equal to 1 byte.
@mfontanini, implementation-defined
in most environments.
02:32
Just looked it up in the standard
that sucks
But it's almost always represented as 1.
yeah, but it would be nice if the standard said that
Hey you know now what happened to Wikipedia's logo?
What would it buy?
02:34
nothing's happened. your dns server has been pwned
the world would be a better place
Hehehe... I'm currently using a cellular network.
The day Wikipedia had the blackout was sad. Way too easy to get by.
Wireless 3G network.
For example, it took like 3 seconds to redirect you to the blackout page.
It's the day before my exam.
Too bad SOPA's not in the questions.\
02:37
@chris Use backticks. `
@Rapptz, That has syntax highlighting, doesn't it?
@chris Nope.
It's just in-line code.
std::string vs std::string looks weird here, so not the best example.
Huh, I thought it did. Guess that's the answer then lol. Me overcomplicating things.
seems silly not to require bool to be 1.
I mean, it's not like anyone needs more than 1 byte to represent 1 or 0.
Entered the room with faith in humanity. Found that the most starred comment is about dick sizes. Faith lost.
7
02:46
#define OFSTREAM std::wofstream
aaaaaaah, my eyes!
@ApprenticeHacker Dick size is very important to some people.
@Mysticial My dick size is undefined. The ladies love the nasal demons, you know.
@DeadMG lol
Huh, found this:
9
Q: Why the sizeof(bool) is not defined to be one, by the Standard itself?

NawazSize of char, signed char and unsigned char is defined to be 1 byte, by the C++ Standard itself. I'm wondering why it didn't define the sizeof(bool) also? C++03 Standard $5.3.3/1 says, sizeof(char), sizeof(signed char) and sizeof(unsigned char) are 1; the result of sizeof applied to any ...

This guy built his own atom smasher in high-school. How cool is that?
03:00
This guy built his own nuclear reactor as a teenager. How cool is that?
This guy got his Ph. D. at sixteen years old. How cool is that?
none of them are very cool
Damn, can't figure out how to send a fucking file through a wifi network to my other laptop
on Windows you can just share the destination or source location and just copy and paste.
03:08
@ApprenticeHacker, google.ca/…
Went to Properties -> Sharing. The "Share..." button is greyed out. :'(
Finally got it working
Now to pwn my brother in counter-strike.
Sharing that mod, huh?
03:44
Woah, what's with the flags?
Might be my fault, sorry :/
wtf's with the flagfest?
@DeadMG Clearly someone doesn't know this room very well. I'm gonna invalidate all of them.
Except for the one on my own which I can't invalidate.
So, I might be exercising my bad sense of timing, but is there any specific reason C++ can't have properties in the C# sense? I'd find it very useful, seeing as how you can use the same syntax to access it for reading or writing, but you easily control in your class which one(s) apply. For example, (for lack of a better example) int length = button.TextLength could work, but button.TextLength = 5; could not if you chose it not to.
I shant draw attention to people having harmless fun by linking to it in the future :P
03:48
@mootinator The only things you should flag in this room are obvious spam, trolls, and very offensive personal insults.
I even hesitate to state the latter.
@Mysticial I didn't flag anything, I drew attention to it in a humorous context.
@mootinator ah... yeah, most of the meta people don't understand this room.
sorry for blaming you
@Mysticial I did the same.
We're gonna need a 3rd 10k to invalidate the ones left on ours.
so I had a most annoying experience today
decided to mail the Clang mailing list with my problems
and fucking thing attached my real name to it, even though I provided DeadMG as my name.
useless wankers
03:56
lol
hello
I just have a quick question that I couldn't find an answer to, and seemed too small to start a question on
if I want to address compare a reference to an object and an std::unique_ptr to that same object, do I just dereference the unique_ptr and get the address of the resulting value?
&(*uniquePtr) == &objRef
I would have started a question, but I sort of already have an answer
I mealn
I know that what I said above works
04:03
@Rabenholz uniquePtr.get() == &objRef
then why are you here?
okay, thanks
I like this room.
this is the chat- for chatting
It's the only one I can relate to.
04:04
I didn't know if that was bad practice or undefined behaviour or something
just checking :P
then ask a question
alright
well
how about that weather?
and talk about gas prices these days
and what's up with airline food?
^
(me chatting)
Don't be annoying.
more like, "Why does Clang's API suck such giant donkey cock?"
ooohhh tough crowd
I guess I'll be on my way then
cheers
04:08
I didn't mean it that way, it was just in the rules. Damn I suck at explaining.
hi
Is the era of Desktop Software Finished?
should more focus be given to cloud based apps?
Depends on what you're doing.
Who knows.. maybe Metro apps will be popular.
04:16
what kind of Desktop apps do People prefer these days?
apart from the cloud apps
Ones that are useful to them.
People don't care. They use an app to complete a particular task. Whether or not that app is cloud-based is irrelevant.
@mootinator Could you give an example of Desktop app that you will pay for
@techno IntelliJ IDEA
@techno Crysis. Or BF3. Or any PC game, really.
04:22
im not talking about games
@techno If anything, I'd say it's getting a lot more attention than it really deserves. So far, most "cloud applications" aren't really a whole lot more than somewhat elaborate web pages. IMO, the big problem is that most people aren't really delivering a whole lot of extra value, but (for many purposes) do have quite a few extra roadblocks -- mediocre productivity, working enough differently to require retraining, but providing little in return, etc.
utility desktop apps
or IDEs
Oh. Then there's Photoshop, 3ds Max, Visual Studio, Office, etc.
Although they're all ridiculously expensive.
So I'd ask my employer for a license.
Right now, for virtually every cloud based application, there's a desktop version that's faster, more convenient, more capable, and just generally better.
@techno That pretty much covers my needs (aside from games)
04:23
I think the key is performance. If your app needs to do some heavy work, then hosting it on the cloud is a bad idea.
Backup in the cloud is popular-ish.
@JerryCoffin I think that's reverse
@techno I think you're biaised.
Foo
Foo
hi all, sorry to intrude but since the java chat room is dead i was wondering if there are any java swing gurus here?
@Foo We actually all dislike Java immensely, so it's the worst place to ask for that.
04:26
@Foo Even though I just admitted to purchasing IntelliJ IDEA I'm not the person to ask either.
@EtiennedeMartel That depends. What you'd hope for is the opposite -- apps that need really serious computation, preferably in short bursts, but don't need low-latency I/O. Then you can (for a short time) use a bunch of CPUs on the cloud (a lot more than an average user's machine provides) to finish faster. Unfortunately, we're seeing a lot of the opposite -- apps that benefit more from low latency than extra processing power. A net loss.
@JerryCoffin Hmm. Indeed.
@Foo I know Swing enough to dislike it far too much to use it voluntarily. Does that count?
@JerryCoffin It also depends on how much memory is involved.
Anything that uses more than a trivial amount isn't very suited for the cloud.
wait
isn't techno a complete troll? Or maybe I'm remembering wrong
04:33
Wait...
@Mysticial Unfortunately true -- and (again) exactly the opposite of how it should really be. If I've got something that can run a lot faster with a lot more memory, the cloud should be a good way to get that. If I don't want to buy enough memory, rent it for a short time. The cloud providers, however, are mostly shooting themselves in the foot, doing their best to provide the equivalent of a fairly pedestrian machine instead of letting me use a super-computer for a little while.
@DeadMG That sounds really familiar.
You (@Mysticial) probably have machines in your dorm room that you could barely afford to rent (the equivalent of) from Google or Amazon for even a few minutes. They could have a big advantage for this kind of thing, but they seem intent on blowing it.
Foo
Foo
Haha no problem thanks guys
@JerryCoffin That's probably true...
04:42
Can someone vote to close this?
0
Q: Does any assembly programmers want to join a project?

