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17:00
@TonyTheLion But their job is a lot more hazardous.
@FredOverflow He'd fare even worse with that
@R.MartinhoFernandes true. We can't burn ourselves, or can we?
@TonyTheLion Not without an application of extreme stupidity.
We can only shoot ourselves
@StackedCrooked Where's that from ?
17:01
hmmm
to commit 1MB of data to my repository...?
stringstream sorely needs a way to extract the buffer.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Actually, it's an x86 device with 0.5GB of RAM, 0.5GB of Non-volatile RAM, 4GB of flash RAM. But running half a dozen user tasks (something between an process and a thread) can bring it down to its knees.
@kbok It's a comment on the article I posted before.
Copying the buffer when you're going to discard the stream is annoying.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow What advantage would it bring in this scenario?
17:02
cool view
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes What do you mean?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Obviously, rvalue stringstream's str() should give the std::string the buffer.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah, that. Yeah. The code I have now was supposed to achieve that, as the buffer is mine.
@DeadMG No rvalue refs on this platform.
@sbi Owch.
17:06
@DeadMG str().swap(extracted);?
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG You guys are spoiled. The last time I did C++, C++03 was all the rage. I am happy enough to keep using it.
@sbi my job still uses C++03 and I'm going nuts :(
Is C++11 the rage ?
I find I'm returning strings and vectors by value everywhere now.
You should do that in C++03 already.
sbi
sbi
17:08
@MooingDuck A year or two ago, they were using GCC 2.95 here. It's GCC 4.1.2 now. Good enough for me now.
@kbok "better" code, but slower
@DeadMG It doesn't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, I'd assumed it would
@MooingDuck NRVO kicks in, in this case. There's no performance degradation.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Then what would happen to it when you keep the string around and write into the stream?
@kbok NRVO is a tricky thing, though, and easily tripped.
17:09
@MooingDuck It's not overloaded (this is exactly what ref-quals are for, but they were not used).
@sbi Is it ? I had the feeling that the rules were pretty simple.
@kbok oh yeah. good
Maybe I should make a proposal out of this.
@sbi why would that be a problem?
Move semantics existed before move semantics existed :)
17:12
std::string stringify_it(T const& foo, U const& bar, V const& qux) {
    std::stringstream ss {};
    ss << foo << bar << qux;
    return std::move(ss).str(); // would not copy if str() was overloaded as str() const& and str() &&
}
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Oh, you mean the buffer gets moved into the string and the stream acquires a new one?
every Sunday ^
Damn. Friendly SO crowd. Everyone is too lazy to type a proper answer, but if I type a short and helpful answer, linking to a longer answer, I get downvotes. Go figure ? — sehe 11 secs ago
^ angry
17:15
@TonyTheLion Every Sunday the buffer gets moved into the string?
user1182183
@TonyTheLion ... ;x
sbi
sbi
@kbok I don't know. Maybe that's just my gut feeling left over from the early 90s, but I remember lots of discussions why or why not this would kick in with specific code.
@StackedCrooked basically. Yes. :)
@TonyTheLion You horny bastard.
@sbi yeah
17:16
@StackedCrooked That was a funny comment :) :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I said "should", not "does" :P
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck That would be better, yeah.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The problem with that, though, is allocators.
sbi
sbi
Still what I'd really like to have is begin()/end() for string streams that let me access the bytes in the buffer and copy them off.
you can't give any random string the buffer
17:18
@sbi I have read a modern article about that, so it's possible that the rules have been flattened since.
it would have to be only std::string
@sbi I just read the word "heap fragmentation". A moving Garbage Collector does not suffer from heap fragmentation.
@DeadMG It would have to be a std::basic_string with the same traits and allocator as the std::basic_stringbuf.
sbi
sbi
@kbok Oh wait. Maybe I am confusing NRVO and RVO? Wasn't there a difference? I always was hazy on this.
17:18
Doesn't sound like an issue to me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yep.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Hey, this is an embedded device. I have a 20msec cycle to do my work in.
@sbi There's a difference, but it's pretty small. Basically, NRVO is when you return an lvalue, RVO when you return an rvalue.
@DeadMG And how is that a problem?
@sbi I wasn't even aware of that :)
17:19
Sounds perfectly sane to me.
