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sbi
sbi
16:00
@EtiennedeMartel "Still confused, but on a higher level." [attribution missing]
By copy only.
so much attempted evil in 1 place
Oh, Cicada is back so soon? I thought she would go to sleep for a prime number of years to evade predators? :)
@sbi Not much any more, no. The emphasis here was on "old" though -- from when even flamewars were conducted with, if not gentility, at least intelligence.
"aol" and all that terminology is still used in the norwegian hierarchy
although there's not much activity now
folks who are interested in the old terminology might google up "hacker's dictionary"
sbi
sbi
16:01
5 messages moved to bin
Your silly cultural wars bore me.
Hey, that's admin abuse.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel So? Yours is room abuse.
The Jargon File is a glossary of computer programmer slang. The original Jargon File was a collection of terms from tech cultures such as the MIT AI Lab, the Stanford AI Lab (SAIL) and others of the old ARPANET AI/LISP/PDP-10 communities, including Bolt, Beranek and Newman, Carnegie Mellon University, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute. 1975 to 1983 The Jargon File (referred to here as "jargon-1" or "the File") was made by Raphael Finkel at Stanford in 1975. From that time until the plug was finally pulled on the SAIL computer in 1991, the File was named "AIWORD.RF[UP,DOC]" ("[UP,DOC]" wa...
@sbi Oh, so it's your room now, hmmm?
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel non sequitur
16:03
@sbi Oh, I'll get back on that next time public transport fails. Winter is a-coming
@EtiennedeMartel If you two will be quarelling about this, please do so in another room. May I suggest the bin :)
sbi
sbi
@sehe Yeah, public transport can be bad here in winter time. Especially the S-Bahn is prone to silly failures the moment a singly snowflake hits its machinery.
@EtiennedeMartel He's presenting it as his room in an article on his blog / one of his blogs.
@sehe I was bashing France! Isn't that accepted behavior here?
Damn double standards.
16:05
tea-drinkers!
sbi
sbi
@sehe They are already doing so!
@Cheersandhth.-Alf If true, and if he really means it, then that is silly.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Dissing other nations is not acceptable. Especially from members of nations so lowly as Canandada.
@EtiennedeMartel The ape was making a humorous statement, implicitely, by moving messages; isn't that accepted behaviour here?
no, not quite. i would also have been a bit proud of having built up such a community. but he's not done it all by himself
;-)
16:07
@EtiennedeMartel No, natural language bashing is down the hall on the left. Here we bash programming languages. Bashing natural languages as a class is fine, but bashing an individual one is verboten. Bashing countries -- not sure, I think that's mostly in the CSS room.
I AM PISSED.
(Not really)
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Please don't fall for Alf's trolling. He's been at this ever since we added new owners and he wasn't even considered.
I AM NOT REAL
(pissed)
@sbi I know.
@JerryCoffin What about programming in another natural language?
16:08
not making much sense (except as diversion), but i think the royal "we" is somewhat misplaced
Like LSE!
LSE (Langage symbolique d'enseignement) is a programming language developed at Supélec in the late 1970s/early 1980s. It is similar to the BASIC, except with French-language instead of English-language keywords. It was derived from an earlier language called LSD, also developed at Supélec. It is most commonly said to be an acronym for Langage Symbolique d'Enseignement (Symbolic Teaching Language), but other expansions are also known (e.g. Langage de Sup-Élec, or the more cynical Langage Sans Espoir (hopeless language)) It originally flourished due to support from the French National Mini...
@sbi Yeah, Alf always seems pissed off about something. Why so serious?
@jornak First you have to produce a parser that gets all parts of speech correct in: "Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana." At that point, we allow the possibility that you might program in a natural language.
@JerryCoffin What about all the non-English languages?
Non-English-based programming languages are computer programming languages that, unlike better-known programming languages, do not use keywords taken from, or inspired by, the English vocabulary. Prevalence of English-based programming languages There has been an overwhelming trend in programming languages to use the English language to inspire the choice of keywords and code libraries. According to the HOPL online database of languages, out of the 8500+ programming languages recorded, roughly 2400 of them were developed in the United States, 600 in the United Kingdom, 160 in Canada, a...
sbi
sbi
16:10
@EtiennedeMartel Actually, that's a very serious accusation, and if I wouldn't know that there is no way to talk to him about controversial subjects without stooping myself to flame wars, I'd have a very serious talk to him about that. As it is, I'd be content knowing everybody else laughs about it.
