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15:00
@sbi kbok has a drumming machine?
@Cicada lol
"There are no words used to describe hats designed to cover butts" - sbi
@Cicada Probably. Then at least I'm not the only one.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah? What's it?
@EtiennedeMartel I concur. My residence is full of alcoholics.
If the top bit is 1, the right shift is going to smear unpleasantly... — Jon Skeet 53 secs ago
Skeet has spoken to me
15:01
@sbi I could have sworn you have said "have a cookie" to me before. I realized that now I could actually claim it. But chat search is not willing to cough up the evidence.
Okay so should I go for UWTF-8 or UWTF-16?
@Pubby to tell you that you syck
Is he talking about it being signed or something?
@Cicada UTF-32
Because both encodings look like a horrible mess to me.
@kbok That's too heavy
Hey! That's my answer!
;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well you didn't answer previously so I'll put all the credit on kbok. HA
@Cicada I remember reading somewhere that the biggest book on Earth has like 4 million characters. That's essentially 16 MBs with UTF-32. Text is not heavy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes an eye for an eye
@EtiennedeMartel Those were my calculations for the KJV bible.
sbi
sbi
15:05
Anyway, I'm outta here to pick up them kids. Bye!
@R.MartinhoFernandes See? I knew that made sense.
There are no words used to describe hats designed to cover butts #somethingwentterriblywrong
@kbok Well, he just did. It's a hat that covers a butt.
What about "shitface hat"?
you can't throw a std::bad_alloc("a msg"); in C++11 anymore?
but why??
15:06
It's much heavier.
You can't even lift it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's two words
So no wonder it's not throwable anymore.
Maybe in German that could be one single word.
If hats are headgear then butt hats are buttgear
@TonyTheLion Such a constructor would need to allocate storage for the string. But it is thrown when there's no more storage left. Do the math.
15:07
throw bad_alloc("ho hisse");
user1804599
I don't see the point of exception messages. You use the types to differentiate between different kinds of exceptions and their reasons.
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait... but there's something like that in the code I'm looking at
how did that ever make sense then?
Why not a bad_alloc(const char[]&) ?
user1804599
15:08
@TonyTheLion the code you are looking at is wrong. Or you are looking wrongly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It could use the stack
Do you even liftM?
user1804599
@Pubby how?
@Aardvark actually,
__CLR_OR_THIS_CALL bad_alloc(const char *_Message) _THROW0()
		: exception(_Message, 1)
		{	// construct from message string with no memory allocation
		}
user1804599
auto* foo = new std::bad_alloc("msg"); // Stack? Where?
class bad_alloc {
  char my_shitty_buffer[1024];
};
15:08
@kbok With the right syntax you mean? Because there's no guarantee the array still exists where the exception will be caught.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So a bad_alloc is thrown by the runtime using some memory conjured from the Warp?
user1804599
@TonyTheLion is it private?
@Aardvark yep
it probably wasn't private in VS2010
user1804599
@Pubby that doesn't need to be on the stack. :P
else I don't know how the code compiled
15:09
@EtiennedeMartel Yes, the runtime usually has some memory on the side for exceptions. Your description is not entirely inaccurate.
Exception throwing is really messy.
All right. Well, I'm gonna get to work. See y'all!
@EtiennedeMartel Thanks for, once again, making my subtle references obvious.
user1804599
Bye.
@TonyTheLion That sounds like a MSVC extension.
@R.MartinhoFernandes which they now made private. Urgh MS.
15:11
@TonyTheLion See, that's what you get for not using standard C++.
I didn't write that code
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes actually, it might still work if the amount of memory needed for the string is smaller than the amount of memory you tried to allocate with new[].
@TonyTheLion Yes, but you learned the lesson :P
@Aardvark Yeah, it might. But the reasoning to not include the ctor is still valid because it also might not.
@R.MartinhoFernandes An interesting read, thanks.
Wow, you called "interesting read" to a rant of mine? I think I suck at blogging.
;)
15:15
I would have expected you by now to realize how much I enjoy rants.
user1804599
NSString, IIRC, stores and allows you to manipulate what you call "text". You cannot choose the internal encoding used, though; it always uses "an array of Unicode characters," according to the documentation.
I should probably read the rest of your blog once I learn C++.
