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13:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes So, that's the bad side, really. We now question the value of well meaning compliments
@Telkitty I have a karma philosophy. And also: anyones circle of influence is just limited. That's good and bad: it means you don't have to really keep worrying about people you don't have to meet, 99% of the time.
For some reason my WiFi failed for 5 minutes there. Damn
@Telkitty lol
hahahah
13:23
3
Q: voice recognition in mono

kalanIs there any way to add voice recognition feature to mono application. There are a System.Speech (in .net) and Microsoft.Speech (in MS Speech Platform) namespaces, but I can't find any in Mono. So how is it possible to add speech recognition functionality in Mono?

@Zignd Are you posting that in every room?
Is it just me, or do people ignore room titles and just spam questions?
You posted it in at least C#, C++, PHP and JS
I've only been in Chat for a few days, and it's happened every single time I've been present.
@NikiC and @MrDoomBringer The objective is just to create activity on the question. There is a lot of questions with bounty
13:30
@Zignd Is that not what this is for?
I started a bounty in this guy question and it is too old. So that's the reason.
@MrDoomBringer hes just posting his question here...leave him alone...hes not doing anything to u
That's it! Leave me alone, ignore me and don't talk to me
user1357851
upboat me if you think this question is worthy :D
user1357851
13:37
0
Q: C++ Util classes in smart phone apps

TelkittyI am creating an app and aim to get it published on all three platforms (iPhone/Android/Window phone). I would like to create a library in C++ then link it to the GUI which is objective c for iPhone, Java for Android and C# for Window's phone. The aim is to put all common background functionalit...

Graaaaah, sunlight coming through windows is too bright. Time for the blinds to go down.
</stereotype>
Are there any case where in C++, within a function or method, a closing brace } does not mean end of lifetime for the objects right before it? In some languages exception blocks behave differently, but I can't come up with any such special cases in C++.
user1804599
"}" //} /*}*/ '}' #include <}>
How cute
[](){}();
That's not what I'm after...
user1804599
Anyway, about the life time of objects.
user1804599
13:40
int foo;
{
    int& bar = foo;
}
user1804599
References ain't objects.
user1804599
Oh wait, nevermind.
Yes sure. I mean objects
Oh well...
user1804599
void foo() {
    struct {int c;} bar; // :P
}
user1804599
} in function body does not end the lifetime of c.
13:44
@JohanLundberg How about static objects?
void foo()
{
    static int my_heart;
} // my heart will go on!
user1804599
{
  Foo foo;
  goto bar; // or is this forbidden? or will it call foo.~Foo() anyway?
}
bar:;
Jumping over variable initialization or destruction is forbidden.
user1804599
And what about the following?
user1804599
{
    Foo foo;
    ::longjmp(x, y);
}
If you are jumping over variable initialization or destruction, it is ill formed, no matter what method you use to jump.
user1804599
13:49
Or exit and execv and friends.
33
Q: Will using `goto` leak variables?

Lightness Races in OrbitIs it true that goto jumps across bits of code without calling destructors and things? e.g. void f() { int x = 0; goto lol; } int main() { f(); lol: return 0; } Won't x be leaked?