@sbi But you do come off as "the guy who's terrified he'll abuse his powers".
@jornak Dreck! French BASIC! Noooo!
@jornak What about them? Is there one close enough to not sucking that it's worth reading about it? :-)
You know what sucks? OCaml. And you know why? It's French. You know why it's used so much in France? Because patriotism.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel I'm not sure what to make of that. Who would abuse, and why?
16:12
@jornak APL
@sbi Well, I mean, you're the closest thing we got to a leader, yet you don't seem to want any of that.
@MartinJames wat
Maybe I'm just overthinking things.
@EtiennedeMartel i think you misunderstand @sbi. he's always maintained that he cannot remember why he harbors a grudge against me. i suspect that he lost some discussion a long time ago. and so he hints about my typing, or drinking, or this or that. it's a small person. with a very long memory, apparently.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Let's just say I have read Pratchett very well.
16:14
@sbi Bitch please, Robert Munsch is the most enlightening author ;)
sbi
sbi
@Cheersandhth.-Alf It's you, Alf, who harbors a grudge.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Maybe, but at least, when he argues, he doesn't gets the ad hominem out.
sbi
sbi
@jornak While that might well be, or might not, or might depend on who you ask, what's that got to do with my statement that I might be terrified about abusing my powers because I read Pratchett?
@sbi Never understood that phrase. If I have a grudge, I try to keep it harboured.
16:15
hai guise
@sbi I'm just messing with you.
@TonyTheLion dis guise are now arguing about who's at fault for starting the arguments.
sbi
sbi
@jornak I, of course, did not realize this at all, and, of course, I did not try to mess with you by appearing to take you serious, and showing how far off the mark your statement was.
@EtiennedeMartel I'm all for argumentum ad mater tua
Now you're all going postal
16:16
@jornak Well, it doesn't use key words based on English, that much is true. That's not because it's based on any other language though -- just that it lacks keywords in general. Think of Brainfuck, but with lots of symbols.
In place of ad hominem
Here's something to entice some constructive discussion:
Ell
Ell
I have read going postal
sbi
sbi
Anyway, enough of this. I'll be going home now.
See you later!
16:18
@Ell One of the better ones, though it's difficult to pick one diamond out of such a huge pile of gems.
@sbi Good night.
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin I'll be going home, not to bed!
I've never read a single Pratchett book
I did, however, enjoy Ernest Cline's "Ready Player One"
sbi
sbi
@jornak Heretic! Next thing you'll admit to will be that you have never washed, either! What you doing here, anyway?!
Looking at the tutorials, this thing doesn't look too promising: openframeworks.cc
16:21
@sbi Wasting time at work :P
@sbi Ah, sorry. Well, good luck with the S-bahn. I'll hope no snowflakes land anywhere nearby...
Stadtbahn?
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin No chance today. After lunch today, I enjoyed the nice roof garden in nothing but a shirt.
@JerryCoffin The S-bahn suffers from the wrong kind of snow too? I thought it was just the UK.
16:23
wait, std::vector<std::string> c{5, 7}; fails to compile?
@MartinJames So he said anyway:
19 mins ago, by sbi
@sehe Yeah, public transport can be bad here in winter time. Especially the S-Bahn is prone to silly failures the moment a singly snowflake hits its machinery.
sbi
sbi
@jornak Yes, I think that's what it means, but even Berliners are hard-pressed to think of it by that name. It's been called S-Bahn forever, and nobody bothers remembering what's behind the S.
@EtiennedeMartel What about it?
@MooingDuck Why should it compile?
@sbi World Geography back in highschool, that's where I remember it from :P
@jornak Schnellbahn, I think.
sbi
sbi
16:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or that. See, I really don't know. Nor do others.
@MooingDuck You're trying to stick a 5 and a 7 into a vector of strings
@R.MartinhoFernandes The tutorials try to teach C with Classes at the same time as they try to teach about the lib itself.
i'm not sure of the rules here
@EtiennedeMartel Oh, sounds funny. Lemme see.
@Prætorian I thought it would call the constructor that takes two integers (there isn't one)
16:27
but for the ordinary constructor it would be 5 vectors with default value 7, which isn't meaningful
That and everything starts with "of", because fuck namespaces.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it shouldn't, my bad
There's even a place where they dynamically allocate an array with new[], but never delete[] it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That depends on whether it's regional or urban.
lol
> "Schnellbahn", literally "city train"
16:27
what is the framework for?
wtf ?