@sbi It's the same basic concept.
sbi
sbi
Then there definitely were problems with that. But maybe compilers became better since.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because, as shown, you could in fact give any old buffer to std::stringstream right now. Then the std::string would try to delete it according to it's allocator.
@R.MartinhoFernandes he didn't say it was a problem, merely observation AFACT.
@JerryCoffin But return only has one side? lol, just kidding ;)
17:20
3 mins ago, by DeadMG
@R.MartinhoFernandes The problem with that, though, is allocators.
@DeadMG Not an issue: this would be implemented at the basic_stringbuf level anyway, and that uses an allocator.
@sbi Given only half a meg of RAM, GC cycles would be pretty quick. Real-time GC is possible (but non-trivial). The big problem is that to maintain speed, GC tends to need quite a bit more heap space. I've seen tests with Java showing about 7:1 more memory...
If you replace this with your own buffer, nothing gets moved unless you write your buffer that way (and then die in a fire).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't really see how that could possibly solve the problem.
I see
17:22
@DeadMG I don't see a problem!
so basically, it would get moved if you didn't replace the buffer
Right, which is the most common scenario.
@JerryCoffin Are you telling I am basically back to 1GB of RAM? :(
sbi
sbi
Well, lemme check whether what @MooingDuck found will do... Off.
@sbi 20 milliseconds? That's an eternity!
17:23
my home page has no content
Did you buy that other domain?
@DeadMG neither has your soul
I filled my about page with a link to my SO profile and bitbucket repo and a picture of the puppy
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yep.
but I didn't set it up to go anywhere right now
this question has a lot of deleted answers :/
@FredOverflow Pretty much, yeah.
17:26
Well, it's a good thing I'm freshening up my C skills then. malloc ftw!
@FredOverflow malloc ftl. FTFY.
The stake. Burn him at it.
sbi
sbi
My program still wrecks the box. :(
@StackedCrooked Not if writing to a non-volatile RAM file takes about 200msecs. and you want to log to there.
what exactly is the problem you're having, @sbi?
@DeadMG stringstream is slow, suspected fragmentation.
sbi
sbi
17:32
Yeah. Thanks, duck. Tsk. Really. The puppy has an attention span like the common mosquito.
IIRC, the primary speed issues with std::stringstream have little to do with memory
@MooingDuck Not just slow -- slowing progressively over time.
more to do with all those redundant virtual calls, and the ridiculous localization malarky they have going on.
45 mins ago, by sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes The issue is that this must be doing something wrong, as it wrecks the machine within minutes.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG That doesn't increase every few minutes. There aren't going to be any new virtual functions.
17:33
fuck stringstream, go back to fprintf or something
I see what you mean
define wrecks/
35 mins ago, by sbi
@DeadMG Look, I have this test app that does nothing else but log a few messages each cycle. We're talking 20msecs/per cycle here, and this starts out with eating <20% CPU, goes up to 40% after a while, and ends up eating the damn machine. I would never even consider switching to static buffers if I had any idea what else could cause this.
huh
profile data?
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG I have to reboot. Sometimes by pulling t he power plug.
40 mins ago, by sbi
@TonyTheLion I don't. Logging is the only way to get any information out of this damn box. If this fails, the whole device might just as well... Oh. Damn. You got me there. Sigh.
sbi
sbi
17:34
@DeadMG Haha, very funny.
@TonyTheLion And how do you format anything not a primitive type?
@DeadMG I literally just have sbi's "recent" tab open btw
lol
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, then you have a problem :/
sbi
sbi
You know, @MooingDuck, just right now I could very well imagine working with you. Must be a pleasure to do so. :)
17:35
sorry, I've been more than a tad distracted over the last 20 mins or so and obviously forgotten everything
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion I do have that problem. Also, there's lots of code assuming you could string stuff to log together by putting << between it.
@sbi you'd be surprised. I can never recall what I'm doing either, and I keep lots of files of notes, none of which are complete. :(
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG There you go again. You meant "the last 20 years", Shirley?
17:36
nah
DeadMG secretly likes it when you call him Shirley.
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion Yeah, something like LOG(wrgl << trgl << xrgl).
The organized mess that is called a programmers desk/computer
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked There was nothing secret about his reaction, was there?
He didn't seem to object.
@TonyTheLion In my case it's an unorganized mess.
17:38
what you'll have to do is manually insert some timing calls
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Yeah. In public.