user1357851
@JohanLundberg use new?
user1357851
Object *myObject = new Object();
user1357851
lasts until you delete it
Eew, naked pointers. Cover your shame!
3
user1357851
13:55
@FredOverflow ? you are in C++ forum. Are you disoriented? :D
Naked pointers are not modern C++.
@Telkitty Exactly. C++. Not C ;)
@JohanLundberg There are none. The language will always clean up local objects, unless UB.
@Telkitty The local pointer is still cleaned up- although that's a no-op.
Or unless a destructor throws and std::terminate or something is called :)
oh yeah, the terminate/exit functions might not clean up
13:59
@Telkitty Object in scope there is the pointer and it will be deleted, so that's not what I mean. The object the pointer points to is a different question, but it's not a variable in that scope.
@FredOverflow At that point the OS will just dealloc anyhow as the process died, unless you specify a different condition. No?
user1804599
Last night I misspelled "daemon" and now I feel bad.
@MrDoomBringer Some resources are, but not all.
user1804599
And it all depends on the OS.
@MrDoomBringer I don't know, somehow I never bothered with these details.
14:02
DeadMG, I was already quite sure of this. I'm preparing a talk and want to explain object life time.. In C# the scoping rules are funky.
{
int a=3;
}
{
float a=3;
}
that is not allowed in C#, considered to be confusing.
sbi
sbi
@sehe I did what? Wow, I hadn't heard of that story. Can you tell me? It'd be interesting to finally hear something about me I hadn't previously known about.
@sbi I gave good parenting advice?
@TonyTheLion what!?
@JohanLundberg What is the exact language rule for that?
@sbi Good morning, did you really just get a few hour's sleep?
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman As I said, you got me thinking, and that made my retry approaching that from another angle. Thanks fro that.
user1357851
14:03
@DeadMG fine: Object *myObject = new Object(); return myObject;
user1357851
happy now?
no?
We're only happy if we have something to be grumpy about!
@sbi no worries :D
you still haven't even remotely demonstrated any time when it's not cleaned up.
sbi
sbi
14:04
@MrDoomBringer Actually, I have been awake for 4 hours already. Also, it's 3pm here, so "Good morning" somehow doesn't cut it. But wherever you are, good day to you, too!
@JohanLundberg That's about name scoping, not lifetime scoping.
user1357851
@DeadMG try to run it
user1357851
I am sure it works
I received an email by Bjarne today. This is going to be a great day :)
user1357851
I used to do this all the times
14:05
*myObject is not a local variable, so it shouldn't be cleaned up.
Hello :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow cool. What's it about?
user1804599
@zuberuber Good afternoon.
@sbi 9:05, nearing that 24 hour mark for me. Probably a sign I should call it quits for a few hours.
US East Coast?
14:06
@Aardvark You think he cares? It's from Bjarne. That's all he cares about right now.
@DeadMG Yep
user1357851
@DeadMG wait what question are you think about? I was referring to what does not get deleted before }
@Griwes Destruction is fine.
@CatPlusPlus, in all cases?
@Telkitty As was I.
myObject is destructed at the } like it should be. That sample acts exactly correctly and there are no leaked variables.
14:06
If you exit a scope, all automatic objects are destroyed.
What should I learn first: C or C++ ( for career I'd like to make robot-like creatures, but also programming a lot of software as hobby )
but yes, I am back and happy to finally have a decent computer again :D
user1357851
new-ed object does not live on the stack
If you want to learn C, learn C, if you want to learn C++, learn C++.
14:07
Hmm, so gotos jumping out of scope are handled just like normal code exiting scope?
user1357851
} unwinds the stack
I want to learn both
@zuberuber C is an irrelevant dinosaur.
3
user1804599
I use goto in C. goto cleanup;
sbi
sbi
@sehe No, he wasn't. OTOH, in complaining he forgot about him sitting on my couch, sleeping in my son's bed, and eating my food, so I guess running a few coding problems and ideas by him (which is what we really did) should be Ok. Also, it was this morning, after I, allegedly, had tarnished his reputation. In short, he cannot have been all that upset about me.
14:07
that's why I asked which of it should I learn FIRST :D
Nothing lives on the stake. Vampires die on the stake, though.
Doesn't matter.
@zuberuber Don't learn C if you want to write in anything newer.
They're both terrible, though C++ much less.
@Griwes meaning what?
Meaning anything newer?
sbi
sbi
@Aardvark I find that surprising, September has been gone for a while, after all.
@zuberuber That is, pretty much any language?
I heard C is perfect for hardware programming
14:09
C++ is same for hardware programming.
As is C++, provided you have a compiler for the platform.
A bit more magic switches, but it's fine.
there's no reason to use C if you can use C++.
user1357851
@R.MartinhoFernandes Pedantic :p
@DeadMG That.
14:09
@DeadMG That's a big if on embedded hardware.
maybe, but it's still quite true.
@FredOverflow I doubt that. Embedded hardware is usually small, so you cannot waste it with big ifs.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow I have always found Bjarne a very responsive email writer. He usually replied within minutes, sometimes within hours, and never longer than half a day. I think I have yet to have an email conversation with him that did not end with a mail from him to me.
big ifs probably more efficient than small ifs, no?
@R.MartinhoFernandes You silly, a big "if", not a big if ;)
14:11
Thanks guys. Also, I noticed on top right side there is C++ and C++11. What's difference between those 2?
none
C++11 is 2011 version of standard.
@FredOverflow You are not allowed to use a variable name more than one time for different types within the same function/method. I don't know of the details but essentially it's that.
That is, for the time being, C++ = C++11.
until C++14 comes out.
14:11
@sbi It's a shame he didn't last longer on stack overflow :(
@FredOverflow Varies so wildly across the market you can't make any kind of sweeping generalizations. RISC and Realtime OSes maybe, getting into super low level and you don't have anywhere near enough ROM to store the C++ STD lib.
sbi
sbi
@zuberuber One is the language, and the other is the language according to the current version of the standard.
user1804599
C++ is C++11, C++03 is C++03.
@DeadMG That's what people usually mean by "for the time being", y'know.
14:12
also, if I learn C++ there is any point to learning Java?
user1804599
There is never a point in learning Java.
hahaha
Oh boy, here go the flamewars :)
user1804599
Java is terrible.
user1357851
more jobs in Java, go figure
14:13
flamewars implies that Java has any defenders
user1804599
It is almost as horrible as PHP.
54
A: C++ as a first language

