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08:00
@TonyTheLion inneresting, i guess that's also on the isocpp site thingie?
I donno, I haven't checked
08:12
@Xeo I was kidding, don't try this at home.
08:25
@TonyTheLion skip the LibTooling talk imo. The speaker was horrid. You're better off just browsing Clang's website
it's days like these I wish the coffee at work was ok
@jalf ah thanks for the advice
But I am still unable to get it :/
why use typedef ?
any easy method to make me under stand
@DextOr because then you don't have to use struct in the future, when you refer to it
In C, structs live in a separate "namespace". A struct foo isn't referred to as foo, but as struct foo
So for convenience, you can create a typedef from, for example, struct foo to foo, effectively bringing it into the "default" namespace
wait
what is this NAMESPACE @jalf :'Crying
08:32
> naıve
do deleted questions retain the comments for those who are able to see said deleted questions?
Note the quotes. It's not a namespace in the C++ sense
but just in the sense that struct names are kept in a different "pool", and you can only access them by prefixing with struct
I don't think the C standard actually uses the word "namespace", but that's effectively what it is
So we could just call it "the struct namespace" if you like :)
ok let me read it again thx for that info @jalf
anyone able to help me with the method of listing files found here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365200%28v=vs.85%29.aspx ?

i'm saving the file name to a packet using sprintf(packet.message,"%s", f.cFileName);, the packet is a char array. when i print said packet all i get is the first character of the file names
If you create a struct named foo, and you then refer to a type named foo, you'll get a compile error, because foo is not a type. You declared a type called foo in the "struct namespace", so you can refer to it as struct foo. But it doesn't exist in the "normal" namespace, so you won't find it if you just type foo
08:37
@jalf I think you've over done it, your starting to repeat yourself
Aren't I always? :)
@jalf never seen it before with such a short cycle time though :P
Anyway, it was intentional that time. I was trying to rephrase it so it made more sense for @DextOr. :)
Awwww :'D
ergh... why do to people lock spreadsheet pages :(
08:45
anyone?
@Portaljacker read the newbie hints
@thecoshman ?
typedef struct{ char name; }emp_list;
^^^ is "emp_list" an object ? And where is the name of created Structure
@Portaljacker ¬_¬ on the starboard to the right... kind of obvious
@Portaljacker I can't be sure, but it sounds like you have a bug in your code. I can tell because my code once had a bug too. If you want a more detailed answer, you might have to show us your code (and preferably, as a SO question, not here)
08:49
ok then, i'll link to it when i post
@DextOr struct { char name; } is valid, and creates an unnamed struct :)
@jalf now there's a logical fallacy
in other words, it refers to a type. So you have typedef <sometype> emp_list;, which should make more sense to you :)
@jalf then how can we call "name" variable in my example .....
struct struct_name { char sname; }emp;
as in above we do it as emp.sname = "fooname";
@DextOr don't forget C strings need a char* not a single char
08:56
ya actually it was an array "char sname[10];"
0
Q: Filenames truncate to only show first character

PortaljackerI'm following this guide from MSDN on how to list the files in a directory (i'm using the current directory). In my case I need to put the information in the message part of my packet (char array of size 1016) to send it to the client. When I print packet.message on both the client and server onl...

there we go
geh, why is excell showing me the formula I typed, rather then actually running it?
Xeo
Xeo
09:13
@LucDanton Oh, but I actually had a good idea to select the right indices pack. :(
@thecoshman Did you forget to stick a = in front of it?
@DextOr once you have an instance of that type, you can refer to it as normal. If emp is a variable of your unnamed struct's type, then you can do emp.sname
@DextOr that would be defining a struct of type struct struct_name, and a variable emp of type struct struct_name
@Xeo no, but strangely retyping it worked. There was no white space at the start, but it was acting like there was
A struct is basically defined like this: struct [optional name] {definition} [optional variable definition], so you can give it a name, but you don't have to, and you can immediately create a variable of the newly defined type, but you don't have to :)
and a typedef works with any type, so you can do typedef int i, or you can do typedef struct foo foo (to alias the name foo in the "struct namespace" into the name foo in the "normal" namespace. Or you can do typedef struct {char* name; } foo to alias the unnamed struct you just defined to the name foo in the "normal" namespace
can you combine typedef-ing it with creating an instance of it?
typedef struct { void* win;} eveil lies;
for instance?
... but you probably shouldn't :)
Xeo
Xeo
A typedef is kinda like * and &, sticking to the name right after it.
bah, C
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf There's a lot of things you probably shouldn't do in C or C++. :P
might just be easier to say "do nothing, except this and this"
09:38
pastie.org/5400270 link lists using arrays want to ask something :/
insert(&l, position, element); what wd be the value of &l
address of what ...... ?
How "start" is connected to struct ?....if not then why its stuck with data and count i.e start->count or start->data[temp] :&
I know start->count is same as (*start).count;
But where instance start of stuct created in program to be used with count ?
Xeo
Xeo
Please, get a good book. This is way too basic, really.
How to Program in C++, by Deitel & Deitel isn't there
09:54
Probably because it's not good.
I think the way that Deitel's teach is cool, you should take a look
^ this ?
can anyone tell me how to initialize something like the following:
`class B { int& count; B() {}};`

