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05:00
Because you may be dealing with overloaded callables and so you need to be explicit in picking the arguments to avoid mistakes.
Wait, now I'm not sure that's a problem.
Oh, yes, it is.
And since there's no way to tell if a callable is overloaded, you pay for it every time.
Oh, Unicode 6.2 was released two weeks ago.
I need to get the updated UCD.
Am I the only who doesn't get it?
I don't get it either. But it's funny.
What's there to get?
It's from the saying "Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus"
So men use classes, women use structs.
05:14
ah...
Having a slight preference for structs, I guess that makes me a woman. Now, where are my boobs?
Yeah, no... I'm pretty sure women don't think about classes vs. structs that often.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ((.).(.))
Third nipple?
valid Haskell
@R.MartinhoFernandes Same here. I write mostly C - which doesn't have classes. So I'm forced to be a woman by that.
05:15
Seems the gang that I usually syphon design advice for ogonek is not around right now, is it? Penguin is not around, puppy went to sleep, ...
@Mysticial I guess C is for pussies.
@Mysticial #define class struct, problem solved!
lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
@FredOverflow Hmmm... that makes me wonder.
@FredOverflow Around #ifndef __cplusplus, please.
No, wait, not even then.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You mean inside, right? :)
05:16
Would any C++ program compile with #define class struct?
It just fucks up everything.
@Mysticial UB, you are not allowed to #define keywords.
@FredOverflow aside from that. I doubt any implementation actually does more than just text-replacement.
@Mysticial Most of mine will.
So assuming it actually does just textually replace class with struct. Would any C++ program still compile?
05:17
But most of @Xeo's won't.
He uses template <class Foo> ..., I use template <typename Foo> ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes How would it break?
oh
it won't work with template <struct Foo>?
I use typename too.
@Mysticial Nope. Go figure.
There's also template <template <typename> class Foo> in which there's no alternative but using class (it's the only situation where the class keyword is the only choice).
@R.MartinhoFernandes wtf...
I've also seen #define private public.
@Mysticial Yeah, let's just say it's messy...
05:21
Does that compile with every C++ program?
That I think so.
Those two have no other meaning anywhere.
And they'd all run correctly too.
@R.MartinhoFernandes no?
Why would you troll yourself if they're all private by default for classes
05:23
@Mysticial Lemme think a bit. I know it will change the PODness status of some classes, but I'm not sure if that would have any harmful effects.
@R.MartinhoFernandes woah... I didn't know that. example?
class foo {
public:
    int x;
private:
    int y;
};
Not POD, but becomes POD if you change private to public.
But I don't see how that would wreak havoc.
I would've thought it was POD in both cases.
Oh you edited it. It said #define public private
Nah, must have all data members with same access.
05:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes I didn't know that...
In C++03 they must be all public. In C++11 they can be all private or all protected (WTF, why would a POD have protected fields).
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
You could inherit from a POD.
oh earlybirds
i nead koffee
People have weird uses for weird crap.
05:30
@Mysticial You could, but why would you? What's the point of a base class with nothing virtual (actually, there can be a little use, but it's pretty rare and mostly for private inheritance anyway).
I'm digging this Core i7. Photoshop processing is noticeably faster than the old Core 2 Quad Core.
let's say i want a function foo( T* ) in Windows that returns a pointer to a dynamically created function that calls some given member function on specified object, how to do that bestest in modern Windows
@JerryCoffin I think the important question is why are the fields of a POD visible to the derived but not to the world, especially when you have private inheritance?
i'm not talking about using some static registry object or such, just dynamically created trampoline function
@Chimera You should see how well it tears (or fails) at Pi. :)
05:35
@Mysticial Yeah, I should download your program and see what happens.