Kevin UsherI want to make an OS but I need a team of at least 3 people to make it. It's not all going to be in assembly but the first few files will probably have to be made in assembly. You can message me at [email protected] or kjeezekjeeze on youtube. It will probably be programmed mostly in C++, C#,...

@Rapptz Woah that went down fast.
heh
I cast the last close vote.
> deleted by birryree, Bill the Lizard♦ 12 secs ago
Heh using YouTube as a point of contact?
ha ha ha
05:07
Neat. +100 rep for getting to 200 rep.
@Rapptz I want to make an OS but I need a team of at least 3 people to make it.. 3 people to make an entire OS?
05:24
@ApprenticeHacker in them old days single students did that. check out xinu etc.
05:50
@Cheersandhth.-Alf In them old days, the OS did jack shit compared to todya
Shouldn't there be a flag for informing the moderators that the question has been solved, but not marked as such?
@VinayakGarg That's been beaten to death. The answer is no.
But why?
i want a windows thing with three buttons: [Disable built-in keyboard], [Enable wireless capability], [Reinstate volume icon]
05:53
The accept is an acknowledgement from the OP. Everyone else can just vote.
@Mysticial What if OP comments that he hasn't used your code but has solved his problem. Thank you.
Yes, I get annoyed by one-time askers or people who simply don't accept. I've been denied plenty of rep and fair number of Enlightened badges. But you learn to live with it.
I don't get why some people seem to be obsessed about this.
@Mysticial It isn't my answer or my rep problem. Problem is I unnecessarily visited that question.
It's like they are suffering from OCD. Can't bear to see incompleted things.
05:57
@VinayakGarg Oh ic what you mean. I just click through almost anything that seems interesting - accepted or not.
BTW I haven't answered or asked a question for more than a month now.
@Mysticial I rarely find interesting stuff by browsing on SO. You have to search for it.
@VinayakGarg I have an auto-refresher on the homepage on a separate monitor. So I kinda see everything in my tags.
Although more than half the questions that I answer are from the email subscriptions to my tags.
Best way to find stuff on SO is Google search with site:stackoverflow.com :p

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