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00:00
I like Windows 8 UI. I just don't like the other crap they're doing to it.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf liveworkspace.org/code/63f3843c159451ccaf041c2ea55a3627 See here, the templated friend function doesn't work. However a specialized one for std::vector<int> does.
@Jeff printf("pi = %La\n", ldPI);
@Borgleader lemme test that
@Cheers That printed pi = 0x1.921fb54442d18p+1. What does a mean? It's not even listed in the (possibly outdated) Kernighan and Ritchie C book I downloaded without paying for it (shhhhh!)
it's very hexadecimal, base 16 numeral system
@Borgleader i tried with templated friend declaration. works nicely with visual c++, but g++ protests about inaccessible. so, thorny problem, compiler specific
In MSCV2012RC it doesn't work :(
00:07
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Why doesn't %Le work to display the entire precision in decimal? I'm not sure yet if I know how to read hex into the target program where I'm sending this (MATLAB).
@Jeff i don't know. i could find out, but so can you. <g>
@cheers :D
^ works with both msvc 11.0 and g++ 4.7.1
Xeo
Xeo
A reference implementation for an operator... that would expand things to packs which can be unpacked after that. (Example). /cc @LucDanton, @R.MartinhoFernandes, @FredOverflow (I think you might be interested in that, atleast)
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Ah cool :) tyvm
Xeo
Xeo
00:11
Proposal for the standard committe might come for Bristol.
user142019
God tier: Erlang, Haskell
Top tier: Clojure, F#, Python
Mid tier: C++, IcedCoffeeScript, Ruby
Low tier: C, C#, D, JavaScript
Shit tier: Java, Visual Basic
Dog puke with elephant shit tier: PHP
@Zoid but without PHP, how would we all post code to forums? :D
user142019
@Jeff ?
user142019
Forums wouldn’t be written in PHP if PHP didn’t exist.
@Zoidberg'-- lots of forums use [PHP]code[/PHP] tags to post code
user142019
00:16
They would have been written in Perl.
Xeo
Xeo
The built-in operator... would take an integral constant and would be like build_indices, aka ...4... would expand to 0,1,2,3 and would allow for concise loops like f(...4)... -> f(0), f(1), f(2), f(3). Now I'm really pumped for that thing.
@Xeo Mmm. I can see the reduction in red-tape code but.... the syntax?! It's not particularly ...beauty...ful
Ah well, I'd have it :) C++ syntax is already beyond salvage
Xeo
Xeo
Fuck syntax, I want that thing. Now. :(
Well, I could have it, but that'd mean I could only use Clang.
Ell
Ell
why not 0..4 (0, 1, 2, 3, 4) or 0...4? (0, 1, 2, 3)
Xeo
Xeo
00:53
@Ell Well, it's just operator..., a single thing, that is implemented there. What would 0...a_tuple mean if std::tuple overloaded operator...?
Ell
Ell
ohh yeah sorry, I skipped over operator and read it as range literals or soemthing :L
Xeo
Xeo
The ...4 is just calling the built-in operator..., which expects an integral constant, and expands to 0, 1, 2, N-1
I love it when people say, "I googled and can't find anything.". I did a google and found something. Derp!
0
Q: what is the difference between gen_tcp:recv and prim_inet recv

user1748906What is prim_inet module , how it works ? i tried to google it but i didn't find any useful docs. i looked at the source file prim_inet.erl but nothing special there , dose prim_inet:async_recv spawn a new process for each recv ?

01:11
What a pun. /cc @sbi, @Xeo, @FredOverflow, @R.MartinhoFernades
Xeo
Xeo
@Chimera Blame personalized search results!
Ell
Ell
01:24
hmm firefox keeps freezing
Xeo
Xeo
0
Q: C++ pointer declaration

YasinIn C++ What is the difference between: int* a; and int *a; Is it same?

close votes
@Ell firefox freezing? give it a sweater, a warm blanket, toddy, turn on the heat
01:58
@Xeo wut
Putting ... in front of whatever is pretty wtf.