I tried making it

`B(): count(int(0))` ,`B(): count(new int(0))` but to no avail.
@soandos count needs to be assigned to an existing address
Woah, the dude who makes the covers is weird
09:59
@Neil is there a a way to construct an address to an instance of 0 or 1 that way?
@soandos Try B(int &num) : count(num) { }
^ this
@soandos No
@Neil I don't want the parameter to be passed
@soandos Not unless you pass an integer with value 0 or 1
10:00
well I would assume default arg would work also
@soandos If you are talking about references and pointers, someone has to be the owner.. who is the owner if it isn't your class?
so something like &new int(0) is still not going to work?
@soandos You can make a static storage and allocate an int there, but that may or may not make sense in your context
@kbok that would not work for me
@soandos You want a pointer to an integer with value 0 or 1? Then do this, have an int count and a reference int& count_ref
Then inside the constructor, assign count to 1 or 0, and count_ref to the value of count
That doesn't make a lot of sense, but that sounds to be what you want
10:02
@Neil I want to create a ref to zero or one on object creation
@soandos int* count; ... B: count(NULL) { }
but it can't be done as a reference?
@soandos Reference isn't a reference unless it is a valid pointer to an object
but new int(0) creates an object
Pointers can be NULL and not be valid
10:04
optional<int&> maybe
OR, you can tell us what you are trying to achieve
@kbok I want to prevent someone using the code from making it some other number
I am doing to implement a smart pointer (for an assignment)
@soandos const :D
@soandos now, that's bad.
@BartekBanachewicz what do you mean?
Xeo
Xeo
10:05
A non-default-constructible smart pointer isn't very smart.
And one which can't change what it refers to is outright dumb.
It is default constructable
it it can...
this is just one of the constructors
The hell hounds have awoken, @soandos! Run! Save yourself!
Xeo
Xeo
1 min ago, by soandos
@kbok I want to prevent someone using the code from making it some other number
@Xeo through the contructor
Xeo
Xeo
Question: Do you mean anyone besides the smart pointer?
10:06
@Xeo yes
Xeo
Xeo
Make it private...
@soandos you mean to make it private?
It already is private
So it can't be modified outside the class
It has to be an int& (as per the spec)
I need to initialize it to 0 or 1
10:07
Do you mean it has to return reference to int in the accessor?
@BartekBanachewicz, no I mean the type has to be int&
I'm truly confused
in my class I have a int& count
in the constructor, I want it to get bound to 0
or 1
Soandos, if it is a reference, it references something.. you can do what you're talking about if it references your own int
But it must reference something
10:08
have you tried : count(0)?
@BartekBanachewicz, that may have worked (simplicity wins it seems)
Anyways, I'd like to spawn a new thread. I want to supply boost with my application. Does it even make sense?
@soandos what do you mean by may have worked?
@BartekBanachewicz I have a lot of compile errors, and that one seems to have vanished
good luck in fixing others, then. don't overcomplicate
thanks
10:10
@BartekBanachewicz No ? Why ?
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz That doesn't work with a reference.
@soandos Why this reference to 0 or 1 stuff ?
Xeo
Xeo
@soandos: I think you're thoroughly confused and we are too because you're not telling us all the details.
hm, indeed @Xeo. error: invalid initialization of non-const reference of type ‘int&’ from a temporary of type ‘int’
@kbok I want the refcount of my smart pointer to be initialized to 1 when it is given a raw pointer
and 0 if it was not given a pointer at all
the type of refcount is int&
Does that make sense?
10:12
@kbok Because boost is massive as hell. + requiring windows users to compile anything isn't very smart
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, you want to supply boost with the source code ?
Maybe let's say it the other way. I have an application that uses boost. How do I distribute?
@kbok yea, one part is the library
I might post it as a question actually, but I think I'm missing something fairly simple
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Just assume Boost to be present.
@Xeo huh?
@BartekBanachewicz Don't worry, this is actually not simple at all
Xeo
Xeo
10:14
And tell the users it's an external dependency.
@Xeo Is it sensible?
@BartekBanachewicz I'd say no. For users of your application, you should supply everything it needs
That's why I'm confused.
For developers, if you're making a library or something, don't bundle dependencies, and just tell them that they need boost
@BartekBanachewicz You should provide a full source + dependencies for your users OR (preferred) a way to fetch the dependencies
Xeo
Xeo
10:15
@jalf He said he wanted to distribute the source, as far as I understood.
Well then, what are you trying to do exactly? :)
You want to make things easy to people who want to build, and asking them to manually fetch and build the dependencies is not
With the executable, you should supply any dlls it depends on. With the source, I'd just distribute the source itself
@jalf +1. However, I'm confused about all the boost .libs
And so the discussion begins that will last well after the last post mentioned by the one who started the argument :P
10:17
@BartekBanachewicz You should know what you need in boost. Often you don't need any binary.
@kbok 'libboost_filesystem-vc110-mt-gd-1_52.lib' :(
Xeo
Xeo
@kbok Boost is basically the second standard library. Really, you should just be able to assume it's there.
@BartekBanachewicz Oh that. Yeah, you have to supply a boost source tree AND the build system. But you don't have to supply all the source tree. Just the relevant part.
@kbok but the sources are like 1% in size of the binaries
@Xeo Not necessarily the version you want. Also it's a pain to setup the paths and shit on windows.
10:18
I did copy only relevant source files. But now it compiled I got to link and BAM!
@BartekBanachewicz Ask the user to build the binaries, but provide them the sources necessary to do so.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Use bcp to extract relevant files.
@kbok The paths are a pain to set up? Really?
@Xeo kind of.
Xeo
Xeo
I don't think so at all.
Ever used a cmake project depending on boost ?
Xeo
Xeo
10:20
Well fuck cmake :D
Well, I'd like the user to just download the archive, let it be +100MB of my code
Xeo
Xeo
(Aka, no, I didn't.)
and hit Build. And everything works.
Consider yourself lucky then :)
@BartekBanachewicz I think you should have a "fetch-packages" script in the source tree that gets and build the dependencies. That way is the user has what you need he just build against that, else he fetches and builds the dependencies.
So I should build the required boost libs myself when building my project for the first time?
10:22
Yes.
@BartekBanachewicz they're only used during compilation. You don't need to distribute them unless you expect the user to compile your program
@jalf Well, I'd say the application part is pretty much settled. I wrote this badly, the problem is of course in distribution of the library that uses boost
Also @Xeo, I have a boost install on all my machines but they get old quickly - even the last version of my package manager is already old.
@kbok Is there anything I could base on? Or I just have to close myself in a room for two weeks and read bjam's documentation to build only what I need
Xeo
Xeo
bjam sucks. :(
10:26
@BartekBanachewicz I don't know. I suppose this is a good time to start asking questions on stackoverflow.
add another build tool to the pro-forma suckage list
I could always get rid of all non-inline boost libraries :P
0
Q: Invalid parameter passed to C runtime function with QTest