@Cheersandhth.-Alf 5 strings, but not meaningful anyway because of the initial value
So, it's another one of those piles of crap aimed at people that don't learn programming before they learn how to do large stuff.
@kbok SCHNELL SCHNELL SCHNELL!
16:28
And as it shows, written by people that don't know programming.
What is.
I want to make fun of it.
Ow. State-based.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sounds like it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's their fault of course
16:29
@EtiennedeMartel Oh wow, I didn't catch that.
@TonyTheLion That was mostly an attempt of making the "dis guise" pun.
@kbok And Schnell means "fast"
Ell
Ell
void testApp::draw(){
ofBackground(0);
ofSetColor(0,0,255);
ofFill();
ofCircle(100, 100, 30);
}
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
Ell
Ell
looks like cairo to me
16:30
> ofBall** myBall; // an array of pointers
@Ell Yep, piece of crap right there.
ERMAGHERD.
@Ell what's the of prefix?
openframework
@R.MartinhoFernandes Schnellbahn = "fast train", stadtbahn = "city train"
16:30
@Cheersandhth.-Alf openframework
Ell
Ell
@Cheersandhth.-Alf in place of a namespace I presume
Literal translations.
oh, they haven't heard about namespaces
heh
it sucks
it's a piece of shit
Why don't people use namespaces? Like MFC, why does it use the C prefix instead of mfc::?
16:31
There's a part in the tutorial that compares Java with C++. So my guess is that it was designed by Java programmers.
@Prætorian namespaces didn't exist yet
MFC is too old
Was it created at a time when VC didn't support namespaces?
@Prætorian yes
16:31
@EtiennedeMartel Because Java is 100 times better than C++. ;)
@EtiennedeMartel Here we will scratch the surface of Object Oriented Programing (a primary feature of C++) in order to make things easier, more readable and less repetitive.
This one is particularly lulz-worthy: openframeworks.cc/tutorials/firstSteps/…
So ATL has namespaces, but I just found out yesterday that if you get the wizard to add an ATL class it'll also add using namespace ATL; to the header!
"Look, ma, no delete!"
> #ifndef _OF_BALL
First line of code, first error.
16:33
@kbok Lemme guess, it allocates crap with new too.
@EtiennedeMartel #define NBALLS 5
@R.MartinhoFernandes new[], to be precise.
So, who's going to e-mail the authors telling them they're bad and stuff? Seems to have become a common occurrence around these parts.
@jornak GET OUT! ;)
that would be negativity
16:34
Oh, they even link to a cplusplus.com tutorial.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought we only did that once
they would downvote the mail
This is just getting better and better.
@MooingDuck I remember two.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Isn't it usually the puppy who does that?
16:35
'A recurring analogy is to see a Class as a the cookie cutter and the cookies as the Objects' WTF?
@Rapptz He only did that once.
@MartinJames This usually comes from people thinking that OOP is about real world objects.
@MartinJames So, what bakes the cookies?
@FredOverflow I'm biased though as most of the large projects I've worked on have been in Java. I do think C++ is a better language, but Java has its uses as well. :P
@Prætorian MFC predates the invention of namespaces at all. Odd bit of trivia: VC++ supported namespaces before anybody else (unless you count EDG releasing code to their customers).
16:36
@JerryCoffin That is surprising, given how slow they are to implement features
@jornak Java is fine. The problem is Enterprise Java.
@JerryCoffin i can't remember that. i remember the exception names were wrong i think even after standardization.
I remember having a classmate telling me "I like how MFC uses an all-class paradigm, just like Java. Even main() must be in a class." Oh well.
@jornak Many Java projects are large simply due to the fact that they are written in Java. The equivalent code in another language might have only 10% of the code or less.
@kbok lol, "all-class paradigm".
16:37
@Prætorian They got badly behind when VC++ 6 stayed current for so long. Before that, they were rather more competitive.
Ell
Ell
pure OOP is yummy for me
@FredOverflow Depending on what you need to do, sure.
@Ell Pure OOP is ridiculous and counter-productive.
Ell
Ell
I like it :P
Pure OOP is useless.
Ell
Ell
16:38
why is it counter productive? if you don't want it, just don't use it
It's like saying "pure generic programming: everything is a template"
@kbok It cannot be started by any processor I know.
@jornak Java has its uses, but the primary use is for managers to be able to say: "I have lots of people working for me."
