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02:00
It is if you change the general interface and general requirements. Will come around to doing that one day.
user142019
Ah okay.
I'm still not sure I want to require CopyConstructible.
user142019
You can generate the clone method automatically only if the type is CopyConstructible. If it isn’t, it doesn’t make much sense to clone it anyway.
@Zoidberg'-- Yes, it does. Some people forbid the copy constructor to get the compiler mad when they try to copy.
user142019
wat
02:08
    class my_base {
        virtual ~my_base() = default;
    protected:
         my_base(my_base const& that) {}
    };

    void f(my_base x);
    derived y;
    f(y); // error
user142019
You can use enable_if and is_same instead, not?
user142019
template<class T>
my_base(typename enable_if<is_same<T, my_base>::value, my_base>::type const& that) {}
void f(y) // error
user142019
Or doesn’t it work that way? :P
user142019
Of course, with removing references and cv-qualifiers from T.
02:11
That T is not deducible.
user142019
Oh crap.
Fact: you cannot test for a runtime type at compile-time.
user142019
Oh yeah it is a reference. Stupid me.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I like that to prevent slicing.
user142019
In Objective-C copy and initWithX: are always virtual.
user142019
02:16
template<class T>
struct AddClone {
    virtual T* clone(T other) { return new T(std::move(other)); }
};

class MyClass : public AddClone<MyClass> {
    // stuff :)
};
user142019
No wait ugh.
user142019
That sucks.
user142019
class MyDerived : public MyClass, public AddClone<MyDerived> {
    // Is this clone ambiguous now? Which one will be called on an instance of MyDerived?
};
Not an option. That is intrusive.
user142019
Ah screw inheritance.
02:20
If you have full control over the classes in question, you can just friend the value_ptr.
Xeo
Xeo
Aw man, somebody linked the X-files theme music. I love that melody.
user142019
I finally understand applicatives.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, I really don't like watching the unfiltered tag anymore. :| So much crap...
user142019
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes WHY DID YOU DO THIS?!
user142019
lol strtok
user142019
He should use Parsec.
Xeo
Xeo
I really like the above one, though.
Mostly clean of clutter.
@Xeo It is wrong on so many levels.txt, right?
Xeo
Xeo
02:28
Although it doesn't auto-update.
I need to file a bug report about that at one point, when I care enough for rep again.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lmao.
That was a good one. :(
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Where's the bleach...
0
A: Undefined behaviour in vectors after 3466 push_back's and clear()'s

LouisTanvector's memory is reserved to size of 10. After 10 push_back, it will reverse 20 and re-allocate these memory. and after another 10 push_back, it will reserve 40! after another 20 push_back.... reverse 80. after 40...........................160 after 80...........................320 so basic...

Oh boy.
If I need a quick HTTP server for a single folder, what can I use? Nothing production worthy or anything, some dev thing is good enough.
user142019
WEBrick is good.
user142019
Maybe lighttpd.
user142019
02:32
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes For build-botting the C++ standard draft on your rpi?
user142019
foo
@Xeo Nah. I can just cp that into a dropbox folder.
It's for local testing blog posts.
Xeo
Xeo
Ah, I see.
IIRC Hg can set up an easy serve, but that may only be for access to the repo.
user142019
I once wrote a web server that served your entire hard drive. github.com/daknok/DEV01-1
user142019
02:35
But it’s terrible.
user142019
> -- FIXME: Epic security fail.
[rmf@persephone _site]$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
/usr/bin/python: No module named SimpleHTTPServer
[rmf@persephone _site]$
Hmmm.
user142019
oh
> Note: The SimpleHTTPServer module has been merged into http.server in Python 3. The 2to3 tool will automatically adapt imports when converting your sources to Python 3.
Ah.
[rmf@persephone _site]$ python2 -m SimpleHTTPServer
Serving HTTP on 0.0.0.0 port 8000 ...
user142019
:^)
user142019
02:37
I have python and python3.
python cool
Woot.
@Zoidberg'-- thanks.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Robot! Robot! Important news! Have you looked at SublimeText2 + Vintage (Vim mode)? It rocks. I'm not sure I would jump ship, but it is surely enough to start using in the work place. Works really well on first testing.
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe I'm surprised they didn't name it "Vimtage".