user1504712I am developping a Qt project with Qt creator, all works fine, but when i came to the unit testing part using QTest, after compilation I get the error "Invalid parameter passed to C runtime function" can anyone help me to find the source of the problem? is it due to the use of cstdio functions or...

^ another french sucker
user1357851
@kbok it ain't even close to C++
"Fichier is a class i created with a methos load."
10:30
Well, no shit sherlock. :p
@kbok Yes he makes weird covers with flies, I think he has a fetish
well, computer programming courses are starting to get into C++ phase. about time
@kbok site du zéro?
Xeo
Xeo
youtube.com/… I feel like I remember the melody at this point from an English song... but I can't remember which. :<
Or maybe not even English. Atleast non-Japanese.
10:37
I have a HW about Automatas, and the funny thing is that my teacher couldn't solve any example by himself :S
Xeo
Xeo
@AlbertoBonsanto Most definitly not, since I despise Naruto. :)
@LucDanton Why the quotes? Was that to mark sarcasm or something? Just making sure.
I don't like it either but I like the song :)
@AlbertoBonsanto lol
@LucDanton While I don't oppose the idea in general, I don't think the current state is good enough for that.
10:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't want improvement in the form of e.g. more stuff going on with std::basic_string.
there is currently a proposal, which is a work in progress and written by me, to address Unicode support
the isocpp forums seem to be down right now though so I can't find it
any one had experience with clearcase here? any idea how you can steal the reserved status of a file so that you can check in?
@sehe A tetris player walks into a bar and yells "Where the hell have you been when I needed you?" at it.
6
@FredOverflow Oh gawd, that's awesome.
@DeadMG Everything is working fine.
10:52
not for me
you open the proposals forum and it's just empty space
Xeo
Xeo
Same
anyways, isocpp.org/forums/… is the current proposal topic
What can I say? You guys suck.
not updated in a while though because, y'know, shit.
@DeadMG "Lookup in unordered_map and unordered_set by hash"
10:53
cock, really?
balls
musta pasted the same link twice by ASCIIdent.
user1182183
==
@R.MartinhoFernandes awesomely awful :)
> Would you mind and watch your language? You're not at your mother's, so please at least pretend that you have some basic manners.
10:56
I know all you can see is white space, but what can I do?
cheers
Oh well, so pointing out that standardizing term for RAII is idiotic is now only allowed at my mother's.
@Griwes huh?
34 secs ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
I know all you can see is white space, but what can I do?
Xeo
Xeo
10:57
OMG, the puppy tweeted.
tweetomatic
@R.MartinhoFernandes link?
if only I could actually load the forum which had the latest decisions in it
then I would be able to write them into the proposal
Time to do some more work on that Unicode proposal.
@DeadMG Can't you just read them in your mailbox?
It's a mailing list, after all.
11:04
good point
@JerryCoffin "small and simple and doesn't do anything that's clearly wrong"? I'm flattered.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG: If you have a Google account, you can just use their Groups directly: groups.google.com/a/isocpp.org/forum/#!forum/std-proposals
It's a terrible interface anyway.
Xeo
Xeo
@Griwes That guy is a nutjob anyways.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I prefer it over the other mailing lists I've used.
OMG, someone not me reported a bug on ogonek!
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman You're slow.
what's the name of those regex thingies like \w?
Xeo
Xeo
Pattern?
Character classes.
Xeo
Xeo
11:19
Hm, I wonder if the static for proposal would obsolete my "extended pack expansion" one, depending on how it's specified.
@DeadMG You may want to look at UTS#18, btw unicode.org/reports/tr18
Xeo
Xeo
If it's like BOOST_PP_REPEAT, aka actually repeating what's written in it, it might.
Although it might look weird.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is exactly where I am right now.
Just FTR, I don't know of any level 2 implementation around.
ANy goof book about automatas? deterministic and not deterministic? I cna't solve an excercice
11:25
@AlbertoBonsanto Goof books all around
