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05:01
anyone wants to go into a philosophic topic?
Why did you ask that question?
because most of the people usually are not in the mood for this things
... and that was not the topic I was thinking about
@chris, do you have any favorite song as of right now?
Can I count ones that I use to annoy people?
@chris, Has it something to do with this?
or this or this ?
05:20
@Jeffrey, I see no Rebecca Black or Hot Problems.
I love how chrome censors those both out now :p
Omg, why did you made me listen to that "Friday" thing... god...
If a video pops up and I see a black censor box, I know to get out of there.
And yeah, that's why I use it to annoy people.
that is gonna be very useful...
What happened to youtube...
 
1 hour later…
06:50
Hahaaaaaaa jesus.
Windows 8 really does interesting shit with the Program Files and other folders.
Not even an admin is allowed to change those folders, so I have to figure out how to run my account with an even higher privilege elevation than Admin.
Otherwise, it won't let me Git/Hg/Svn clone my stuff into my usual Program Files/Code folder.
@ThePhD I just put something in Program Files - no problem.
@Mysticial What witchcraft did you do with your permissions.
Disable UAC.
I can't imagine anyone who doesn't.
06:53
I've done that. But everytime I try to delete/git clone/move things into Program Files/Code, it prompts me for elevation, rather than just.... y'know. Doing it.
Windows 8's permissions are definitely a lot tighter than before though.
This has caused all kinds fo havoc for me trying to git clone or hg clone stuff in there.
Just set UAC all the way down to the lowest level.
I've utterly nuked UAC. It's not a UAC thing.
Then I dunno what you did.
06:54
:c
WAIT
What version
is your Windows 8?
Pro Ultimate Home?
Win8 Professional Retail
You can get Windows 8 cheap
Ugh where's that System Information thingy when yuo need it...
This thing just says Windows 8, I don't know if it's Professional or not
right-click on Computer.
The version shouldn't have anything to do with permissions.
@Mysticial Not the usual thing with the Windows 8 logo, the straight System Information screen that just lists specs in plaintext. It was literally called 'System Information' in Windows 7.
And, I think it might be cutting me at the legs if this is Home or something, and giving me an Admin-But-Not-Really-Admin account.
06:59
^^ Looks the same as in Win7.
Haruka-Laptop
Why?
Different name for all my machines. Or I can't tell them apart on the network.
Do I still have to provide overloads for (int x, class a) and (class a, int x)
:(
for what?
what else? operator overloading
07:01
Yes
Man. Imba imba world.
'Twas a bitchin' long time to find it, but this is what I meant:
Unfortunately, it shows nothing that really groundbreakingly different from the other screen.
You named it THEPHD?
Why not?
lol
guess it's better than Phantom Derpstorm
07:08
@Rapptz The username is Derpstorm, actually.
fixed it before you mentioned it
Phantom and Derpstorm was too long. :c
Derpson is actually a nice last name though.
You literally spammed my bitbucket feed
"Mr... ... Derpson?"
@Rapptz I did not. D:
lol @ this pull request
dude really
Why T_T
so many file changes hnnng
07:10
For which pull req?
yours
... Mine?
In ogonek?
yes
Oh. Well they were necessary, I swear. D:
08:00
Eh.
Figured it out.
Just Git clone eleewhere and then drag it in and it works.
Just wish Windows 8 wasn't so permissions-anal.
08:46
Problem is it has to
Because a substancial part of the customers don't know jack about computers and end up with viruses all over their computers and then blame the OS.
09:07
@Borgleader: but it doesn't work. Those users will happily follow a virus' instructions to click all the "I know what I'm doing"-buttons and install the virus anyway. And given Microsoft's track record, I would be very surprised if the system isn't full of security holes anyway.
 