I'm not. Vintage is more esthetically pleasing
The thing that caused me to try it was this (the followup response is just, wrong AFAICT) and some similar
02:49
What would I gain from that?
Expedience. Joy. Also, look above your message
That is hard to follow. Seems to lack important context.
user142019
SublimeClang :P
Xeo
Xeo
I wish MS would drop VC++ and just port Clang. :s
this -----lolwut----> this
Xeo
Xeo
02:51
@chris Accidental double post?
He deleted it himself, after all.
Not the same user.
Xeo
Xeo
Yes the same user.
The question was worded differently to begin with, as well.
wth? I swear it wasn't.
Xeo
Xeo
Pasted wrong links? They're exactly the same AFAICT.
Ohh never mind, they got a name.
So one still had user1123214242 for me
02:53
@sehe Seriously, I can't make heads or tails of that.
Sounds like someone made a complex transformation somehow. But that's all I can get from that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh well. I'm just saying there might be an editor that I'd like besides Vim or VS + R#
@Xeo, It's funny, it started out as a different title and different wording, but same code, and then they changed the wording and title to match.
R#?
Is that the regular GNU S sharpified to be like C# ?
user142019
TIL about ReaderT.
@sehe And all I'm trying to say is that I want to understand WTF you are talking about, but this is all I'm seeing.
Xeo
Xeo
02:56
@ThePhD ReSharper.
@R.MartinhoFernandes TIL HN links link to messages without thread context. Sorry about that
Ooh.
@ThePhD ReSharper. VS is the best plugin host for ReSharper. Or something like that.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Click "parent" at the top
Man, not even Code::Blocks seems to like the .c++ extension. =[
02:58
@sehe On reddit comment links you can append &context=n to get n comments of context, while still highlighting the one you want to refer to.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Anyways, just go to SublimeText, look at some feature demo involving multiple selections/code blocks. Then, let your imagination run for a while. Some of these things actually work nicely with the Vim bindings in ST2. More than I expected, anyways
@R.MartinhoFernandes TIL that too then. I hardly ever visit HN. I think it will be <once a month
@ThePhD, Wait for it, I just saw something.
While cool, I always struggle to come up with a real situation where I would appreciate that kind of thing.
user142019
Hmm, Guido van Rossum is quitting Google.
@chris ... ?
@Zoidberg'-- Who's that?
user142019
03:04
@ThePhD God.
user142019
He created Python.
@ThePhD, I swear I saw a list of file extensions to use or something somewhere.
FWIW, I would do most of the transformations in that video with :%s/blah/bleh/c.
I see
What's the C++0x compiler flag for GCC?
-std=c++0x ?
user142019
In clang it’s -std=c++11. I believe GCC does the same.
03:08
^
If you're doing this with a regex in a powerful editor like Vim or ST2 you're missing the clue. Why degrade a decent editor into sed? — sehe 39 secs ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes Really. Now that is surprising since you always criticize my whimsical use of /g :) I generally prefer * with cw (or c% etc) and . (dot repeats).
@ThePhD, nvm, the thing I saw was for a plugin.
@sehe Yeah, sometimes I degrade ss into n.s too.
But the point is, I don't want to chase the instances by hand.
And if I am going to grep, I already have that feature.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's my default. I only opt for 'ranged' ex commands if I know I'm going to repeat the same later
> Now, let's say for a second that I just realized I don't want to return, I want to do some processing, then return. This happens a few times a day for me. I just multi-select both "if"s, hit enter, and add the code. If it's two functions and I need to use the function names, I can even go back, copy the function name, and paste it as part of the processing!!
Sometimes I make functions instead of using cool fancy editor features.
03:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tell me you've never recorded a macro in Vim to do similar things (yeah the example sucks)
anybody know what a top coordinate is? I've never heard a coordinate referred to as a top.
@sehe Yes, I have. But it is such an uneventful thing that I cannot come up with a decent example.
I don't like the idea of writing repetitive stuff like that.
I have general dislike for many Ex commands on a visual selection. I mean, I like Ex mode a lot. And I type my ranges, logically. But somehow it doesn't mesh well with visual mode in my brain. Probably because I never remember how to ^U to remove ugly :'<,'> and I'd like to recall commands regardless of ranges
Xeo
Xeo
@ShrimpCrackers Usually the y coordinate if positive y is up.
