« first day (766 days earlier)      last day (4411 days later) » 

19:00
Why is dark history if we learned C first? xD :D
I learned Java, then I learned C. Barely touched C++
Well, I wouldn't say I learned them... but you know what I mean
@Steva Because most regulars here don't like C (and as the tagline says, most have learned C first)
C rulz! :D
Yeah, in the 70s. ANSI C and C99 was also pretty good.
On Torstraße 231 there is also an indie video rental place, which has foreign movies from all over the world, including some crazy languages like Burmese and Tibetan.
lol, crazy languages.
19:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tibetan is indeed crazy considering it's in the process of being eliminated by the Chinese government.
Can I inherit from std::array?
@Pubby There's no such thing as sealed in C++, I think.
anything for a dynamic-sized bitset apart from vector<bool> ?
@Pubby it's not safe (no virtual destructor), but can be done if you're careful
@EtiennedeMartel Isn't final sealed?
19:15
dynamic_bitset ?
Thanks !
@MooingDuck std::array doesn't have a (explictly defined) destructor though, why would I need to be careful?
@EtiennedeMartel If you want to you can use a virtual base class to prevent inheritance, but I can't imagine that std::array would do this.
 std::array<int, 3>* baseptr = new myderived();
 delete baseptr; //doesn't call ~myderived
Oh, ~myderived is just the default one so it should work, right?
Or is that UB? :S
@Pubby I'm pretty sure it's UB. Best to just use composition.
19:18
@TonyTheLion I don't think
Ell
Ell
@EtiennedeMartel isn't it final?
@Ell Isn't that only for methods? Or is that also for classes?
Ell
Ell
I'm not sure, I was under the impression it was for classes too, but you're most likely correct
- my cat only likes to make small ka-booms, how do i get her to make huge explosions
- FEED HER GRENADES
Dat Mister Torgue.
@Ell Yes, you can specify that a class is final, which prevents anything else from deriving from it (§9/3): "If a class is marked with the class-virt-specifier final and it appears as a base-type-specifier in a base-clause (Clause 10), the program is ill-formed."
Ell
Ell
19:49
I don't see the logic in a final class o.O
@Ell If you want to piss off inheritors?
damn
my scroll wheel seems broken :(
@Ell it allows more optimizations of virtual calls for one thing. (That's a small thing)
I wanna post on isocpp public mailing list, can I use google group rich text formatting?
@Ell according to stackoverflow.com/questions/3961881/…: performance for virtual calls
Ell
Ell
19:54
@MooingDuck hmm I see
@EtiennedeMartel In a language like C# or Java, there's a very simple reason: because you did not design for inheritance.
Ell
Ell
but also I guess if you don't design for inheritence, you can't use it anyway
@R.MartinhoFernandes Good point.
You don't want to break your clients by changing implementation details.
@Ell you can, it's just tricky to do it right
Ell
Ell
19:55
I mean for example - you can't do polymorphic calls on a value, and if you only accept values, what is there to do?
hey guys, I have a snippet that I just wrote, and I wonder if it makes sense : pastebin.com/RbHFYC67
Ell
Ell
I also don't really understand the "design for inheritence" thing - I understand designing your class to be subclassed and methods overriden, but what if they think of something useful you didn't?
@Ell Can you ensure that they won't break your invariants? (Answer is no, because you did not design for it)
@BartekBanachewicz no, that doesn't make sense. You have boost::optional, but you're completely ignoring everything it can do
Can you ensure that you won't break their classes by changing implementation details of yours? (Answer is no, because you did not design for it)
19:59
@MooingDuck just started to use it, so please tell me what can be improved
Ell
Ell
well shouldn't that be true always?
@Ell What should be true?
Ell
Ell
@R.MartinhoFernandes that a change in implementation won't effect the client code using that class
@BartekBanachewicz In the failure case, either (A) return a default created stream by value, or (B) return boost::none
@Ell But this is not client code using that class: this is a class derived from it.
If you design it properly, the subclasses cannot override your invariants away. If you don't think about it, they might override them away.
Ell
Ell
20:01
I guess. Then all classes should be final by default then? o.O
@MooingDuck well, in the synopsis of boost::optional<T> constructor, it says it will be unitialized. OK, I'll change it to boost::none. Is the move usage OK, though?
@Ell Not in C++. You cannot override everything anyway.
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, that's fine
@MooingDuck thanks a lot :)
And there's things like private inheritance for composition.