@sbi so you're sure that the problem is your stringstream?
unless you've got a pretty trivial program, you're gonna need more data
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Yeah. And then log the results, right? Oh, wait.
if you don't have profile data, what makes you think that logging is the problem?
sbi
sbi
17:39
41 mins ago, by sbi
@DeadMG Look, I have this test app that does nothing else but log a few messages each cycle. We're talking 20msecs/per cycle here, and this starts out with eating <20% CPU, goes up to 40% after a while, and ends up eating the damn machine. I would never even consider switching to static buffers if I had any idea what else could cause this.
balls
I should just read that message in it's entirety for once
@sbi plenty of things that can cause CPU usage to increase.
but as none of us have seen the code you're dealing with, hard to tell. really.
@TonyTheLion I was going to join the Air Force straight out of high school. My bad back shot that plan down though.
@TonyTheLion I presume commenting out the logging caused the problem to go away, else he wouldn't be so sure.
you know
you actually could switch to C Standard I/O
depends on the exact interface your LOG macro offers
17:40
@MooingDuck ah right
sbi
sbi
@TonyTheLion In an app that is using a well-used framework and does nothing but logging?
I haven't paid that much attention
sbi
sbi
6 mins ago, by sbi
@TonyTheLion I do have that problem. Also, there's lots of code assuming you could string stuff to log together by putting << between it.
@Chimera oh
sbi
sbi
4 mins ago, by sbi
@TonyTheLion Yeah, something like LOG(wrgl << trgl << xrgl).
17:42
@sbi Fixable problem.
Maybe your logged inside your log.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Without logging, it would be an empty app.
@TonyTheLion Your photograph reminded me.... :-)
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked This would crash within the first cycle then.
17:43
How awesome would it be to fly a fighter jet a land on a carrier?
very awesome
insert op<< overloads for extra types as desired
No one is paying attention, I see.
Does anyone know what is good to program in C or C++? I don't want to do any graphics or games
2
Ape must be really grumpy having to constantly repeat himself.
17:44
C -> nothing.
sbi
sbi
@Chimera Very awesome. In fact, so awesome that it took me 10secs to find this. There's dozens of other on YT, though.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, my proposed alteration does match his posted LOG interface.
Xeo
Xeo
Just.. no. Did you not read the comments on the question? This is a bad idea and you should feel bad. — Xeo 2 mins ago
Party pooping as always, huh?
Xeo
Xeo
Some people don't like to read.
sbi
sbi
17:46
@Xeo Oh, we didn't know that around here. Everyone is reading everything in full, and nobody is distracted.
@sbi Accidents and tragedies happen in aviation. Whether your flying a civilian Cessna 2 seater or a military fighter jet.
sbi
sbi
@BrandonLing The last time I ran into this I recommended a logging library.
Sad though.
@sbi thank you so much i shall look into it :)
@BrandonLing Write a Unicode handling library. <joke>
Ell
Ell
17:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes hows yours hoing?
@sbi Curious- what do you get with literally an empty app?
@R.MartinhoFernandes that would suck to do
@Ell I'm going to tackle normalization now. I already have a minimally functional text class.
@DeadMG No bugs?
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes is text the same as a string?
17:48
@Ell unlikely, presumably has some unicode functions.
No, it's different by design.
sbi
sbi
@Chimera When you wreck a car, you might end up killing half a dozen people, if you're really unlucky. When you wreck something that's flying, you can easily end up killing dozens or hundreds of people. Just look at the Ramstein videos on YT, and follow the links to similar videos you will inevitably find there.
Avoiding something like string was a design goal.
@sbi Fortunately, aviation crashes are quite rare- much more so than car crashes, I believe.
sbi
sbi
8 mins ago, by sbi
@TonyTheLion In an app that is using a well-used framework and does nothing but logging?
17:49
@sbi Yes, many things are dangerous. What is the point you are trying to make?
avoiding string must be hard :P
@sbi I mean, cut the "but logging" part.
to be "An app that ... and does nothing."
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Then I end up with a well-used framework, that my cow-workers have been beating into shape for years. Modulo the logging, which I am tinkering with, of course...
@DeadMG You are correct @DeadMG. Aviation accidents happen FAR less than automobile accidents.
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes what does text do then?
17:51
@sbi All I'm saying is, you might have found some odd bug in their initialization code of a static object, or something like that.