DevSolarI don't understand why people still confuse "language" with "library". (Referring to the linked answer.) So what if C++ doesn't have a "native" concept of audio? There are lots of libraries out there, which you can readily use with C++, and which are probably better suited to your specific needs ...

at least, here
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow If you want to discuss with him more regularly, look into comp.lang.c++.moderated. About a few years ago (when I still spent significant time there), he would chime in once in a while to participate.
@Aardvark Almost.
14:13
C++ won't be my first language
I know Python
...
user1804599
Python. <3
@sbi I can't afford to use usenet, I already spend way too much time in front of the computer :)
sbi
sbi
@zuberuber You also seem to speak English.
That doesn't prevent you from reading, does it?
user1804599
14:14
My first language was Ruby. :/
Bjarne is such a cool guy
If you've read, you'd know that I wanted you to read that part about java.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Oh, I don't think you'd need to use your computer for that. ISTR an Android Usenet client.
I started with C with classes and later went to C++. Everything else than C++ sucks <3
14:15
@sbi I don't have any mobile hardware worth mentioning.
@Griwes You literally started with C with classes? Wow. You must be old.
@FredOverflow, with C with classes called "C++"
What? When exactly did you start?
user1804599
I did Ruby, Objective-C, C++, Python in that order. Now I'm learning Haskell.
You will never be bored with Haskell.
@FredOverflow, huh, 2006, the very beginnings.
14:16
@Griwes thanks for link.