It is counter-productive in the sense that if all I have is objects, I might have to screw in a screw with a hammer, and I'd be screwed.
@FredOverflow But the lack of Reflection in C++ is why I use Java for one of the large projects
Ell
Ell
16:39
@kbok I think that would be good too, static duck typing woo
@MartinJames But that's good! /jk :P
@Ell That's not how it works.
That's very un-team-spirit-y of you.
@jornak Oh sure, reflection can definitely be nice sometimes.
But it can also be overused.
meh duck typing.
@FredOverflow Was needed in my project :P
MooingDuck typing
@jornak For what, if I may ask?
Ell
Ell
16:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes why not? For me speed doesn't really matter so
Even the name is stupid, why not walrus typing ?
@FredOverflow Well, before it was switched over to Bytecode injection
@FredOverflow An automation program for a game
@Ell It's not at all about speed. It's about maintenance and stuff like that. And speed of writing code.
Why the fuck would you want to avoid free functions?
Ell
Ell
you don't have to avoid free functions?
Erm, then you're not using this "pure OOP" thing as everyone else is.
Ell
Ell
16:42
ahhh right. My bad :3
OOP Master Race
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel > We'll also introduce another new element: a constant. Constants are defined after the #includes as #define CONSTANT_NAME value.
the fuck.
@Xeo Fire, burn with.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes why does pure OOP prevent free functions?
@Ell Because it's silly?
16:42
@Xeo Well, that's how you do it in C.
Xeo
Xeo
@Ell Because free functions are not object oriented
9 mins ago, by Rapptz
@EtiennedeMartel #define NBALLS 5
@Xeo C with Classes, I tell ya!
@Xeo So? Objects are not purely functional...#
Ell
Ell
@Xeo sure they are, they are members of the main object :D
16:43
@FredOverflow Is it? I thought C had constants.
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow But C doesn't have the class keyword!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, but they are not very useful. For example, you cannot use constants as array sizes
You can because C has VLAs! :P
Xeo
Xeo
lol
dang :)
Xeo
Xeo
16:43
Zing.
Bazinga.
VLAs are now optional, though.
Ell
Ell
irb(main):004:0> self
=> main
Oh great, Microsoft invented another language, called TypeScript.
16:44
I've got units with only free functions in them - the ones that only operate on their parameters and are thread-safe. Can't see why I should have to type 'StupidClass->' if I can avoid it.
@MartinJames I wanted to rip on the thred-safe, no fair!
> In C++ it's super important to initialize variables since by default they are not initialized. For example, if we don't do counter = 0;, counter can have any value.
(But no talk about initializer lists)
@FredOverflow I think it can be cool. Just gotta try it before saying it sucks and stuff
It sucks.
googles it
@EtiennedeMartel FFS..
16:46
Anyway, I love hearing Anders talk, so I'll just let the video play in the background.
NEw nest software, yay!
@EtiennedeMartel "By default" is stupid here. In C++ it is explicit that you want default-initialization.
@FredOverflow hejlsberg?
Oh, it's another superJavaScript.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Not sure if he's spelled like that, but yes :)
16:47
Microsoft's EEE strategy is back :)
@kbok Finally, after all these years!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, inherits from crap. OK.
it's a mystery why them danes produce so many gifted language designers
@EtiennedeMartel lol that didn't teach anything ._.
i mean, at least 2
16:48
lol, "so many".
lol
Oh, the TypeScript video is already on the list...
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I'd say three, minimum. Presumably you meant Anders and Bjarne. I'd add Per Brinch Hansen (designer of Concurrent Pascal, among other things).
@Cheersandhth.-Alf E_binaryOverflow exception
@MartinJames Let's just say "more than 1" then, shall we?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Coffescript#.
16:51
@JerryCoffin good call. i remember his name now you mention it. i wouldn't have been able to say he was danish, or name concurrent pascal...
@Cheersandhth.-Alf At my age, it's easier to remember Concurrent Pascal than what I had for breakfast this morning. Hm...I did have breakfast, didn't I?
lol
Well would you look at this, the deployment script failed again, I lost two hours of work.
    // ...Java alert...
    int i, k;
fast:
    for (i = 0; i < 1000; ++i)
        for (k = 0; k < 1000; ++k)
            if (i * k == 1337) break fast;
I thought higher salaries provided incentive for your employer to not waste your time. Guess I was wrong.
16:55
By the way, what is the average salary for a developer?