@R.MartinhoFernandes With private inheritance, the access you specify in the base is irrelevant -- it all becomes private in the derived anyway.
Why would mixing public and private make something not POD?
Xeo
Xeo
It wouldn't, since POD says you can only have 1 base with data and then have to be empty yourself, IIRC
@Mysticial Because that's a requirement in the standard.
05:36
@JerryCoffin That aside, I was wondering if there was a technical reason behind it.
Xeo
Xeo
And robot, I write my templates as template<class T>, no space between template and < :)
@Mysticial I suppose that it is either an oversight, or some existing compiler was doing the nasties with that. Probably the first; I can't think of a reason a compiler could take advantage of that.
Anyway, am I right in asserting that no one that is up is familiar with the Unicode normalization algorithms?
@Mysticial Where there's an intervening access specifier, the standard allows the compiler to rearrange fields, which wouldn't fit with the general idea of a POD. In the end, it's intended primarily for C headers being used in C++ (which obviously have no access specifiers anyway).
I've been wondering if I can get them to work #1 in a lazy manner (aka online); and (separately) #2 in-place.
@JerryCoffin Ah... that makes sense. Although I don't see how re-ordering will block it from POD if it's done consistently.
05:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes Can't really be done in place, at least for most definitions of in-place (some of them expand the string).
@Mysticial It's intended to allow compatibility with C, which doesn't allow reordering under any circumstances.
I was afraid you would say that.
I'm also wondering if it's beneficial to carry around the normalization form at compile-time in a template parameter, and enforce it.
Maybe a normalized_text class?
@R.MartinhoFernandes You mean a string templatized on its normalization? If so, I'd say probably not, unless you want to force the same normalization before (for example) concatenating two strings. That might be handy at times, but at a guess could become bothersome at times.
@JerryCoffin So text r = normalize(nfd, concat(a, b)); instead of text<nfd> r = concat(a, b);?
Hmm, yeah, explicit normalization sounds better.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The problem I see arising is something like text<nfd> a; text<nfc> b; c = a + b; Do you force the user to re-normalize a or b before concatenating, even though they might never use it for a purpose where normalization matters?
It's only interesting to normalize after a series of operations; intermediate results don't really need to be normalized. Yeah, this avoids redundant operations.
05:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes More specifically, in a lot of cases the only time you care is when you're going to do some sort of string comparison. As such, I'd consider just passing the normalization to use as a parameter to the comparison.
Yeah, that's why I wanted to be able to do normalization online, which I think I can (I mean, it sounds like it will be painful to implement, but feasible).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not to be (too) sarcastic, but did you honestly hold out any hope for normalization not being painful?
I just need to implement lazy composition and decomposition, and then chain them. Sounds simple.
@JerryCoffin Nope. :S
Oh, and that will produce ginormous iterators. I suspect some may get close to 100 bytes...
@R.MartinhoFernandes What manner of laziness are you thinking here? Expression templates?
@JerryCoffin I'm thinking of iterators that normalize as you go (i.e. without previously storing the normalized results).
I'm not using expression templates anywhere (I'm going to use variadic concat instead of op+).
So you can write a comparison as auto na = normalize(form, a); auto nb = normalize(form, b); return std::equal(na.begin(), na.end(), nb.begin()); using O(1) space.
05:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes: In case you are interested: ideone.com/bCNcj
@R.MartinhoFernandes So that's why you were thinking of online (and preferably in-place) normalization. If you're going to do that, then the normalization really becomes (or at least could be) a policy template for the iterator itself (not sure that's any real revelation -- just thinking out loud).
@R.MartinhoFernandes: creates a std::function from a member pointer and an object