@DeadMG Well, C is fucking unsafe, but that's still better than unsafe fucking :)
hi guys, does anybody of you know of some nice and pretty C++ project that looks like managed (using smart pointers and stuff)
I need it for a demo
@Aardvark Oh that's cool. I shall look it up later tonight.
15:17
> nice and pretty
> C++
pick one (hint: don't pick C++)
@Cicada Pretty?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thank you.
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes The mutable version of NSString is NSMutableString, FYI.
Do you even have Apple's express authorization to write their class names on this chat?
user1804599
No, and I don't care.
15:19
@Aardvark Their lawyers do
@mizi_sk I guess all my code is like that. I am not sure how good it would be for a demo, since I don't actually need smart pointers much.
@Aardvark I'm calling Apple support right now for copyright infringement.
Also Hi Not-so-dead @Cicada
user1804599
@Borgleader I don't care about their lawyers either. :P
user1804599
@Cicada I don't care, again.
15:20
@R.MartinhoFernandes can you share?
@Aardvark I see, I see. You think you're not part of the system?
user1804599
@Cicada nope.
user1804599
I'm an aardvark. The system only covers humans.
@Cicada I'm an adult.
15:20
@Aardvark The SYSTEM
And despite popular belief phones cannot have robots as children.
@R.MartinhoFernandes This always cracks me up :D
user1804599
I think my array-layout tree in C is finally done.
user1804599
But I gotta go, see you later!
what IDE do you professionals use? for a Windows guy
user1804599
15:22
Sublime Text 2 and Terminal.
@R.MartinhoFernandes thx, will look at it
@Borgleader and any plugins? helpers?
@Borgleader resharper or similar
@mizi_sk Visual Assist X is a common one
Depends on the language and OS I'm on. Usually VS on Windows, Qt on Linux for C++. And Notepad++ / gedit / vim for all the rest.
On VS I only use VisVim.
15:23
@mizi_sk Some people here like VAX but I think it's shit. A matter of taste IMO.
@kbok what is a hit for you?
@mizi_sk Something like a sharp blow.
Oh well brb hafta buy food.
@mizi_sk You mean shit ? Visual Assist X (VAX)
@Cicada Bring me some cookies btw, thanks
@kbok c'mon :D I am serious
@mizi_sk I'm serious, what do you mean by "hit" ?
15:25
@mizi_sk What do you mean with "managed"?
@FredOverflow I am from ActionScript / C# development, managed ... I mean memory management, not that new/delete stuff :D
@mizi_sk You probably want Visual Studio. If you can't afford that, I have found CodeLite to be a nice alternative.
@FredOverflow There's always VS Express
I use either Sublime Text 2 + waf or Visual Studio on windows. On Linux, vim or KDevelop. The latter is awesome but still alpha stage
@DeadMG Oh, right. Forgot about that.
15:27
@FredOverflow Watered down versions of VS are available for free.
Is VS Express 2012 already out?
VS Express should be the way to go for every noob
@FredOverflow yes
@FredOverflow Yes for a few weeks now I believe
I need to download it, my VS install is broken :(
15:31
So download it, what's the problem?
@FredOverflow VS license is not a problem (BizSpark), but do you know something better than VAX?
I doubt there is.
@mizi_sk Switch to another language and use Eclipse is not an option, I suppose? ;)
@FredOverflow Isn't there an Eclipse version for C++?
15:38
@FredOverflow I have some new guys coming in on a C++ project, and I need to make a decision how difficult is to migrate somebody from AS/C# team to that
@Borgleader There is, but it sucks. Balls.
@mizi_sk Good luck with that :)
@FredOverflow Only balls, not DC?
Direct Current?
No, something about donkeys.
Oh, I get it. Yeah, that too.
15:40
@mizi_sk It depends on the people, mostly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I bet. another option is to write the whole thing in C#, but everybody says that game engine should be in C++
@R.MartinhoFernandes ^ This?
@mizi_sk The major reason to use C++ and a game engine is to use an existing engine. If you're going to write it yourself, you may as well go with C#.
@FredOverflow what about this cock?
@TonyTheLion Not his, the donkey's.
lol, I disturbed Tony's slumber by posting a picture of a cock :)
7
@FredOverflow you have some game engine experience?