see you guys, and thanks
@Griwes C with classes was 1979-1983 :)
user1804599
@FredOverflow says the Haskell avatar guy. :P
@FredOverflow, I call writing C in C++ "c with classes"
sbi
sbi
My first language was BASIC. That would have been some 30 years ago, I guess. I then learned (Z80) assembler. Then Pascal. Then Ada, C++, C. I got my feet wet in Prolog, LISP, and a few other ones. Then, I think, C#. I might have forgotten some, though.
user1804599
@Griwes I call writing C in C++ "moronic" and "brain dead", and you are "butt-ugly" if you do it.
14:17
because it essentially boils down to that.
@FredOverflow, I was given one "awesome" book, called "C++Builder 6" :D
@sbi I also started with BASIC. Seems to be quite popular in Germany :)
sbi
sbi
@Griwes In a tweet, Jared Parson called it C+-. I liked that.
user1357851
Our university invented the language, so the first language I have learnt is called ... Blue
@Griwes Hint: If your C++ book is not on the list, it probably sucks.
user1357851
now I feel like a guinea pig
14:18
@sbi Walter Bright calls it "C Plus" :)
@FredOverflow, I know, that "awesome" was sarcasm.
C+-, good one.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow There wasn't much else for beginners in the early/mid-80s to learn. At least, there wasn't on my side of the Iron Curtain.
user1357851
C++ = C+1?
C++ = C++
@sbi I also learned assembler after BASIC, but it wasn't Z80 (never got to that), but 6502.
user1357851
14:20
since # is a wildcard, C# = C (whatever)?
Since when is # a wildcard?
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow A 6502 machine was very hard to come by for us back then. :(
@sbi Never had a Commodore 64?
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Huh?
user1804599
@Griwes UB
14:20
I only know * and ? as wildcards.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow No, the first computer I owned for myself was a 286 with 640kB RAM and a 20MB HD.
20 MB, wow. That must have been impossible to fill up with real data :)
That would have been about 60 floppy disks. More than I ever had.
Oh shit, it's already 3pm, and I ate nothing but crap. Gotta go cook. See ya!
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Actually, in the early 90s, it wasn't that hard anymore.
user1804599
My first computer had a 20GB HDD.
user1804599
14:35
And it ran Windows 95.
My first PC was running on MS-DOS 5.0 and Windows 3.11 :)
@Aardvark 2 GB HDD, Win 95 as well.
A FANCY v.92 modem built in as well.
user1804599
My second computer had 60GB HDD and ran Windows XP.
user1804599
My third computer had a 320GB HDD and ran OS X.
And my forth computer had 500GB HDD and ran OS X.
@Aardvark Second computer in my house ran Windows ME :D
14:39
Urff
user1804599
I heard Windows ME was terrible.
Like many things of that era, it wasn't as bad to use as everyone claims
It really was.
I do have a distinct memory of being able to BSOD on demand though, but looking back it was more likely a driver issue.
9x kernel was shit.
14:40
Comparing ME to 2000 was a world of difference though. My father picked up a copy of the new OS and I installed it. Instant performance boost.
@CatPlusPlus Quite. NT 5.0 was a major improvement.
@sbi that twitpic url: bccx58 - borland c compiler = batshit? (twitter.com/tweetsbi/status/267636119347281922)
note to self
sbi
sbi
@sehe That twitter fuckup. I am fighting with twitter every time I want to post two pix at once. This time I lost.
when listening to music from phone, it is impossible to control it with your keyboard
Alright, haven't been able to write this tuple class for 20 minutes. Time for a nap, later folks.
14:48
ME was, (thankfully), the last of the line of shite that BSODded when you looked at it. Any sort of development effort was rewarded by a continual sequence of reboots. Abysmal. W2K was stable - it had a kernel that worked.
sbi
sbi
14:59
For those of you who are into electronics, and in London, here's a map of the tubes for you.
@Aardvark You can't spell meh with ME...
Nov 18 '10 at 22:09, by sbi
@FredOverflow You're all free to find out my identity, and if you've been a regular in c.l.c++.m during the times I have, it's actually not that hard. But please do so in private. I have been very open with my opinions for more than a decade, and I now value my privacy.
Feb 23 at 10:28, by sbi
@MrAnubis After many years of posting under my real name all over Usenet, I have learned to value online privacy.
sbi
sbi
Ah, but what you said seemed to imply I restarted here. That could have been my fault, but it could also have been you telling it wrong.
@sbi Ok, I can see how my wording could be improved. Will do next time, I hope
15:08
you hope?
lol
> The D programming language. Modern convenience. Modeling power. Native efficiency. The D Conference 2013 funding is underway through November 21st. Pledge your support starting at only $1!
Any love for D? :)
0
A: Code duplication between typedefs and explicit instantiations

GabrielI ask my self, why do you actually write a .cpp file as you have templates and they should go either all in the header file or in a seprarate file e.g ".icc", which holds the stuff from the cpp file. I am not sure but tempalates definitions should always NOT be in a compilation unit. See -> Stor...