@VaughnCato Oh, thanks. I was planning to put something like that in my Swiss Army Knife library.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Yeah, seems like a generally useful thing
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I still haven't decided if I should pass the normalization form as a template argument or as a runtime argument. But I'm leaning for template; I don't see much value in the ability to pick a normalization at runtime.
And in any case, if you really want that, you can always type erase it.
06:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah -- at least offhand I don't see a lot of advantage there. The normalization you want mostly depends on the circumstances, not something like run-time data.
I finally lost my tag badge... :(
I've been making many of the decisions by doing what amounts to not making the decisions, and I'll take the same approach here. One option enables both options; the other doesn't. So I pick the versatile one.
That's also why I'm making most things lazy: you can force eager evaluation out of it, but you can't make lazy evaluation out of eager.
qox
qox
06:37
Hi.
Hey
I need an async timer that will call a callback at given interval
is there any in chrono ? or in asio ?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes You can't? Wouldn't a simple lazy wrapper suffice?
@Xeo Of a range?
Xeo
Xeo
some_range | boost::adaptor::transformed(some_func) creates a simple lazy wrapper, for example.
@Xeo Right, but if you're given an eager transformed you can't make a lazy one.
Xeo
Xeo
06:43
Well, you can just use another one. I see were you're coming from, though. It's easier to force eager evaluation out of a lazy one than the other way around
Although this totally depends on the way the result is provided. If transformed was eager, you'd need to exchange it. However, by going lower and using a range of eager transform_iterators, you could easily go to lazy evaluation.
nvm, iterators can't really be eager, can they?
I guess it's time for me to sleep.
@Xeo What do you mean "just use another one?" Write it yourself?
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah. And that's where I noticed that when going lazy -> eager, you can reuse the lazy function. The other way around, you can't.
Xeo
Xeo
1 min ago, by Xeo
I guess it's time for me to sleep.
Making eager out of lazy is as simple as dropping the range into a vector.
Xeo
Xeo
06:47
With that, good night.
Oh well, have fun.
Xeo
Xeo
Or... day.
i can't help the feeling that something entirely trivial has now been discussed with wording that makes it seem advanced
anyway, how about windows trampoline functions (a little bit of assembly required): is there any especially good/bad way
07:07
@Rapptz Um... Your answer is actually wrong.
I suggest fix or delete before it gets downvoted.
Sure. It's typically the result of me trying to dumb things down. It doesn't work too often.
sbi
sbi
@sehe I hope you weren't referring to me as "aps" in an attempt to avoid my scrutiny. Because if so, then that failed.
@FredOverflow Yeah! Here! What?!
@Chimera No. Why?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, you never fuck alone. That's a fact, right? (Well, some just never fuck, but that...)
oh fail
@sbi fucking alone is called masturbation.
@sbi Did I. Well, I can assure you the irreverence was entirely uninentional :)
@TonyTheLion A highly technically incorrect term for that. manus/turbare
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Part of my job negotiations. (I work four days/week — also part of those.) OTOH, I do relinquish wealth for that. (I have to admit, though, that I do not get paid badly, even though I'm only working 30hrs/week and I'm away for 7 weeks. But that comes from negotiating with more than a decade of experience to back you up.)
Also: I heard from a guy (he's from Belgium, BTW, so go, figure) working for MS at Redmond who has a lots of vacation, too. So if you north Americans would just strife for it, you would have this, too.
07:18
@sehe oh who cares about technical. :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes what would be the benefit of v | eager::transformed above boost::sort(v, v2.begin()) (essentially*)?
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Can "masturbation" be referred to as "fucking" in English? If so, the English completely fail at understanding the procedure.
OP here wants some help deleting his question:
-4
Q: Assignment first or increment first in i = i++