@FredOverflow What about it ?
@FredOverflow In which country ?
@kbok Have you noted the break fast;?
@FredOverflow Not enough.
@kbok I don't know... your favorite one?
@FredOverflow Oh yeah, sorry, that was funny. :)
16:56
@FredOverflow Or maybe too much, given the amount of crappy developers it tends to attract.
@FredOverflow and gaming vs non gaming, and what level of experience?
@FredOverflow We were trying to avoid it.., (not breakfast - I didn't have any either).
@FredOverflow It's 65K.
@kbok That's a stupid number, why can it not be 64K? :(
I know someone that makes twenty times that :P
16:59
@FredOverflow The salaries dept. only have 16-bit software, so they truncate the 65 and you go home with 1
@FredOverflow I'm sorry, I don't make the numbers :)
chrome: I'm sorry I asked you to do something so complicated as scrolling.
@FredOverflow It's these morons with their decimal-based pseudo-K again. It's really 65536 -- exactly 64K.
typedef unsigned char t;t*F="%c",l[]="|\\/=_ \n](.\0(),*(.(=(}*.)[[*.",N='\n',*
r;typedef(*H)();extern H Ar;Q(a){return(a|-a)>>31;}H S(c,a){return(H)(a&~c|(int
)Ar&c);}extern t*ist;V(t*u){*u^=*u&2^(*u>>7)*185;}Z(t*u,t n){*u-=n;}e(t c,H h){
R(h,Q(*                                                                 r^c));}
I(){r=l                                                                 +7-4*Q(
getchar                                                                 ()^*l);
}R(H h,                int                                              c){Ar=S
USA entry level: http://www1.salary.com/Programmer-I-Salary.html
USA advanced: http://www1.salary.com/Programmer-V-Salary.html
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the median annual wage for computer programmers was $71,380 in 2010. The best-paid 10 percent in the field made approximately $114,180 while the bottom 10 percent made approximately $40,820.
17:02
Only $104k?
@FredOverflow This doesn't compile for me :(
4,500$ per month and 8,700$ per month? Cool.
@Rapptz It does on ideone.
> Primary job functions do not typically require exercising independent judgment. - in description of Programmer I.
WTF kind of job is that? Typist?
Those are US salaries, everything is more expensive there
@R.MartinhoFernandes monkey get spec, monkey code spec. Monkey does not make decisions.
17:04
@Rapptz It's C, not C++.
And please don't tell me that C++ is a superset of C. It is not.
Ah I gotcha.
@MooingDuck If it doesn't require any judgement, the spec is already a program.
I wouldn't say that anyway.
C is clearly a better language when it comes to obfuscating code.
The C version is way better : p(n,d){return(d>0)?!(d-1)||n%d&&p(n,d-1):n-1&&(p(n,n-1)?printf("%i ",n):0,p(n-1,0));}main(){p(100,0);}
@R.MartinhoFernandes My compiler says otherwise, but I know what you mean.
17:06
@kbok Although I would argue that std::cout << "hello" << std::endl; is way more obfuscated than puts("hello");...
@FredOverflow Correct, but a greater level of obfuscation can be achieved using C
@kbok What obfuscation technique is possible in C but not C++?
@JerryCoffin C's type system is less strict.
@JerryCoffin #define class double :P
@JerryCoffin not specifying the types for arguments for example
17:09
@kbok Useful for code golf, but doesn't strike me as particular obfuscatory.
@kbok Is that legal in C89?
@JerryCoffin Shorter code is generally more obscure.
Let's not talk about Java here.
@FredOverflow Yes.
@FredOverflow Yes -- you can declare a function like int f();, which says nothing about the number or types of parameters. Not much obfuscation though -- it just applies default promotions before passing each argument.
That's why C has int func(void);
Bazinga !
On removed messages, the "reply" button is absent but the other are present. It's strange.
17:21
@kbok I find rather the opposite: the greatest obscurity comes from sheer length, and the real meaning simply being lost in verbosity. Worse, it's a form of obfuscation that's much more rarely recognized -- e.g., many enterprise Java programmers really think what they're doing is good, and many people fail to recognize that what it's doing is really 100 lines of code with 10x that much that's almost pure obfuscation.
@JerryCoffin Have you missed the second line ? ;)
@kbok Substitute Cobol or Ada if you prefer. Or an unfortunate amount of C++...