"I ask myself", "I am not sure"... interesting "answer" :)
you heard it, the puppy said it.
15:20
@DeadMG No to D or no to bacon flavored coffee?
both
coffee is bad, and adding bacon would surely make it far worse
and definitely no love for D.
shush, coffee is awesome
0
A: Code duplication between typedefs and explicit instantiations

DeadMGUse a macro. You could write a header like I_HATE_MACROS(binary_operation<std::plus<unsigned>, '+'>, addition) I_HATE_MACROS(binary_operation<std::multiplies<unsigned>, '*'>, multiplication) Then you can do #define I_HATE_MACROS(a, b) typedef a b; Or #define I_HATE_...

15:23
I_HATE_MACROS <--- LOL
That's called x-macro, and C people use that. Shame on you.
the self-documenting macro name
so what is actually bad about macros? I've heard many times they are bad, but besides their global scoping, I don't know what else is bad about them.
@TonyTheLion lol @picture in the picture
15:25
They're primitive text replacement.
@TonyTheLion Basically, a good part of it is the lack of scoping.
@bamboon well spotted :)
you can't prevent some other guy's fucked up macro from replacing half your shit.
cpp is sort-of functional, but with so many restrictions you can't even do any fun stuff without ton of crap.
and if it does, good luck debugging that
and the preprocessor specification on when it expands macros in other macros and stuff like that is hideous and arcane
15:26
right, yes I have experience with macros lack of scoping messing everything up
witness windows.h
indeed
but really that's far from the worst of it
at least you get a clean compile error
Source-level metaprogramming should work on AST level
Of course, C++ has a terrible grammar and it probably wouldn't work so well
where does it sit now?
token level, for preprocessor, and semantic, for templates.
15:27
Template Haskell owns.
you can wring Haskell into almost any conversation, can't you?
@CatPlusPlus Just use LISP then.
It's just the best metaprogramming system, with Lisp macros being close second.
@FredOverflow No.
Not now, not ever.
@TonyTheLion "My brother has Caltech on his CV." -- "Cool, Haskell!"
@CatPlusPlus How about Clojure then?
Still Lisp.
15:31
lol
@CatPlusPlus CLOS?
Don't care about CLOS.
Template Haskell it is then!
15:34
cute
make me un-see it, please
15:47
Hello!
Is there anyone here who would be willing to help with a little advice about Linux and parallel programming?
Linux is great, and parallel programming is hard. You're welcome.
Hehe. :)
I had some more specific questions in mind, if you don't mind. :)
just ask
If you decide to ask, am I allowed to answer? Am I even allowed to ask about that?
Hi every1 :P
15:54
OK. So... I'd like to implement a library in C++ that does FastCGI with all the bells and whistles. Since it will be used to handle web requests, it's only natural that the consumers of the library will spawn several threads/processes to handle them. At the same time I don't want to tie down the consumers to a particular parallel processing model (like 1 thread per processor or something).
They should be able to write their main application loop in whatever way they want, and implement their parallel processing in whatever way they want (whether it's multiple threads, processes, or a mix of both).
Can this be even done?
I don't think every1 is here at the moment.
Don't write webapps in C++. :cripes:
I'm quite familiar with Windows model of programming, and could do it easily there, but Linux is a strange land to me...
Probably only C, assembly and PHP are worse for webapps than C++.
Cat Plus Plus, would you answer my question concerning linux c programming? I'm very beginner with all that linux stuff and you seem to know more than I do :P
@CatPlusPlus Why? I'm thinking about doing it in near future, writing template parser that works with polymorphic printable objects as values for template variables seems fun.
15:58
It's only fun if you're a masochist.
@CatPlusPlus - maybe, but that's another discussion, probably best left for another time.
What you want to write is a FastCGI-aware socket wrapper, and nothing beyond that.

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