Rohit Jain Possible Duplicate: What is x after “x = x++”? Recently I came across a strange situation.. I have a code: - public static void main(String[] args) { int i = 0; i = i++; System.out.println(i); } Now, if i++ is a post increment, then why the value is not ...

sbi
sbi
@sehe So you say.
@R.MartinhoFernandes (* i.e. not the minor inconvenience of using an output iterator for the output range)
sbi
sbi
07:20
@Mysticial Hey, I got up late! What are you still doing here?! Hop off to bed, boy!
@sbi I do
@sbi Hehe... studying for my qual exam.
sbi
sbi
@Mysticial Yeah, right.
What do you guys say about this comment (referring to my overloading FAQ)?
@Mysticial i don't understand the downvote. i think this changed in c++11, with the assignment sequenced after. anyway it's quite subtle.
sbi
sbi
Anyway, I meant to be at work at this time. Instead I am sitting at a computer typing silly chat messages. Sigh.
After a great weekend, it's now time to head for my second week at my new job. Hooray for another flood of new information drowning me!
07:23
@sbi Well 'STL' is right:
> It's bizarre for a modifiable container's op[] to return an lvalue, but a const container's op[] to return an rvalue. There is nothing to be gained by such a practice except complexity and confusion.
oh i do understand the downvote. so readers. i'm dumb, need more coffee
sbi
sbi
@sehe Yeah, I immediately understood his argument. Lemme chew on this on my way to work.
@sbi You know what, you and me, let's both go into the office. Let's see who gets there first?
sbi
sbi
@sehe You will. I'm still in my pyjama, haven't eaten anything, it will take me an hour from door to door, and I need to make a detour today...
Off.
okay i now noticed that it's a java question (talk about being sloooow), and delete-voted. it still needs 1 more delete vote.
@sehe might help a compiler with bad optimizer
07:36
@Cheersandhth.-Alf huh. a reference does different things (esp. over time, but in a concurrent environment, immediately)
@sehe well returning reference to const, or rvalue, in both cases the intent is to provide an immutable value to the caller.
stop me now
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I suggest you do the stopping, if necessary
there is no such thing as "returning an rvalue"
an rvalue is an expression
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Okay, returning a temporary by value then (and no 'wrestling out' with 'returning a temporary reference variable by value :))
But, they do different things. The standard doesn't specify the intent (only), it specifies the signature as well...
yeah. it's a bit subtle, yet another case where it's different for POD and non-POD
even though one might expect RVO to kick in
hm, i not familiar with reddit. is "stl" our stl over at microsoft?
oh he is
well even andrei has been visiting reddit, but really, i don't see the attraction
07:48
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Me neither
I just got semi-serially upvoted in the last 15 min. It's interesting cause the timestamps give away how long it took for the person to read each of my posts.
Aug 24 at 6:57, by sehe
Tthat, and the titles are usually so exceptionally bad or unreadable (math.se) that it is impossible to judge from just the title and you end up clicking links just to verify. If there is one thing that I don't like, it is chasing links. That makes me rather immune to reddit/tvtropes/whatnot
@Mysticial Well, if the upvoter actually read them, there is a good argument to not call it serial. It's more like "newly discovered fan"?
hence the "semi"-serial
The upvoter skipped the loop question though - good evidence that it's too hard to understand. One of these days I should probably go and revamp that answer to make it more reader friendly. It's littered with edits and old habits from my earlier days.
@sehe You're broken.
You should see a doctor.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, I'm fine. I'm happy to be broken. Perhaps that's the only thing keeping me from starving on the internet :)
8 hours ago, by sehe
@Xeo I get unhealthy kicks out of finding things with search engines. Maybe I should consider treatment.