Let's see if I can express one of those things I can't express with current packs.
I'm not sure. It makes for more elaborated expansions but it doesn't help with nested expansions, does it?
JTA
JTA
My poor C room is gone :(
Is there a reasonable way to see if a char* (as returned by say strtol()) is the actual end of a std::string?
Or, probably better, is there a way to make a stringstream do base detection like strtol does?
hmm, doing std::distance(line.c_str(), static_cast<const char*>(lastParsed)) == line.size() seems to work pretty well
Xeo
Xeo
02:16
@LucDanton It's not about expansion, it's about making packs for expansion, in a concise way.
@Xeo And I don't like it for that!
Xeo
Xeo
lol
But I do. I definitly do.
Pack expansion is arguably broken. I don't like the idea of enshrining workarounds for a bad spec.
Xeo
Xeo
Well, I wouldn't say "broken". Just... not very versatile.
Like you can't expand outside of certain places, and only into a comma-seperated list.
It's still dumb that you have to do e.g. fold(operators::plus {}, 0, ...pack...) for 0 + pack0 + pack1 + ... + packN. Sure, no need to get indices involved anymore, but that's barely an improvement.
Xeo
Xeo
02:19
@LucDanton Yeah, that's what I meant with "only into a comma-seperated list"
Also this doesn't affect e.g. using Bases::operator()...; right? Same expansion sites after all.
Xeo
Xeo
We need some syntax to express the delimiter between the pack elements
All those things are hints that current expansion rules are too narrow.
Xeo
Xeo
Sadly, all kinds of braces, parens and brackets are already taken. :(
pack@+... :D
zero @op@ pack... with special rule that pack... is void(), pack...? (In expression contexts, e.g. base list expansion not affected.)
Xeo
Xeo
02:21
@LucDanton It's just a single thing, a single operator that's implemented there.
@Xeo Question was rhetorical.
Xeo
Xeo
Just say "normal expansion is with built-in meaning of ,"
Yeah, void(), pack...!
Xeo
Xeo
If you want to allow overloaded comma, have pack@,... (yes, now we're getting cryptic)
Sounds like a bikeshed issue. Let's put that aside.
Xeo
Xeo
02:23
True.
Here's a riddle for you: imagine a zip_with function such that the result of calling zip_with(f, make_tuple(0, 2, 4, 6, 8), make_tuple(1, 3, 5)) results is a tuple that contains the results of f(0, 1), f(2, 3), f(4, 5). Can you express the result in one return statement without helper functions? You're allowed to use new, imaginary expansion pack syntax.
Xeo
Xeo
You're hinting at expanding different length packs, huh?
hey guys ^.^
I just have a quick question, When i want to make an inline function in a class. Can I use the inline keyword in the function definition but not the deceleration?
Xeo
Xeo
Sure
I've never decelerated a function before
did it come with a speedometer?
02:31
@DeadMG hahahaha My bad :D
* declaration
@Xeo Thanks :)
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton return make_tuple(f(...a, ...b)...); and my imaginary expansion syntax says that you're getting expansion up to the smaller pack. :>
Internet being sucky qgqin.
Ell
Ell
herro
@Xeo That's make_tuple(f(t0, ..., uN, u0, ..., uN), /* repeated */) isn't it?
Xeo
Xeo
Nope
02:41
The mismatched sizes don't really matter. It's interesting when put into tandem with the issue of nested expansion but the latter is the crux.
Xeo
Xeo
make_tuple(f(a0,b0),f(a1,b1),...))
...a creates a pack, that can be expanded.
This kind of pack expansion is incompatible in a sense with get & others isn't it?
Xeo
Xeo
Why? get<...tuple_size<Tup>::value>(t)...
How is that not TS repeated?
Xeo
Xeo
?
02:43
That's inconsistency right here.
Xeo
Xeo
I don't see where.
To repeat 42 N times I have to use an alias right?
Xeo
Xeo
((42 - ...42) + ...42)... :)
That's a lot of arguments against that syntax by now.