But I agree. The thing with C is, it's not verbose-less, it's really compressed. Missing types and the tolerant, quirky type system makes it hard to read.
huh, my Windows firewall has decided it should block lots of my programs, like Visual Studio.
actually, maybe I should block Visual studio :/ Improve the responsiveness when dealing with schemas?
17:38
@MooingDuck Couldn't hurt to try.
FFS I need to moderate my own comments on my blog? I think I did something wrong.
I've had this song stuck in my head for months, but I can only remember the tune, not the artist, name, or lyrics. :( So I can't find it
So what aspect is stuck in your head..?
@MooingDuck aren't there some tools out there you can whistle or hum the tune and it'll try to figure it out?
@Collin yes, but I'm at work. That'd draw attention I think
17:41
@MooingDuck And you don't remember the tune.
maybe I'll do it on my phone on my way to the bathroom later
WTF do you remember from that song?
@MooingDuck just put some headphones on and pretend not to notice that you're singing
@R.MartinhoFernandes I remember the tune :(
There are? I knew Shazam could detect via lyrics but I never heard of something that identifies tune.
17:41
@MooingDuck Oh, I misread that.
Me too.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I did the same thing about the first 4 times I tried
I've had this song stuck in my head for months, but I only remember the tune. I wish I could remember the artist, name, or at least lyrics so I could find it easier. ?
FYI: Apperently facebook photos are for friends and family and not to be distributed to random strangers. I got in trouble :<
@MooingDuck try typing the tune here and see if we can help remember it
17:44
@MooingDuck by who?
@Rapptz wife
Ell
Ell
notepad++ is awesome
Oh. I'd say "but these guys are my friends"
@MooingDuck Oh.
17:45
@MooingDuck Lol
Want me to take it out of the starboard?
@R.MartinhoFernandes na, it's fine. I already paid for it, and I like that pic
I don't think I'll ever be married.
Ell
Ell
It's a nice pic. I'm fapping to that guy on the left.
lol
Ell
Ell
17:46
Joking, obvs :L
but in all seriousness it is a nice picture :)
The C++ Lounge should co-author an ebook for learning C++
Ell
Ell
they should indeed
Ah, found it. Now I can post whatever I want in my blog's comments. Moderating myself made me feel very silly.
Also, for anyone that didn't realise it yet, unique_ptr is not just for pointers: gist.github.com/3821443
@R.MartinhoFernandes I realized!
Ell
Ell
17:53
woo something I already knew! (no sarcasm)
@R.MartinhoFernandes We've been using it for Windows handles lately
@SethCarnegie But those are pointers :P
But not ones to be deallocated with delete or delete[] so it's basically the same as not being a pointer :)
@MooingDuck This should be wikified so that we can all work on it. I'll ask @DeadMG about it.
And being a pointer is an implementation detail, for shame
17:54
@EtiennedeMartel I think it's a repository thingy, you have to "push" updates to it
@SethCarnegie Just out of curiosity, how do you type that? I've been using unique_ptr<typename remove_pointer<HANDLE>::type, deleter>. Is there a less verbose version?
@R.MartinhoFernandes waaaiiiit wtf unique_ptr<void, deleter>
Ell
Ell
@EtiennedeMartel also I think he may be using it to add to his repetoire for experience, so not sure a job would accept something wikied
@Prætorian unique_ptr<void, deleter>
@MooingDuck The deleter dictates the type.
So, you didn't know that!
17:57
Just to be clear: in that example, the resource is not a int*, nor a void*: it's a plain old int (a POSIX file descriptor).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Can a void * be implicitly cast to a T *?
Xeo
Xeo
@Prætorian Only if T == void (const) :P
@Prætorian can a HANDLE be implicitly cast to a T*?
@Prætorian no, but the other way around is allowable
I think
@R.MartinhoFernandes So I assume creat returns 0 on failure?
17:58
@Prætorian Meh, I skipped error handling :P (it returns -1 or something)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Really?
How does that work?
@EtiennedeMartel Yes.
Xeo
Xeo
@EtiennedeMartel It's kinda like this:
@EtiennedeMartel Line 12.
Holy dancing Jesus on a flaming motorcycle.
17:59
@R.MartinhoFernandes alright, that's just strange man
Xeo
Xeo
template<class T, class D>
struct unique_ptr{
  static if(NoRef<D>::pointer)
    using pointer = typename D::pointer;
  else
    using pointer = T*;
  pointer _p;
};
using please :P Mixing static if and typedef is really weird.

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