@FredOverflow but that's a cock, not a donkey
@mizi_sk Well, I wrote a Tetris once... or twice :)
15:43
There we go.
@TonyTheLion Now put the two side-by-side.
In the right order!
@FredOverflow lol :)
Next up is bull shit. Anyone up for the challenge?
Yesterday, I taught my students about the new foreach loop in C++. @DeadMG is going to kill me :)
15:44
lol
@FredOverflow Why!? And you're a teacher!?! Where?!
I'm a golden retriever
Because some people don't like it and think it's redundant with std::foreach and lambdas.
But I haven't taught them about std algorithms and lambdas and iterators yet, so... :)
@Borgleader I am from Germany. I teach in Germany.
Nobody likes std::foreach
@Pubby I do :(
7
Q: Prefer algorithms to hand-written loops?

FredOverflowWhich of the following to you find more readable? The hand-written loop: for (std::vector<Foo>::const_iterator it = vec.begin(); it != vec.end(); ++it) { bar.process(*it); } Or the algorithm invocation: #include <algorithm> #include <functional> std::for_each(vec.begin(...

@EtiennedeMartel oh god
@EtiennedeMartel omg LOL
It's impressive how the landscape looks like France's
@FredOverflow I definitely don't think so. Not with the current lambdas anyway.
15:51
@R.MartinhoFernandes I tend to agree but I can't come up with an example of something that wouldn't work with foreach+lambda that would in the new for loop.
for (std::string subject : {"The man", "The woman", "The child"})
{
    for (std::string predicate : {"reads", "cooks", "pets"})
    {
        for (std::string object : {"the book", "the soup", "the dog"})
        {
            std::cout << subject << ' ' << predicate << ' ' << object << '\n';
        }
    }
}
That was one of the examples for nested loops :)
@Borgleader Verbosity suxors.
@FredOverflow Ugh, nested loops.
can I ask a quick C question? (or can someone point me to the C room, I can never find it..)
for (std::string subject   : {"The man", "The woman", "The child"})
for (std::string predicate : {"reads", "cooks", "pets"})
for (std::string object    : {"the book", "the soup", "the dog"})
    std::cout << subject << ' ' << predicate << ' ' << object << '\n';
@melak47 It's dead.
15:51
@R.MartinhoFernandes You gotta mention them sooner or later.
@Borgleader aw.
for (unsigned int i=0;i<vec.size();i++) {
{
    bar.process(vec[i]);
}
Goggles on
@FredOverflow No thanks, I prefer the list monad.
@melak47 Rule #0: DON'T ASK IF YOU CAN ASK A QUESTION. JUST DO IT.
@FredOverflow yeah, but it's C :p
15:52
@FredOverflow May I ask you if you'll let me ask if I can ask a question here ?
So what? Some of us know C. Some of them even love it. Secretly, of course.
2
Lesbian brothers! The tyrant is defeated!
@FredOverflow Ahem.
@kbok Rule #1: Contrary to popular belief, not every question can be solved by an additional level of indirection.
@Borgleader I'm not a C room.
15:53
@DeadMG lololol
alright, so if I malloc some memory, and then fork some child processes, they will all have the same pointer to the same block of memory. is it ok to access that memory from the child processes? (no two processes will work on the same area of that memory)
@melak47 It's a copy-on-write kinda deal, they don't really share the same memory.
@melak47 They will have a pointer to a block of memory on their own address space.
15:54
@DeadMG but isn't the pointer to the same memory just copied?
@DeadMG Haha, imagine people coming to your tombstone in the distant future and asking C questions, because the ++ part has faded away. You would be rolling in your grave :)
If you want to share the memory, you need to actually use shared memory.
@melak47 The OS maps in a physical page to that virtual address. It's the same physical page until one of them tries to write, then it's copied and one of them receives the copy.
@DeadMG hmm...then my code shouldn't work.
why does it work :S
15:56
how the fuck should I know? ^^
yeah yeah :p hold on..
@EtiennedeMartel Where is the original image from ?
@kbok No idea.
@kbok You understand it's not real, right? ;)
hmm
apparently, it's some fundamental limit of edit controls that they don't properly support owner drawing
and I'll just have to live with the odd strange flickering
15:58
@DeadMG What. Then how do skinned applications do?

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