@Ell This describes the goals gist.io/3166256
@Chimera There are far less airplanes.
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Think about it, boy! That's an app that does nothing but logging! Each one working here will have started with something like this!
so you're in the logging business?
@DeadMG Aviation crashes have substantially different characteristics than car crashes. Planes crash mostly at takeoff or landing, almost never mid-flight. A really short trip in a plane is more dangerous than traveling the same distance by car, but a longer trip in a plane in much safer than traveling the same distance by car.
@sbi And there's some subtle UB in their init code, and they just upgraded their compiler/OS/whatever and now it triggers.
17:52
sounds cough interesting cough
@JerryCoffin I think even short trips are safer
So I say, "How awesome would it be to land a fighter jet on a carrier" and the response is a video of a jet crashing into a carrier. Interesting.
sbi
sbi
@Chimera Around the age of twenty, for some time I had been maintaining helicopters. The pains we had to go through to prevent a crash were terrible. Every single piece of tooling was marked and signed, and you had to sign and count it when you took it for work, and count it and have it signed when you returned it. Whenever some 3inch screw driver got lost, we spent whole days walking across the airfield to find it, so it wouldn't end up in some engine. I would never want to go back doing that.
@MooingDuck At least according to the US FAA, they're not. If memory serves, the break-even point is something like 200 miles. Although that's a US agency, I believe they're basing it on world-wide numbers, not just the US.
r/shittyadvice is really not the place that you want to follow advice from, cause as the title suggests, it's shitty. But a good laugh.
sbi
sbi
17:55
@MooingDuck That depends on whether you count crashes or victims.
@Chimera Yes, we all want you dead.
@sbi Ugh, sounds very tedious. What type of helicopters did you work on?
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG Yeah, and all those who started out here before me, all starting out with an app that would do nothing but logging "Hello, world!", never hit that bug. What's wrong with you, puppy? Why are you wasting my time with this crap?
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's ok, I have life insurance for my wife.
17:57
@sbi But those were Russian pieces of crap, right?
sbi
sbi
@Chimera These. And, yes, it was tedious. Worse, though, was the constant pressure to never to make a mistake, because there's at least three guys in those things, and there might be a hundred people below them.
@Chimera Yeah, we know. She told us.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You have no idea.
@sbi Partly, because I really don't have anything else to go on, and partly, because I think it makes sense that a latent bug could be exposed by some recent change, and partly, because I think that running an empty application shouldn't really take you much time to check out.
sbi
sbi
@BrandonLing The last time someone said that, I pointed out this for inspiration. It puts performance over everything else.
18:01
@sbi sounds good, i'm looking at it right now thank you
@MooingDuck So far it's just a container of codepoints with configurable underlying storage and underlying encoding that you can iterate over. You can also iterate over grapheme clusters instead of codepoints.
Ell
Ell
grapheme cluster? o.O
sbi
sbi
Oh, this is interesting. I have now put the old string stream code back into place, and the thing still wreaks havoc. I guess I'll have to look over all my changes...
Oh, and it already upholds the validity invariant, which is, I think the bestest part.
@Ell Consider : this is made up of two codepoints U+0067 LATIN SMALL LETTER G and U+0308 COMBINING DIAERESIS. But it is clearly a single "character", right? A grapheme cluster is an approximation of the concept of user-perceived character.
Ell
Ell
right okay
sbi
sbi
18:06
"A grapheme cluster is an approximation of the concept of user-perceived character." OMG, what have I gotten into here?
@sbi What about it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I prefer Korean as an example. It's clear there's lots of symbols per "character".
sbi
sbi
Well, of course it won't work well when I output the old buffer, which I am not filling anymore... Sigh. I should go home.
@MooingDuck I can't tell a letter from a sentence with this.
@MooingDuck I think latin letters are better to explain it to latin alphabet users.
@sbi oh. It appears to be two columns of three letters
sbi
sbi
18:09
@MooingDuck "appears"
@R.MartinhoFernandes maybe. I work with other languages a lot so maybe I'm not the best sample case.
you know
in my "About" section, I should have more than just a picture of Daisy.
@DeadMG "This is Daisy"
@DeadMG what is your URL?
@DeadMG You mean "more pictures of Daisy", or "other stuff besides a picture of Daisy"?