Xeo
Xeo
But yeah, a template might be nicer: first<42, ...42>::value...
02:46
I just found out about it today and it's already overused :(
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Mind explaining the inconsistency you mentioned before? (chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/6056391#6056391)
Oh, wait
@LucDanton (...42, 42)..., d'uh
@Xeo By the way just to be clear @ was not meant as a syntactical element. @op@ as a whole is a placeholder (I think the Standard uses @op actually). So I really meant expansion of the kind e.g. 0 + pack....
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton operator@, if you mean when they explain the semantics of those things
@LucDanton But yeah, sure.
They do use that one yeah. However the expression form is simply a@b.
Xeo
Xeo
Ah, right.
02:52
If there's one thing to retain from the experiment is that indicating expansion sites (here with prefix ...) in a pattern for pack expansion is useful, rather than having each pack being unconditionally expanded.
Does ...f(...t..., u)... do what I think it does?
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton I don't quite follow.
@LucDanton Only if f returned something that overloaded operator..., like a tuple.
No? Well then that proposal is actually horrible.
Xeo
Xeo
Well, what do you think it does?
What I would like it to do is f(t0, ..., tN, u0), ..., f(t0, ..., tN, uN).
I didn't mean for the expression to be standalone by the way.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, I didn't see that u was supposed to be a pack: f(...t..., u)...
Just drop the prefix ...
02:56
That would be inconsistent.
Xeo
Xeo
Why?
... doesn't designate a pattern for pack expansion
It creates a pack, nothing more.
Which is why that proposal sucks.
Xeo
Xeo
I still don't see your inconsistencies.
I want to designate the call to f as the pattern.
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, you can do that by having an unexpanded pack inside f's argument list and appending ..., as is today in variadic function templates.
02:59
i find that i want more practical features
Xeo
Xeo
But before going further, can we please first clarify the inconsistencies you keep talking about?
starting at bottom, a standard signed Size type
@Xeo u is the pack to expand...
support for platform specific Unicode encoding unit
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Yeah, I got that at the end.
03:00
program arguments
what good is variadiac templates etc for a language unable to express echo or cat for the most common platform (in portable code)?
it is almost a kind of intellectual masturbation then
Xeo
Xeo
@Cheersandhth.-Alf std::ptrdiff_t? Or do you want Size's max value to be equal to size_t's max value?
std::ptrdiff_t would do nicely, and it's what I usually define Size as
but standard support would also diffentiate hosted and free-standing platforms
uh, implementations
Xeo
Xeo
@Cheersandhth.-Alf This one I don't get. We have that, don't we? Or in what way do you mean?
we have std::begin and std::end
they are 2 out of the 3 necessary functions for dealing with sized collections
also needs std::n_items (say)
Xeo
Xeo
@Cheersandhth.-Alf which would return ...?
03:04
signed size type
Xeo
Xeo
I meant what the return value means.
end(c) - begin(c)
Xeo
Xeo
.size()? And why do you need a signed size type for that?
get rid of a lot of bugs, senseless discussion with newbies and advanced students, and a heck of a lot of code that does needless discrimination on various "right-sized" unsigned size types
sorr, got carried away there
:)
Xeo
Xeo
I think I'll refrain from asking why exactly an unsigned size type is bad, so you will not have such a senseless discussion here. :P
03:08
in basic causes it goes back to late C
as i've been informed the earliest incarnations of C had the implicit promotion rules right way
for some reason lost in history, that was changed
@Xeo The short answer is that an unsigned type isn't a big problem in itself -- but mixing signed and unsigned can lead to all sorts of problems.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Keep in mind: there is no real "right way". Sign preserving and value preserving both cause problems, just under different circumstances. No matter which the committee chose, a substantial number of people were going to believe they picked the wrong one.
hm, probably right
it is the mixture of types with different kinds of semantics, alternating in promotion ladder, that is problematic
so easy solution would have been to not mix them
@Xeo That I can do things with non-packs that I can't do with packs. Namely all those things we need indices for, since this solution supplants that. As a consequence for elaborated nested expansions, now instead of transforming a subexpression into a function call (to prevent some expansion in select spots and put some, possibly different, expansion in some select other spots) I need to write an appropriate operator... somewhere.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Wait, ...N generates a pack of indices. Just stuff it where you'd stuff Is in a template that takes a seq<Is...>.