Ell
Ell
20:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh yeah sorry, forgot about that
@R.MartinhoFernandes Same for C#.
I'll just leave this here
Don't let the ladybug, aka @Cicada see it.
@TonyTheLion Are you single?
even if beer did contain female hormones, the only thing that would happen is that you would digest them.
20:04
And don't plink her.
who, @Cicada?
@DeadMG Anti-joke puppy.
2
@EtiennedeMartel erm, what do you think?
Puppy can kill a joke pretty quick.
@TonyTheLion Jeez, I wonder why.
oh you took that as offensive to the female part of society
20:06
I'M TERRIBLY OFFENDED.
I just thought it was funny, hence why I posted it here. But I'll bin it if you find it offensive
(Not really)
Actually, I think it's sad for the guy who made the picture. He probably spends his nights masturbating furiously.
But, yeah, leave it there, maybe we'll get an exciting flame war when @Cicada comes in and kicks her Feminist Circuits into overdrive.
Hows life?
:)
20:10
Living.
Will we ever get rid of header files, pimples #ifdefs, linker errors, etc?
@EtiennedeMartel To make it easier for @Cicada to see it, let's star it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're playing a dangerous game, dude.
Ell
Ell
feminism is stupid
Actually this makes me wondering, do you get linker errors when using D?
20:11
@Ell I don't think so.
@Ell depends on how you define it
Ell
Ell
@EtiennedeMartel why?
yeah let's define it before we argue :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh gawd. And I'm the asshole around here?!
@Ell Because women are still second class citizens in many areas of the world.
@TonyTheLion You are?
20:12
scrap that
And even in more "liberal" countries.
in fact
just today the Church of England failed to pass a motion allowing female bishops
Well, well.
lol
20:13
if you're a wimminz your belief just ain't as good as a man
@DeadMG oh gawd
pun intended!
Female Bishops!? Like when you get non-Christian thoughts by looking at a Bishop?!
@Nils can't get rid of linker errors, even C# has linker errors.
Then we rather introduce Satanism :P
@DeadMG it's just an outdated belief they seem to stick to for some out dated reason.
20:14
@MooingDuck Actually, those only occur at runtime.
@Nils header files probably though, once we get modules.
@R.MartinhoFernandes so?
@MooingDuck you are optimistic
@MooingDuck There are no linker errors!
What about Java?
you just get class files which are loaded by the class loader
no linking, right?
@Nils unless they can't be found, then you get a runtime linker error
20:15
But it's a loader error! :P
heh :)
hmmm
according to this game, three prisoners just walked clear through a wall to escape
What about D?
D's useless, so who cares?
@DeadMG They got killed and crossed it as ghosts?
Ell
Ell
20:17
It's most likely not useless
no, just walked right through it
@DeadMG Bug free!
I can't download visual studio express 2012
It keeps redirecting me on French pages where no express version is available
I don't know if this is intentional or not :(
@kbok Only one option left: get out of there!
Do it! Before the FN gets elected!
We still have more than four years before another election
20:20
Does this work for you? go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9816768
FWIW the entire american continent could blow up until then
@Rapptz Yes :) I can't thank you enough
I tried many different links, but forcing the lang in the URL results in infinite redirections
@kbok Edit your browser settings to put American English on top.
@EtiennedeMartel All my setup is en-US: system, desktop, browser.
But those tools do geographic-based redirections
@kbok could be geo-ip detection
20:23
@EtiennedeMartel Some sites are made by fucking assholes that thing you always want to see pages in the language of the place you are at.
5
Freaking annoying when you are in Germany and don't understand a word of German.
Not that it ever happened to me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah. Those assholes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes totally
It could be worse though, there are people who log in in Japan and can't get anything else than Japanese version even thought they don't even know how to read the alphabet
@R.MartinhoFernandes Subtle as a flaming bear.
but you know, it works for other 99% :D
20:25
Maybe they should know better and see that User-Agent: elinks is not the 99% :p
is there a difference between
const T &x
T const &x
???
Damn you all to hell! Why did you have to go and star a message of mine with a typo in it?
Have another star.
@mizi_sk Only cosmetic (i.e. no)
@kbok what is preferred?
20:26
@mizi_sk Not in this particular case. The latter won't cause confusion with more complex types, the former will.