18:10
@Chimera None atm- the new site is still just some aspx files on my HDD.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Heh. Both? :P
how about the old site?
www.wide-language.com
but now I need to convert all my C++ tutorial pages
I think I'll leave the Wide specification down for now.
whoopsie, my save function is saving all the blank strings as "<blank>". (I have them display as "<blank>" on the screen because actually showing nothing looked silly.)
Word segmentation is going to be a bitch. I'll have to implement a mini-regex-like engine.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yup :(
@R.MartinhoFernandes is "word segmentation" fully localizable, or does it have to become "can linewrap here"?
18:16
@MooingDuck Line breaking is a different segmentation algorithm.
Ell
Ell
word segmentation? where does that differ with languages?
don't all languages just use a space?
@Ell nope, Asian languages don't have spaces. Why would they? Each symbol is a word.
@Ell What about punctuation?
Ell
Ell
is "It's" one word?
> The use of the apostrophe is ambiguous. It is usually considered part of one word (“can’t” or “aujourd’hui”) but it may also be considered as part of two words (“l’objectif”). A further complication is the use of the same character as an apostrophe and as a quotation mark. Therefore leading or trailing apostrophes are best excluded from the default definition of a word.
user1182183
18:17
anyone knows "VPN server" software for windows? (like poptop for linux), and I know windows has a built-in one but it's so... not satisfying.
@Ell It's all a mess.
Ell
Ell
are there any standards on word-ness?
All the segmentation algorithms can be tailored for different languages. So far I'm sticking with the default untailored algorithms.
Ell
Ell
also isn't this going to slip into natural language processing?
18:20
@Ell Not really.
Word segmentation is for things like double clicking selecting a word in a text editor or Ctrl+left moving a word ahead, and stuff like that.
NLP is way overkill.
NLP is extracting semantic information from words
that's way more than just word processing
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Well, this wrecks the device, too. I have been digging through SO a bit more, and my code is almost the same as Loki's code here, only I am using an ostream, rather than an istream. I don't know what I'm doing wrong. I think I give up for today and go home now.
@sbi When you're free, check out the e-mail I sent you.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes I did. I lack time, but I will work on it.
goddamn, the bootstrapcdn thing keeps going down
guess I'mma have to host it myself
Ell
Ell
18:25
who even uses double click to select a word?
@sbi No worries, I've got time.
@Ell It's pretty much supported everywhere (try it).
@Ell me, all the time
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Lemme look at it before I leave here....
Triple click for a whole line, or is it a sentence?
Ell
Ell
I know it's supported, but it's always been an annoyance for me
18:26
@Collin I think that one varies from application to application.
sbi
sbi
Fall C++ meeting starts in a week. Record attendee count and lots of papers! I'll be live-tweeting as much as I can.
Wait, @sbi are you doing this on vxworks?
My (soon to be written) proposal for moving strings out of stringbuf will not be there :(
sbi
sbi
@Collin Yep.
@sbi I don't have a solution, but I do want to sympathise
I just finished with 4 days of pain screwing with makefiles getting vxworks to compile for an SBC board here
vxworks is not something I'd wish on anyone, although I'm not sure who's more at fault, windriver or our board supplier
qox
qox
@DeadMG PHP
sbi
sbi
@Collin Well, hold on to your hat then. I am actually working with an inhouse-framework that's build on a vendor's framework that's build on a vxworks version from 1996. And, no, that's not a typo. 16 years old.
@sbi oof, at least I'm using 6.7
sbi
sbi
18:31
Keep your tin hole shut, robot.
welcome to the world of embedded software, where all the compilers suck and your sanity doesn't matter :-P
6
Oh. I thought you were amenable to typo-pointing.
In fact, I have recollections of you thanking me for it.
I guess you're just not in a good mood. Carry on, then.
:)
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes There's a time and place for everything human, robot. After this day, when I haven't made any progress for hours, and have just given up, it's not the right time.
Why am I telling this to a robot?
As much as the frustration sucks, the elation when it works is much better
Ok, sorry if I upset you.
Als
Als
18:34
Hello @sbi, @R.MartinhoFernandes
Als
Als
kinda okay
sbi
sbi
@Collin That also depends on the relation of the amounts of frustration vs. elation.
@sbi You'll learn to appreciate the little victories all that much more after working with vx for a while
@Collin What SBC? Intel x86 based?
18:35
PPC
interesting.