I still need to write the function template that maps indices to whatever I need...
03:15
@Cheersandhth.-Alf IIRC, Ada does that (prohibits mixing, I mean). Might be a good idea, but doesn't seem to have been enough to make it very successful.
Honestly any objection or recommendation for a workaround is water for my mill. I don't want workarounds, I want a syntax to specify everything in one go.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Specific example? (Btw, I'm pretty sure zygoloid / Richard Smith from the Clang team will love suggestions to improve the proposal.)
I don't want to improve the proposal.
03:32
test
is anyone having issues viewing this room correctly?
nope, it's fine for me
@KronoS Looks like you're having problem getting the CSS.
@EtiennedeMartel but I don't have any issues over at Root Access (Super User Chat)
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton In any case, you can take suggestions to him and maybe he'll play around with them and implement them in Clang, so you get an implementation experience for a proposal.
03:39
@KronoS Different top level domain. Are you disabling JS?
not that I know of
Try a hard refresh? Ctrl + F5
@Xeo I'm terribly sorry but I figured out why I couldn't make the previous example of zip_with work. I started with a simple zip_with(f, t, u). But of course now you have to make it variadic in the number of tuples it accepts.
posted on November 01, 2012

Let's explore the consequences of checking that invariants actually hold when they should — a state of affairs that in principle should always be true.

That's the one spot where I couldn't use just one pack of indices in one go.
A solution that transforms non-packs to packs will hit the same obstacles I'm afraid.
Xeo
Xeo
03:41
@LucDanton Ah, yeah.
I think I see what you mean
Hm
It might be the case that it's not possible (or easy enough) to conceive of a syntax that can express what we want there (or some other example). If that is the case, then my objections to that proposal vanish. I'd rather have tuples that expand themselves than tuples + (manual) indices. My objection is that I don't want tuples to begin with, just packs.
@rapptz ya that didn't work. Now it's not even loading.
(Using the phone to talk which btw is showing the same thing on both LTE and local wireless)
Seems you have a problem receiving packets from SO. My only guess, otherwise I have no idea.
Pinging chat.so yields anywhere from 54 to 102 ms
Other sites are at about 56 to 60
oh that's better.
that was weird
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton: I have some ideas on how to make zip_with(F f, Tuples&&... ts) work with a single return statement and no helper functions, but I'd need to compile clang with the extension to check if it will work as I think it does.
03:48
Anyways... my original intent on coming here was to ask a quick question on the algorithm::find method
Xeo
Xeo
And the question is?
My question is, when I pass a first and last it searches the entire range from first element to the last?
or the first elements to the second to last?
Xeo
Xeo
[first, last), it's a half-open range
I don't relish the prospect of having to teach packs vs non-packs to someone tbh :| Things like f(...sizeof...(Pack)...) are hard to human-parse.
Xeo
Xeo
03:50
That counts for all algorithms
It even answered your question in the first sentence, lol.
Xeo
Xeo
So if you pass my_vec.begin(), my_vec.end(), it'll go through all elements of my_vec
find_if Oooo that returns a bool... which is what I'm looking for
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Yeah, that's one of my concerns too.
user406009
cplusplus.com is a cancer, spreading bad info.
Xeo
Xeo
03:51
@KronoS No... it does not.
> 2. find_if searches for an element for which predicate p returns true
That doesn't return a bool.
Xeo
Xeo
It does if(pred(*it)) return it;
user406009
@KronoS Are you trying to check if a container contains an element?
@Lalaland duly noted... as that's been my main source of C++ info
@Lalaland yes: list<string>
user406009
03:52
Look at the example on cppreference.com
user406009
It does exactly that, check if the element is in the container.