I think of the mainstream engines, only Perl supports \X (match whole grapheme cluster). But then it does not have \b{g} and friends. AFAIK.
hmm
I didn't look at it too closely, but UTS-18 Level 2 just seems to me to be like "Normal regular expressions but we use the boundary analysis algorithms.", essentially
@DeadMG There are some more complex things. Look up the property wildcards things.
(It's regexception for properties, basically)
Does anyone mind explaining to me what could be happening if auto a = someType(b); fails to compile, but auto a = new someType(b); works just fine?
Not without knowing someType nor the errors.
Xeo
Xeo
11:29
private/deleted copy/move constructor
the error is use of deleted function
why would a function be deleted? there is nothing const or ref in the class
@DeadMG Oh, and matching with canonical equivalence too. That one complicates engines a bunch.
@Xeo You get the prize
Xeo
Xeo
Why not just someType a(b);?
@soandos there is a non-copyable member or base?
11:31
@Xeo because I had a brain fart and forgot about it
Xeo
Xeo
@soandos const or reference members don't prevent a class from being copy-constructed
So, basically, I'd recommend sticking to level 1. Requiring full level 2 conformance is not likely to happen.
And level 3, ahahahah, lol.
yeah, don't think that I intended on that.
Oh, I never checked ICU's regexes.
11:34
what level conformance are they?
> ICU Regular Expressions conform to Unicode Technical Standard #18 , Unicode Regular Expressions, level 1, and in addition include Default Word boundaries and Name Properties from level 2.
Nevermind.
"Haskell is a medium-sized dog" ^
is he a dog? i thought it was a programming language!
derp
user1357851
12:03
HEHEHE
I have a question is this correct? i.imgur.com/qFSyA.png , If it is why in this post they say the opposite. stackoverflow.com/questions/12718929/…
Sees new question. Thinks "Nice, let's get some reps". Reads question. Question is crappy. :(
@AlbertoBonsanto Where does it say the opposite?
Xeo
Xeo
Seriously, the BGL documentation is confusing.
he says that it's not good
Xeo
Xeo
I just want to know the parameter types of out_edges. :(
that you can't use strn functions
Xeo
Xeo
12:14
Btw @R.MartinhoFernandes, I don't think your idea works for the graph question.
@Xeo A graph and its vertex descriptor (not in this order).
@Xeo Why not?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, I meant the types exactly (reference, value, blah)
Hi all
Xeo
Xeo
> otherwise, begin-expr and end-expr are begin(__range) and end(__range), respectively, where begin and end are looked up with argument-dependent lookup (3.4.2). For the purposes of this name lookup, namespace std is an associated namespace.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ^
Clang agrees that the names are not found.
Has any body created a plug for Mozilla? Actually i have to run an ActiveX control in Mozilla .
Xeo
Xeo
12:17
Note that they're not looked up with unqualified lookup
Can any body suggest me
@Xeo boost::graph_traits<G>::vertex_descriptor.
The docs are very simple to follow, btw.
Xeo
Xeo
And for the graph itself? G&?
Anything that models the IncidenceGraph concept.
@Xeo Meh, drop them in the boost namespace!
Xeo
Xeo
Rather, std namespace. :P
12:19
@Xeo That's not allowed.
Xeo
Xeo
Exactly.
But boost is fair game. (joke)
Xeo
Xeo
And putting it in boost won't help, since std::pair is not a part of that.
@Xeo But the iterators are?
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, right, I forget ADL also associates the namespace of template arguments
12:21
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes That doesn't help... Reference, const-reference, value?
(Or just link me to the docs)
I can agree with you that the navigation on that thing sucks, though.
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, that's as far as I came.
And by "sucks" I mean "does not fucking exist".
Xeo
Xeo
So it doesn't say whether g is passed by reference or anything.
12:24
Just G&& and forward it...
Xeo
Xeo
Meh, I'll just assume non-const ref
What?
lol, and now there's people asking to define RAII in the standard. WTF are they smoking.
@Xeo Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaait.
I have the shortest solution!
Xeo
Xeo
Show me.
0
A: Replace BGL iterate over vertexes with "pure" C++11 alternative?