1 hour later…
10:20
What is this crap??
this room being silent for over an hour?!!
Everyone is guilty.
but now we make up for it by being here again.
:)
we do?
whoops, nearly uploaded my CV with all my personal information in it to isocpp as a Unicode proposal
Are you working on Unicode as well?
10:36
yes
but the robot is implementing a Unicode library, and I'm specifying Standard support for Unicode, so it's not really an overlap
all the UNICODE
bank of England gold vault
they have a fuck load of gold
quite a few billions of pounds worth
Nice shelving. It would be even better if the UK actually owned the gold.
Ell
Ell
I thought Gordon brown sold the gold reserves when gold was at an all time low
Just one quick question: do you know of a site that lists namespace names used by C++ libraries?
The gold does not move, ownership of it moves around. The gold brokers just hand around pointers to the gold objects.
10:49
can I use a vector<unique_ptr<char>> instead of a vector<char*> when calling something like execvp which expects a char* []? I really don't want to write a destructor that calls delete (or delete[] or whatever)
why couldn't you do that?
hmmm
I don't think so
you'd be betting on the representation of unique_ptr
the Standard may or may not define it for that case
@TonyTheLion because decltype(&vc[0]) != decltype(char* [])
maybe I could store two vectors: one with std::strings, the other with just non-owning pointers to the string's strings.
10:52
but they are both arrays of pointers
why not the same?
for one, the unique_ptr may hold a deleter object, unless the Standard guarantees it eliminates zero-sized ones
and secondly, implementations can usually do whatever they like with Standard types
and the compiler won't let me unless I fool it by explicitely casting the monster.
> unless the Standard guarantees it eliminates zero-sized ones
wut?
std::default_deleter<T> is stateless
I'll just create a vector of non-owning raw pointers.
10:54
but strictly, if you have a member, it adds to the size
right
but decltype doesn't care about size, no?
no, but you're sure going to get fucked if you try to convert it to an array and the elements are larger than regular char*
@rubenvb No. Even if std::is_standard_layout<std::unique_ptr<T>> holds.
ah right
Stupid C OS API
Luckily, I have only one header that hides every single OS detail in my code.
10:56
Even if you had the guarantees to go from std::unique_ptr<T> to T** (which needs more than standard-layout), you can't increment and go to the next element.
It's probably better for aliasing, who knows.
Oh wait there's that thing where you can increment but you're not yet to the next element, lol. Don't do it though.
oh wait. Fuck. the storage vector will reallocate on resize.
so I can't store pointers to it's elements.
reserve an excessively large amount beforehand
But I'm storing pointers to its elements internal elements. When a vector<string> reallocates, the std::string data won't be reallocated, right?
right
assuming C++11, of course
of course. There is no other C++.
Good news.
11:03
erm
I thought he was dead?
Ell
Ell
ugh I underestimated the size needed for my Ethernet cable :/
he is
Ell
Ell
maybe there's a Steve jobs too?
Ell
Ell
I've managed to fail at crimping an Ethernet cable 4 times
how am I so incompetent?
cpx
cpx
11:06
Maybe his ghost was here to learn C++.
can anyone suggest me how can I access printer through a c++ program ?
@AnandRatn Hi, and welcome. Please read this:
10 hours ago, by Mysticial
If you're new here, take a look at the rules or expect to get treated accordingly.
Thanks rubenvb !
11:12
@Ell It's surprisingly hard to get right.
I'm thinking of replacing all std::map::at calls to a wrapper that actually says something useful.
@rubenvb What do you mean by "useful"? Can't think of any scenario where std::map::find isn't sufficient as a replacement.
11:30
@rubenvb TIL about std::map::at.
@Zeta oneliner access to an element that should be present under non-bug circumstances.
> He was wired all night from smoking catnip.
what.
didn't know you could smoke that shit?
What happens if the element isn't present? Just curious.
@Zeta it throws an uninformative std::exception thing.
@rubenvb: Then what's the difference of your implementation to std::map::at, which throws std::out_of_range?
11:37
@Zeta that's what I thought you asked about.
I don't have an implementation currently.
It could for example output the value not found, so I'd at least have some idea what it was looking for where in the code.
Any reason execvp would not fail but also not execute the command?
Ell
Ell
11:59
bollocks bollocks bollocks bollocks! I bought a motherboard with a VGA :( no hdmi :(
user1182183
hmm if I have the address of a function, (it's a __stdcall) could I execute if and get the created data before it gets out of the scope and destroyed?
Xeo
Xeo
It's not much different from normally programming for 8 hours.
And I have to admit, pair programming can be pretty awesome.
Morning, btw.
user1182183
morning hehe? it's 1pm here :P
Xeo
Xeo
12:04
And @StackedCrooked, Coliru is pretty fast now after the first build, I'm surprised.
@GamErix 1pm too, but whenever I wake up, it's "morning"
@Xeo It was a bug that caused it to be slow.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, I see.
user1182183
@Xeo xd
A few days ago I started a background command that killed the sandboxing process every ten seconds. And forgot about it. That explains why sometimes I got not results after compilation. lol.
Xeo
Xeo
oh lol
Ell
Ell
12:09
hmm does anyone know which side the rubber guards go to the screws.when installing a motherboard to a case?
I wonder if I should enabled optimizations in Coliru. It might make compilation a little slower, but it is useful if you want to use it for little benchmarks.
@StackedCrooked #<#<Class:0x7f95d0842d40>: execution expired>
@LucDanton That's a normal timeout.
Not a very helpful message. I think I want to improve that as well.
12:14
i am working alone, admire pair programming
Currently requests are processed sequentially and each (compilation + run) job has a timeout of ten seconds.
Not very scalable, but ok if there are only a small number of users.
However, if I enabled concurrent processing then I could allow longer timeout periods.
Welp, free GApps is gone
12:26
Hey guys
have you had a look at that?
8
Q: Why shouldn't an Android app be written in C/C++ because you "simply prefer to program in C/C++"?