@Xeo thanks
Xeo
Xeo
03:15
If you have a rectangle, it's the upper line.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well okay. Still I just silly stuff like that all the time, e.g. to go from log files to input for GNUplot in the shortest possible way etc.
Xeo
Xeo
And similarly, left is the, well, left line.
It's not just coding we do. We manipulate text. Often I feel of text documents as 'queryable'
Yes, and I don't need that kind of manipulation often enough to justify learning a new editor (though thanks to Felix Riedel I don't need to).
Yeah. I hesitate there too. Still, it is enough of a singular event on my radar when a viable editor presents itself. I'm going to keep an eye on this and maybe use it in the workplace. (It looks pretty fast too)
user142019
03:18
Sublime Text 2 y u no hide __pycache__ folders.
user142019
Piece of junk.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Where can I download his plugin? I mean, I know about multiselect.vim, and frankly, it sucks hard-boiled eggs
github.com/felixr/vim-multiedit I guess. Though it appears unfinished.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I was just nosing in there
OMG it's 04:22.
For a moment there I had forgotten I woke up at 19:30.
03:24
O shit. That's late indeed. I'm off to bed. Thx for the alarm!
user142019
I <3 CherryPy
03:44
> When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a communist.
Good evening gentlemen.
anyone know which fonts are free/universal for like Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, IPhone...
Microsoft Sans Serif, of course.
currior, helvectica?
@RolandSams I guess Arial is.
You can look up free fonts online
03:58
Oh hsit
shit*
Yeh, sorry for jumping the gun I foud found a w3c page online. TYAW
That's why this is so bad
I'm using Code Blocks 10.05
They're on like version 12.11
They updated code::blocks for the first time in 2 years yesterday
^^^^^
Actually, it was late Nov, but same thing.
03:58
No one here likes it though except me and maybe chris
Well, it's going to kick VS's ass in terms of MinGW devel.
I randomly looked today after suggesting it as a similar feel as devcpp, but better.
Did the update change the aesthetics?
I'm still using a nightly build from July
DevCPP is utterly crappy and dated and last I checked, hasn't been updated for centuries.
Looks about the same.
03:59
THe update is a million times more kick ass.
Holy shit, SO many features.
FINALLY.
I like Visual Studio. Strangely.
Liking VS isn't hip anymore.
It's like a cat. Stupid as fuck, yet perplexingly endearing at times.
Most awesome thing: when you type " and the second one comes, pressing backspace now deletes both.
@chris About damn time.
But yeah, man.
What happens if I type "foo"?
Code::Blocks finally got the shot in the arm it needed.
Do I get "foo""?
I'm going to assume no
04:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes, No.
Should I update?
It overlaps the end one.
OMG it isn't only half-smart, like Eclipse.
I don't want to redo all this fucking config
I hate the syntax highlighting for Code::Blocks
It did that before, but not the delete thing.
04:02
Wow, this Jen's server guy
I changed it to look more like VS2012-ish
@Rapptz, save your default.conf
runs a real slow piece of shit.
Argh, I'm sure I'm doing something wrong. But I am so close...
and replace it after
04:02
I shoulda downloaded it from BerliOS.
Where the fuck is default.conf
I am really close to having a syntax file that can get post metadata highlighted as YAML, regular post content highlighted as Markdown, and code snippets highlighted as C++, all in the same file.
@Rapptz, You might want to look on the wiki, but it looks for default.conf in C: somewhere first and goes to your installation directory if it can't find it.
Look up how to make C::B portable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You're my hero.
What's YAML
04:03
Oh wait, it's installation directory first, I think.
I forget.
Okay, I googled it.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz YAML Ain't Markup Language
@Rapptz Some configuration language popular in Ruby. Basically, key-value pairs separated with :.
You mean a JSON? :)
Xeo
Xeo
Note that YAML is a proper superset of JSON
04:05
@Rapptz Something like that.
I wish it supported VS2012 compiler. Then it'd be nearly perfect.
Xeo
Xeo
And YAML's the reason they got rid of comments in JSON, I remember reading
Right now I get everything except code snippets don't highlight at all.
@Rapptz, Second one down: wiki.codeblocks.org/…
It's a great improvement, though. Before this, code snippets would highlight as Markdown and fuck up everything the moment I typed an identifier with underscores.
BAM, italics everywhere.