Deja-Vu

9 hours ago, 7 minutes total – 20 messages, 6 users, 0 stars

Bookmarked 10 secs ago by sehe

07:56
Woah, someone immune to links.
How do you do it?
I click everything that gets posted here.
qox
qox
@Rapptz GOAT SEX
I also hover over.
Me too :0
that's why you use link shorteners
07:58
@TonyTheLion I'm not immune to links in general. I'm immune to sites that hinge on the concept that users have nothing better to do keep clicking links in order to experience the site
@sehe oh. Well, that says a lot of the quality of my life then. :(
I tend to avoid certain links on reddit fairly easily.
@TonyTheLion Oops. That came out wrong
@sehe Don't worry. I knew that already anyways.
lol
There I made it reflect the message better :)
08:00
:)
Is it me, or is today a shitty day?
user image
4
@TonyTheLion Related ^
morning
@R.MartinhoFernandes so shitty day well expressed :)
When you thought a shitty day couldn't get shittier...
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'cause, What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Can I unpin that message from JamesMcNellis?
It annoys me
08:02
@TonyTheLion No.
Thanks :)
I vowed to get something done today
Like facebook posts, I tend to ignore facebook posts.
But then again, I do that everyday. :/
FB sucks.
Jul 19 at 0:52, by sehe
@TonyTheLion I did. As an experiment. I think about a month ago now. I spent 3 hrs one night, and probably 1 hr the other. I like youtube better for total brain numbing. But I don't like youtube that much
^ So, not completely immune. Just ... lazy, I guess :)
08:06
Donno
@ThePhD You're doing it wrong. You didn't provide a this value to be the argument.
I never go on that subreddit
Is healthcare that spammy?
or if the first argument is supposed to be this then use lambda or bind.
@Rapptz You're a moderator?
08:07
@TonyTheLion I know, it just feels weird that a subreddit with only 600 readers gets that much spam.
@Mysticial Yes.
std::function<void (const DisplayDevice&, DisplayModeCollection&, DisplayMode& )> best = [](const DisplayDevice& self, DispayModeCollection& arg1, DisplayMode& arg2) { self->SelectBest(arg1, arg2); }
@Rapptz woah...
huh I don't moderate too many subreddits. Only like 3 have over a couple readers.
@DeadMG ugly syntax redefined
@Rapptz meh
08:12
@sehe bind or it's derivatives would be neater
the point is, the problem is nothing to do with std::function and everything to do with PMFs
@DeadMG ?
Revel in the magic of INVOKE.
o rly? that never worked for me (and obvs not for ThePHD either)
maybe it's a VS QoI thing
Maybe you're not using C++11.
or maybe you just suck? :P
08:17
shut up
I got a loadbearing wall coming down next to my head
@DeadMG What?
Is your house under attack?
probably
Aliens.
nah, building an extension to one of our rooms
build all the extensions
08:21
but as you can iamgine, from the perspective of "I'd really like to sleep now", there's not much difference
oh
I hate being woken up
Hey, if you mean Java is not "real programming", following texts are for you; else please ignore. That shows you are familiar only with one language or you don't know what you are talking about. If Java wasn't there, No one will have Eclipse, Android, TomCat, NASA World Wind, MineCraft, may be even Apache. And, opensource would have died a long time back, mobile will not have a major development and platform independence will be a dream. So, before underestimate anything, it is better to think twice, specially when it is in PUBLIC :) :D — Sepala 4 hours ago
hahahahhahahhahhaha
That comment is just epic.
Apache?
No, I am not new to programming. In Java we don't put as "Vector<int>" etc. Since it can handle anything, we put "Vector v ". You can see the conclusion — Sepala 12 hours ago
Oh god, he likes the broken generics in Java.
Fire.
Kill it with it.
Yeah, and he claims he don't need books for C++, because he knows Java.
But that "praise the Lo^H^HJava" comment is awesome :D
Oh and terrible question to boot.
I'm going to write an article titled "C++ for Java programmers".
The contents will be simply "C++ is not like Java. Don't pretend C++ is like Java, and grab a good C++ book like everyone else."
08:27
'and start from scratch'
Hmm, he says in his profile that he automatically upvotes any question with a downvote.
:(
I'mma go back to bed for a little while
And he says I should think twice before writing something in public? rofl
I found out due to a loss of a file that the disk on one of our servers is corrupt
08:38
@DeadMG Have fun.
Problem was amplified when I found out that it was one of many virtual machines on our central hosting computer
Now it seems I'm having an argument with our systems administrator over the fact that "disk corruption" is not part of a virtual machine simulation..
2
Like disk corruption is actually something you'd desire to have simulated
For some kind of testing, yes, you would. But in a controlled fashion.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I guess that counters that cat's downvoting of any question that he gets linked to
@DeadMG fap fap fap
@R.MartinhoFernandes but that is a serious edge case
08:48
guys I am trying to write code for Matrix Product of N x N matrices measures the time to perform the product...Does anyone know how I can actually measure the time?
I am doing this in C
help a brother out
@kbok how do I use that???
@BicB Google may be of help. dreamincode.net/forums/topic/…
13
Q: Energy in bolognese reduction - lid on or off?

SarahGenerally, to let my bolognese thicken, I leave the lid off in order to "let water vapor escape." I am however distracted from enjoying the taste because I'm having doubts that my physical reasoning is sound. Given a constant power output from my stove, it seems a given that having the lid on to...

@kbok oh lord! I had never thought so hard about this
08:57
@thecoshman I'm still not thinking hard about this. But I thought the into was nice :D

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