Logan BeseckerUpdated(for clarity and to reduce ambiguity): I'm going to start tinkering around with android apps. I was planning on writing the in C++ using the NDK (since I have more experience in C++ and prefer it to Java) but came across the following on the Android NDK page: you should only use the ...

12:40
@KonradRudolph I agree with your comment
Ell
Ell
ahh I'm so scared. New build doesnt appear to be booting from USB o.O
oops
what you building?
user image
5
I guess that fits @Cat's philosophy
He's overtaking @sbi in grumpiness
@TonyTheLion It is, after all, one of the huge selling points for C++11, and justifiedly so
12:43
indeed, now I would do mobile, if it I could write some C++11 on it
I suspect that the Android platform is designed by Java evangelists. For them, the need for a NDK would be a thorn in the eye.
ah man, fuck Java.
@StackedCrooked I suspect that a lot of practical consideration also went into it … maintaining a good framework (API, documentation etc.) is a lot of effort. Duplicating that effort would cost Google dearly. Still, it’s a pity. Microsoft arguably did it right
yes, gotta give MS at least credit for that.
it's not like Google can't afford to pay people to do this
and I thought there was lots of need for jobs?
so all excuses have just gone down the drain. Only because this Lion said so.
You tell 'em.
12:49
:P
@StackedCrooked It's also useful to enable warnings about using variables before initialization.
user1182183
0
Q: "Access Violation" exception when calling function by address

Gam ErixI'm trying to call a function when I know it's adress and parameters. But I keep getting crashes: Now I'm wondering if my code is right or the main program of which I don't have the source too just doesn't support such calls? This is my code: ////////////////////////////////////////////////...

user1182183
:$
user142019
What the hell.
user142019
Why does that function return an int.
user142019
12:58
struct Point { double x, y, z; }
Point GetPlayerPos(int playedId);
user142019
FTFY
user142019
Stop writing C in C++.
@KonradRudolph Duplicating it all would be a horrible thing to do. Building something vaguely like JNI, but in reverse, so you can access the existing framework from native code is clearly a better choice (and I'm not sure: that may be already exist in the NDK). Obviously the right thing to do is write the framework in native code, and provide access to it from Java (or skip Java altogether, of course).
user142019
If an error occurs, throw an exception.
@JerryCoffin Yeah.
13:00
@JerryCoffin Well, skipping Java would be a strategically poor choice of course. Most people cannot, and won’t, program in a native language. And that is a good thing – and HTML5 on the other hand isn’t suitable for all those app types either
Isn't it the usual approach for a system to expose a C API for which bindings can be created to higher level languages.
@StackedCrooked FUCK C bindings.
user142019
Then it should have been extern "C".
@KonradRudolph Care to elaborate?
user142019
C bindings are fine as long as there is a C++ API available too.
13:04
@KonradRudolph While I generally agree that everybody writing native code probably isn't the best idea, I'm not even close to convinced that Java provides much (if any) real improvement. The rate at which apps written in Java crash on my Android phone hasn't given me much reason to re-think my position either.
user142019
But hell no I don’t want to interface with a C++ API from Python or Haskell.
C APIs are a lowest common denominator. They are usually bad at what they do and cause a lot of friction in the interface. Essentially, they work in all languages, but well in none.
they are also the opposite of opinionated programming, of which I’m a big fan.
@StackedCrooked I certainly can't argue with the sentiment -- basing the API in C is extremely restrictive.
user142019
libgit2 is terrible. It has a C++ API but that uses Qt. WHAT IS WRONG WITH PEOPLE
@JerryCoffin I’m not a fan of Java so I deplore the platform decision … but some kind of high-level (non-native) language helps tremendously for most programming jobs
13:06
@Zoidberg'-- lol
user1182183
@Zoidberg'-- the amx engine is in C.
user142019
I think I’ll write a decent libgit2 wrapper soon.
@Zoidberg'-- The world needs more library developers like @R.MartinhoFernandes.
9
oh i just stumbled on an old-times
@KonradRudolph I have no problem with supplying non-native languages. I have a big problem with attempting to mandate them, regardless of suitability. The last time I looked at the NDK, I became convinced that rather than attempting to support native development, it was intentionally designed to discourage it by adding unnecessary clumsiness.
13:12
ah, ok
yes, agreed
picture of girl with car! (or opposite)
nswf, i believe
dunno :-)
christmas motif!
@Cheersandhth.-Alf suitable for certain jobs
user142019
If I write a library should I use std::string or boost::filesystem::path? Boost.Filesystem may be a heavy dependency for users.
I would probably go for std::string.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf As I've pointed out before, forcing a woman like that to wear clothes may be somewhat objectionable, but the mere fact that she isn't completely nude isn't good grounds for banning it.
13:14
Meh, since GMan deleted his answer, I'll just drop my link here, for the explanation what the & and && after the functions do: What is "rvalue reference for *this"? Hope you don't mind. :) — Xeo 1 hour ago
Here, take my upvote, you nasty repwhore ;) — FredOverflow 30 secs ago
Oooh, very interesting problem:
1
Q: Initialization function call whose effects are needed for the initialization list?