04:07
@chris k cool
The Simple Declarative Language (SDL) is a cross-platform declarative programming language used for defining basic data structures such as lists, maps, and trees of typed data in a terse representation that is easy to read and edit. Like XML, JSON, and YAML, SDL is suited to the serialization of hierarchical data for storage or transfer between systems and may serve as a representation for program-configuration data. It might also serve as a representation for data stored in document-oriented databases such as NoSQL. Its most typical application, however, is for declaring specification d...
Really? That name's taken son.
I had to use that to save my settings when I used it at school >.>
Fuck yeah! Works now.
Did they improve syntax highlighting options?
Now I need some proper colors.
@R.MartinhoFernandes rmf is awfully close to rms.
04:21
Hey!
That dude's crazy.
Anyway, now that I have vim finally set up properly to be fed the 3-language mashup that makes up my blog posts, I can start writing the next one.
Also, I learned how to do this for an arbitrary number of languages, which is awesome.
user142019
Websites of Python libraries Y U NO TELL ME WHETHER YOU SUPPORT PYTHON 3.
Python 3 was a disaster.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How so? I actually haven't tried out Python 3 yet.
@Insilico Because now you basically have two different languages.
And libraries that work with one, but not the other, and shit like that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Are they really that much different?
04:27
They don't look that different, but they are different enough that you get many projects not upgrading.
user142019
The only differences I know are that print has become a function rather than a statement, and that strings are now unicode and you have separate byte strings.
@Zoidberg'-- That second one is a big difference.
Porting cannot be automated (contrary to print).
user142019
I like it how it is now.
user142019
Oh and % for formatting has been removed. You must now use .format.
Did the Python authors ever do something about the global interpreter lock?
04:29
@Zoidberg'-- That can be automated too.
@Insilico There are implementations without GILs.
user142019
Stackless has no GIL, IIRC.
user142019
It has green threads.
user142019
EVE runs on Stackless.
static_assert(true, "Compiler must be minimally sane");
04:58
Hmm, how will build the reverse map in linear time? It's worthless to sort in linear time if I end up having a quadratic operation later on.
Xeo
Xeo
What kind of map and what do you need the reverse for?
Xeo
Xeo
Your optimized tuple mapping?
Ah yeah.
I can get the first one in linear time, but the reverse one will need trickery.
I think I can abuse overload resolution for it.
Xeo
Xeo
Problem being that it's not really "reversed", right? You can't just index it in reverse.
05:00
@Xeo Yeah.
Xeo
Xeo
But you might index it shifted over the way you want.
@Xeo No, shifting does not work (the example may be too simple and misleading)
Xeo
Xeo
No wait, it might now just be shifted, it might be completely jumbled.
Yeah, realized that.
I think you're basically fucked for a simple solution. :)
Well, if I get to show some new trick, the post is better, I think.
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, your picture says "Inteface"
05:02
I know :)
Xeo
Xeo
Good time to do it over with a not-so-misleading example!
Hmm
You store your items paired with their original index, right?
If yes, abusing OR might be a good way.
Yeah, testing right now.
Xeo
Xeo
Although the OR context needs to be built in linear time.
What do you mean?
Xeo
Xeo
Hmhm
Yeah, doesn't take linear time if done right, I think, since you already have the indices.
05:09
Does this look right?
(I made the assertion fail on success to make sure I am not hitting the bug where I get no output)
Xeo
Xeo
    template<unsigned Target>
    struct X{
      template<class T>
      static T& select(ref<indexed_member<Target, T>>& m){ return r->value; }
    };

    template<class... Args>
    struct inherit_all : ref<Args>...{};
    // and then do 'X<I>::select(inherit_all<tuple_members>{})
Fuck formatting.
What's the implementation of the function for?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yep, that's the idea behind it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes You only wanted a type?
Xeo
Xeo
I thought you also wanted to actually select the right member.
05:12
No. I only want to get types and indices right now. Pure TMP. Then the implementations are merely get<>ing with the right indices packs.
Xeo
Xeo
mhm
That works, then.
Now you also don't have the problem that you need to get the values inside the inherit_all, yeah.
Dammit, finding chat messages posted by a specific user sorted by "newest" times out and errors for me all the time -.-
Although the "relevance" sorting works just fine and dandy
I'm trying to find that access map thingy I did, which is build-up in O(N) and does the selection in O(1) in a similar way as above.