@sbi Head home, have a couple drinks.. good luck tomorrow
sbi
sbi
@Collin For the last two days I have been pairing with my R&D boss, and he kept being delighted at me pointing out all those occasions where needless work was done and how it could be done faster even while ending up with simpler code. I thought I could live on this for a while, but...
what you scrubs think?
18:38
@sbi Obviously I don't know your boss, but I'm sure he's had experience with getting stuck on something like this himself
So, you have Nickname "Other Nickname" © 2012 at the bottom left?
user1182183
@Collin I had a couple of drinks last night...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Heh. I know, right?
sbi
sbi
@Collin It's approaching 9pm here, I'll need an hour to get home, and I will have to do some laundry before I get to go to bed. If I have "a couple of drinks" on top of that, tomorrow will be a bad day. :)
user1182183
18:39
@R.MartinhoFernandes Name "callsign" surname
@GamErix Cept I don't feel like putting my real name on there.
@DeadMG Whatever you do, don't even think about adding "Ads?".
@DeadMG Looks nice.
user1182183
@DeadMG if your life will be at dange because of that okay.. else I don't see the point
18:40
@NikiC Oh. That's more a design note than an actual thing.
Oh, where are the ads?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Currently not serving any
Can't hotlink tvtropes.
On my old blog I served free open-source ads, just for kicks.
Oooooh, question! brb
Never mind then, guess I pwned myself
18:42
:( kind of a silly question. Nevermind.
sbi
sbi
@Collin Yeah, of course. We all have. And he didn't even know one can do what I am doing. Well, one should be able to do this, that is.
@DeadMG Good :) Ads are baaaad. At least with your visitor count ;)
sbi
sbi
Still, I am all fine here. I set up my machine on Monday, checked out, compiled, and uploaded to the device for the first time on Tuesday (we had a holiday on Wednesday), wrote my first app on Thursday, and have been debugging with him on this really hard-to-find issue on Friday and today, making significant progress. I think there's nothing for him to complain about.
@Collin Seems like vxworks supports PPC more than any other architecture.
@sbi Glad it's going well
18:43
@sbi Must be stressful pairing with your boss.
no + in URLs, right?
sbi
sbi
@Chimera Actually, it's a delight. He's a nice guy, I got to know him at a Scott Meyers seminar a couple of years ago, and he's been trying to coax me to work for this company every since. If you came into the rooms here, you'd never think he's some kind of boss, if it wasn't for the others keeping to bug him about stuff. Also, he acknowledges that I know C++ better than he does, and loves to learn it, while at the same time teaching me tons of stuff. There's little to improve upon in this.
@sbi Sweet! Sounds like a great situation then.
18:48
hmm in two of my headers, I'm getting "Cannot open include file: 'unordered_map': no such file or directory". All other headers can open 'unordered_map' just fine.
Build problems again?
and if I want to put a + in my html file, I need to encode it, right?
@DeadMG no
oh, ok then
Als
Als
@sbi Who is he? someone we know?
sbi
sbi
18:50
@Als No.
Still trying to find out his secret identity?
Aug 26 '11 at 19:06, by Als
@FredOverflow: I know you have met him and so i want someone to tell me who he is (pretends @sbi is not around) probably some famous guy I probably know only by name.
hmm
I should really have a "Back" link, like, for each subsection a link back to the primary tutorial index
right?
sbi
sbi
I work with Björn, though. (But that's because I got those two connected.)
Yeah, that's called navigation. It's usually generated automatically.
Als
Als
@R.MartinhoFernandes Damn..you never forget anything
18:52
@sbi Oh cool. Maybe he knows some pubs that are actually still open. :P
@Als The robot must have a good indexing scheme
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes He's gone home long ago. Also, out here in Adlershof there's no pubs. Just hip startups, TV studios, and some facilities of the Humboldt university.
@DeadMG Unless you always display the nav on the left, yes, you need a backlink ;)
sbi
sbi
@Collin Silicon-based.
18:59
0
Q: Why am i getting an error when adding private variable to class [C++]

user1494136I have this mesh class which is spread out over two files (mesh.h and mesh.cpp). now it worked perfectly until i added a position variable to it (of type Vector2d). when i added the variable it still ran as normal but as soon as i used it in one of the functions it gave me an error saying a bunch...

" i have been working with computers for about 4 years now and i've never ever seen i computer act like this." lulz

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