Xeo
Xeo
std::find(c.begin(), c.end(), target) != c.end()
user406009
^ That's basically the idea.
@Xeo but what about std::find_if(c.begin(), c.end(), target
wouldn't that be the same?
Xeo
Xeo
Read the page again
03:54
because my question here is, what if the last element in the list is the match?
Xeo
Xeo
find_if takes a predicate and checks with that.
@KronoS c.end() is one-past-the-end
pick up a good book
@Xeo Boost.Range has boost::size (also boost::distance) and I'd expect as much from a range library. Works for arrays, too.
@Xeo Oh! Well that makes sense.
@Xeo I know I know.. I need too... just no money right now :)
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton: Btw, f(get<...tuple_size<Tuples>::value>(ts)...)... might work. It should (in my imagination) expand to f(get<Is0>(t0), get<Is1>(t1), ...)... with IsN being the usual indices packs
And that requires a get!
Xeo
Xeo
03:57
@LucDanton Yeah, not the perfect solution, but I'm working on it.
And in the same vein, f((...ts)...)...) might also work, expanding to f(...t0, ...t1, ...t2, ..., ...tN)...
I just have no idea if it actually works like that. :(
I mean, if prefix ... is an operator, it should, right?
Just like (+Is)... expands to +I0, +I1, +I2, ... +IN
And that would be damn concise, IMHO
I'm okay with prefix ..., it's the pack expansion which I feel is problematic.
Xeo
Xeo
What specifically?
You're expanding a pack expansion.
Xeo
Xeo
...X is not a pack expansion
Or do you mean the f((something)...)... part?
(btw, I put a paren to much in the snippet up there)
Ya, latter.
Disregarding non-packs for a minute this doesn't work with current rules for packs.
Nested (and not parallel) expansions don't work with the current rules. I'd like that not to be the case, if it is ever possible (and convenient enough).
Xeo
Xeo
04:04
Yeah, because you currently can't create an expansionable pack from expansion
// Check to see if the line is a comment
const bool Graph::IsComment(const string aString) const
{
	return aString[0] == '/' && aString[1] == '/';
}
how is it that this returns a bool?
Xeo
Xeo
So it's not like you can't do nested expansion, but rather there's no way you can create a context where you can double-expand stuff.
On the other hand it's not a given that better expansion rules would free us from (most of) the need for tuples. Especially considering something like tuple(std::piecewise_construct_t, Tuple0&&, Tuple1&&);.
user406009
@KronoS The && operator returns a bool.
Oh... ok
04:05
"... any self-respecting Java developer ..." - I wasn't aware there was such a thing
@Xeo Would you say, expansion in an expansion pack?
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton I mean that after one expansion, you have packs that you can expand again
So... an expansion pattern in an expansion pattern.
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah.
So... nested expansion (patterns).
Xeo
Xeo
04:07
Hai hai.
Wait
I feel like the proposal is 'a more convenient interface to std::tuple by means of a first-class feature that anyone may in fact use'. Saying that in a good way.
I would certainly favour it over proposals to make std::tuple itself first class in expansion patterns or some such.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton The tuple is just the easiest example, I think. Also, really, most of the time when you deal with expansion is when you handle tuples
user406009
Sorry to intrude, but would this be an entirely compile time feature?
Xeo
Xeo
int a1[] = { (...4,42)... }; // [0,1,2,3]
int a2[] = { a1[...4]... }; // copy built-in array! :D
@Xeo Right. My gripe (at first) was that you need tuples in the first place due to the limitations of pack expansion -- so why not fix that. But I don't think there's any easy way to e.g. make piecewise construction work without tuples, and that may be more fundamental than the rules of packs anyway.
Xeo
Xeo
04:10
@LucDanton Yeah, you need a way to group values of different types together, and a pack doesn't suffice for that.
can find be used for any object, including custom classes?
Xeo
Xeo
Sure, just overload operator==, or use find_if and provide an appropriate predicate.
@Lalaland Yes, since expansion can't possibly happen at runtime.