I see, thx
will use T const &x then
@mizi_sk What you think is better. A matter of taste. Some people prefer T const & because it's consistent when you do T const * const for instance. Some people prefer const T& because it's clearer "it's a constant T"
now I am confused
don't mind me
You can either do T const * const or const T * const but you can't do const const T * as in const (const T) *
Is that clearer ? :o)
@kbok totally not :D
20:30
I don't use T const& because you don't need consistency while using pointers when you don't use pointers.
come on :D
When you have a const pointer to a const object, you have a T const * const. It reads backwards : const - pointer - const - object.
const int apple; //constant integer
int const apple; //constant integer
const int* apple; //changable pointer to constant data
int* const apple; //constant pointer to changable data
const int* const apple; //constant pointer to constant data
int const* const apple; //constant pointer to constant data
@kbok You don't do templates much, I see.
You can write it const T * const, too, but then reading it backwards would make less sense.
20:32
if the const is always to the right, the rules seem more consitent
@kbok it's not always backwards, it's insane. (see: function pointers)
@R.MartinhoFernandes You would you want to put const after while using templates ? Also, no, indeed.
@MooingDuck It's a spiral, I heard.
@kbok yes
Xeo
Xeo
@kbok From the identifier out in a counter-clockwise spiral, is what I heard.
I like the spiral metaphor since it carries very well the "despair" aspect
I just typedef things whenever I am not sure.
20:34
^ le this
Or shoot people when I am on the reading side.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton !!
Ok guys, it's time to hit that dwarf fortress book. see ya
Xeo
Xeo
@kbok Really, that has nothing to do with pointers.
@EtiennedeMartel I object to the implication
I'm not subtle
@kbok I just read a blog post in elinks today.
20:41
@sehe I meant a generic bear. Not you in particular.
@sehe You are when flaming.
@EtiennedeMartel Ok.
@R.MartinhoFernandes :) Touché
damn
my idiot guards put prisoners in only partially built cells again
what?
Xeo
Xeo
me wants this for Windows. :( cryopid.berlios.de
@DeadMG You seriously suck at that game, don't you?
actually, it's going kinda swimmingly
but I've just run out of capital and there's a bunch more prisoners arriving tomorrow
stackoverflow.com/a/13481542/8747 makes me think. I wonder how big a variable I need to individually represent every Plank Time the universe has ever known. Hmm. 5.3e44 Tp / s * 3.2e7 s / yr * 1.4e10 years = 2.4e62 Tp or 2^207. I propose a new standard for time_t: typedef std::uint256_t time_t; Large enough to hold every instant that has ever occured.
@DeadMG you use the funniest words to describe situations
what's wrong with swimmingly?
also I had to cut my prisoner's meal budget by 90% /whoops
Sep 14 at 20:07, by Mooing Duck
so who thinks we'll go ever go above 128 bit pointer addresses and why?
Xeo
Xeo
20:52
Fuck ALL the programs that try to add a fucking toolbar to my browser when installing them.
And mess with my start page settings.
Especially if they are by default ticked
what?
"swimmingly" does not sound like an accurate description.
previously I was running practically a five-star hotel
Unless you mean that you flooded the whole thing.
20:53
$900 a day for 30 prisoners
GitHub Y U NO REBUILD MY SITE?
Xeo
Xeo
sigh why the fuck does a simple 300kb program need an installation at all. -.-
hidden downloader that downloads 10 GB worth of stuff.
@Xeo To install the toolbars. Sometimes you ask the silliest of questions.
@MooingDuck I suppose we may eventually, but it won't be very soon. We can use Moore's law here: chip density doubles roughly annually. That translates roughly to needing/using one more bit of address space per year. Right now, a fairly high-end machine might have, say, 128 Gigabytes of RAM. That works out to 37 bits of addressing. So, assuming Moore's law continues to apply, we can expect to see a 64-bit address space to last about 27 years. Another 64 bits pushes that out to 91 years.
20:57
but on the upside
@JerryCoffin You're joking, right?
my cooks no longer believe that when there's "EAT" written in giant letters on the schedule, this means "Don't cook anything in readiness for this time."
What do you think all that memory will be made out of?
@JerryCoffin if you're interested, see the debate that followed that question for the reasons I don't think moores law will continue there.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Qubits, obviously.
20:58
@DeadMG How many Qubits in an Ark?
@DeadMG Missing the point.
nah, I get the point
just joking about quantum computers
I mean, let's face it, those things ain't never gonna be invented

« first day (766 days earlier)      last day (4411 days later) »