AzrielI have a base Image class with const field members: class Image { protected: const int width; const int height; public: virtual ~Image(); const int getWidth() const; const int getHeight() const; protected: Image(const int width, const int height); }; This means in the...

user142019
How would I pass a function pointer type to std::unique_ptr?
user142019
std::unique_ptr<git_repository, decltype(git_repository_free)> repo; like this?
user142019
Or do I need to create a new functor class?
Ell
Ell
you can pass a function pointer IIRC
unless you have to use std bind
user142019
13:20
> Error - data member instantiated with function type 'void (git_repository *)'
user142019
Oh, std::unique_ptr<git_repository, decltype(&git_repository_free)> repo; doesn’t give errors.
@Zoidberg'-- Well, decltype(some_function) doesn’t yield a function pointer type, it yields a function type. And you cannot initialise such a type (or indeed do much with it)
user142019
I see, thanks.
user142019
> static_assert failed "unique_ptr constructed with null function pointer deleter"
user142019
I get that when I do repo = decltype(repo)(repo_ptr); in my ctor.
13:28
@Zoidberg'-- Well yes, you need to initialise the function pointer in the constructor
user142019
Ohh, like repo = decltype(repo)(repo_ptr, &git_repository_free);?
user142019
Ohh wait.
hmm? What’s repo?
user142019
Got it, thanks again. :P
but yes, probably
user142019
13:30
std::unique_ptr<::git_repository, decltype(&::git_repository_free)> repo;
ah yes, exactly
user142019
I needed to initialize in the initialization list.
but I don’t like this use of decltype, it’s kind of backwards
user142019
git::repository::repository(std::string const& path)
: repo(nullptr, git_repository_free) {
    ::git_repository* repo_ptr;
    auto err = ::git_repository_open(&repo_ptr, path.c_str());
    if (err) throw error(::giterr_last());
    repo = decltype(repo)(repo_ptr, &::git_repository_free);
}
why not do this?
using repo_t = std::unique_ptr<::git_repository, decltype(&::git_repository_free)>;
repo_t repo(repo_ptr, &git_repository_free);
user142019
13:31
I didn’t think of that.
oaky, gotta go, buy a burgundy bow tie
user142019
Später.
später ;)
user142019
giterr_last returns a pointer to an enum. T___T
Ell
Ell
kernel panic :(
also an unsettling high pitched noise coming from inside the case somewhere
13:34
Colonel Panic?
Ell
Ell
yup
:/
ill make another live USB and try again
user142019
13:49
Does a friend have access to a class’ protected members?
Sure, why not?
user142019
I thought it only applied to private members.
Note that protected data members are evil, though.
Xeo
Xeo
Here, take my upvote, you nasty repwhore ;) — FredOverflow 37 mins ago
lol
I was just sharing useful information!
user142019
@FredOverflow it’s a protected ctor in my exception base class.
13:54
So do you get an error message or something?
user142019
I did get errors in past clang versions.
user142019
In clang 2.~.
OMG is that a real book?
@FredOverflow Yes.
user142019
13:56
DAT COVER
user142019
Is it made with Paint or what.
The content may be interesting

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