R. Martinho FernandesSince out_edges returns a pair, you can simply provide begin and end overloads for std::pair that can be found by ADL. Luckily, such overloads already exist in Boost.Range. #include <boost/range/begin.hpp> #include <boost/range/end.hpp>

Xeo
Xeo
heh
12:29
I could make it one line, if I wanted :P
I like how you defined Invoke even for a single use. That thing is really nice.
Xeo
Xeo
Well, originally I planned to use it for OutEdgeIterator too, but eh... They should've taken the Boost.Range approach and done boost::out_edge_iterator<G>::type.
Can someone explain why you cannot use a using declaration on a nested class at block scope?
Thank you, after I included it (full source code: pastebin.com/hrh6ierX) I still get errors: pastebin.com/FKtW5cgG :( — danilo2 51 secs ago
Ugh.
Whereas I want to know the motivation and which section in the standard demands that
Xeo
Xeo
Wait, nvm.
12:37
I'm not even going to look at it.
Xeo
Xeo
Good question why boost::begin and boost::end aren't found..
Oh, wait, I think I know.
boost::detail::out_edge_iter.
I was afraid of that :(
Xeo
Xeo
The devil's in the detail::s.
I'll make a note to not return detail:: iterators on ogonek, because it sucks.
Boost is the substandard library ...
No range-based for, no moves, ...
It has all that #ifdef crap to support compilers old as heck, but a couple of #ifdefs for C++11 stuff? No...
> However I have the need to derive from the derived classes too.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, my code's leading to errors too, it seems.
12:47
lol, you suck.
I didn't learn C first, either. I did C++/CLI before I found out what real C++ was D:
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Indeed I do.
I think I was in the midst of writing that when my brain paused and switched to some other part.
But seriously, the OP could've looked over the code himself for a bit...
@Xeo do you ever speak and type and the same time, and then end up typing what you're saying instead of what you wanted to type?
Xeo
Xeo
@melak47 Too often to admit, actually.
12:49
I often write and type at the same time.
@R.MartinhoFernandes d'oh
Maybe because I use typing as a means of writing.
:P
@R.MartinhoFernandes sweet potatoes
@sehe Would be nice if it worked.
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe Sweet burninated potatoes?
12:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh doesn't? @Xeo something ADL induced?
Xeo
Xeo
Just follow the discussion after the link
@sehe The iterators are in a detail namespace :(
@Luc do you know if clang is correct in rejecting {} when initializing an initializer_list?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes As in?

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