Although an overloaded operator... would be called at runtime.
What a trap for f(...t...) since there's no ordering guarantee.
user1174868
I have been stuck on this code for like 3 days now, can anyone help me out? I have like forty minutes to turn this in now
user1174868
I can't get it on my own
Xeo
Xeo
04:14
@LucDanton Unfortunately, yeah, that would be the case. :/
Btw @LucDanton, I think we have a context where you have nested expansion today
@Xeo Arguably something like EXPAND( i += 2 * Indices ) may already be hiding the error.
user1174868
trying to do binary trees in scheme, can anyone help?
user406009
@Jordan Try posting on stackoverflow.com
user1174868
@Lalaland I can't post
@Lalaland Not appropriate for a deadline 40 minutes away imo.
user406009
04:17
My bad, Luc is right.
user1174868
it just really sucks that there are no online resoucres for this stuff
Well, we're not that online resource.
user1174868
no shit
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton: Yeah, we have nested expansions today too: liveworkspace.org/code/ac8ad8dff8c2e8c1c63ddc2b59d05232
First expansion happens before the second.
Xeo
Xeo
04:23
Sure, and same thing happens with f((something)...)...
That's what I'd think, at least.
The same thing happens which is not what we want. Also it results in an error.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Wait, I thought we did want that?
So in two steps we'd first get f(s0, s1, ..., sN)... and then f(s00, s10, ..., sN0), f(s01, s11, ..., sN1), ..., f(s0N, s1N, ..., sNN)
Why not f(s0, ..., sN), ..., f(s0, ..., sN)?
Xeo
Xeo
I meant if something is multple packs after expansion
like (...tuples)
But it doesn't work right now. What changes with the non-pack version?
Xeo
Xeo
04:29
How does it not work right now? Isn't it essentially the same as the f<Ts>(Us...)... I linked above? After the expansion of Us, you still have a pack left that can be expanded. In the (...tups) example you'd just have multiple.
@LucDanton Btw, why do you call the ...X the "non-pack" version? Or do you call what we have today the non-pack one?
Because X is not a pack.
Xeo
Xeo
But ...X generates a pack
So what?
Xeo
Xeo
(Disclaimer: I might be mildly confused thanks to sleepyness.)
What do you call it?
04:33
I was gonna say... Xeo isn't usually on at this time. :)
Xeo
Xeo
I don't really have a name for it, but "non-pack version" sounds wrong, somehow.
@Xeo At this point I'd need access to a compiler to check what is happening right now with the pack version.
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, let's clarify for my sleepy brain. The "pack" version is what we currently have?
Yeah. If you want to 'expand' something, a pack must be involved.
Xeo
Xeo
What's wrong with LWS then?
04:38
@Xeo It doesn't accept #include <annex/tuple.hpp>.
Xeo
Xeo
Heh, right.
More seriously though I am cutting up my code to feed it to LWS.
Xeo
Xeo
What kind of complicated test are you going to do oO
I'm just putting in my code that is problematic and removing the helper to see the kind of errors it spits up.
My example was not made up, it's really something that did come up in my coding.
Xeo
Xeo
The zip_with, you mean?
04:43
Ya.
Xeo
Xeo
Never doubted that
Well I'm not going to write the example from scratch, am I?
> error: expansion pattern 'decltype (declval<Functor>()((get<ElementIndices>)((forward<Tuples>)(tuples))...))' contains no argument packs
Is this fixable? (Scroll down to big comment block.)
adl::get<ElementIndices>(frwd(tuple))... is the counterpart to ...t....
I suppose we can reintroduce the tuples pack into the expansion pattern?
user1174868
I hate homework assignments like this
user1174868
shit comes up in real life so you lose 20 percent off a homework assignment because life
> error: mismatched argument pack lengths while expanding 'get<ElementIndices>(forward<Tuples>(tuples))'
Hard-requirement of nested packs!
I suppose we could cheat and make everything N * N. Oh well.
And then it works. But it's not what we want.
@Jordan Use version control and an offsite repo.

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