And it seems you can't use Google to search the history.
Or I'm doing something wrong.
Oh, going with the transcript seems to do it.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh hey, LWS is back. Not in the way we had it, but it's breathing again, atleast.
I just have a feeling we won't see our snippets ever again.
Which kinda sucks right about now.
I had a lot of stuff only on LWS because I thought I'd just find it in the transcript if I ever wanted to do anything half-serious with it. :|
I put that stuff on gists.
I trust GitHub won't go down in flames any time soon.
05:30
guys, this type of declaration
i=1; k=0
for(i=0;i<10;i++) k++;
is invalid in c++, right?
That's not a declaration
statement*
If you add a semicolon it should be fine. Why do you ask?
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes I remember why I had the O(N) (or rather, O(log N)) build-up time on my type_array -- I needed to build the indices too.
Yeah, that is done.
05:34
Hm, LWS is run by russians?
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, that improves it.
@Pubby Did you not notice?
@Xeo I never noticed before today
just like that, out of curiosity. Got it now. if there is only one thing to print or do in a for or if-else, you need not use a curly bracket, in this case, it is just 1 k++, so it is correct.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't know what I did, but compiling my Pull of Ogonek on GCC results in millions of compiler errors. :c
@AnujKaithwas Any statement works. The curly braces create what is called a compound statement.
05:36
yeah. I forgot that.
@ThePhD What you did was things like replacing the coded_character alias with typename blahblah::type but only in some places.
That was one thing I noticed.
You should do a search for all uses of coded_character and fix that up.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Perhaps this is my fault (in fact, it is) but I forked your Ogonek, then took Puppy's files and then copy-pasted the majority over, before doing a global rename from his .hpp to .h++, then worked from there.
Which is probably why the renaming is inconsistent....
Oh. Well, someone did only half of it.
Doesn't really matter who.
Yeah, but now I can't just do a global find an replace because some cases are gonna be all changed and stuff. D:
You can do it with two if you are careful/clever enough.
One to replace the replaced ones back to the old style, and then correct all of them at once.
> my::indexed<my::indexed<int, 0ul>, 2ul> is an inaccessible base of inherit_all<std::tuple<my::indexed<my::indexed<char, 3ul>, 0ul>, my::indexed<my::indexed<float, 2ul>, 1ul>, my::indexed<my::indexed<int, 0ul>, 2ul>, my::indexed<my::indexed<double, 1ul>, 3ul> > >
Ooops.
Xeo
Xeo
05:41
oO
Dat find and replace.
@Xeo Hint: the amalgamated inheritance thingy has only one base.
Xeo
Xeo
Encoding all mappings in the types?
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh
Oh, dear.
@Xeo As I said, I am still at the TMP level.
Everything needs to be made in types.
Xeo
Xeo
05:44
Okay, but how / why do you only have one base?
@Xeo I made a mistake. Notice how there is a tuple.
Xeo
Xeo
Ah
It's inherit_all<tuple<...>>.
Xeo
Xeo
I thought your plan somehow was to only have one (direct) base :P
And wanted to declare you insane.
05:45
constexpr requires the variable to be initialized, regardless of its position.
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, I was just thinking, abusing OR may actually just be O(N) aswell, depending on the compiler.
Which means I can't late-initialize it outside of its designated place.
Xeo
Xeo
Since template instantiations during OR are compiler-specific or something.
@Xeo That's fine. As long as it is not worse than that, it's cool.
Which means I either change it to const or I find some kind of wonky workaround...
05:46
I just don't want to look like a fool that made the sorting linear, and then goes with quadratic search.
Xeo
Xeo
heh
Though the sorting algorithm is actually heaps simpler this way, so I can always justify it with simplicity.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, but it made me realize that my O(1) compile-time any_of and family aren't really O(1) depending on the compiler. :(
seq<FindIndexed<Alignments, inherit_all<stuff>>...> for the sorting would work, right?
No.
Alignments are not unique.
Xeo
Xeo
Derp. Right.
How do you build your alignment list again? Conditionally pushing front or back?
05:52
Read the damn post :P
Xeo
Xeo
Too lazy to open it.
I'm lying in my bed half-asleep at this point.
It's a multipass algorithm. For each alignment push_backs all the types with that alignment. Each of those passes is O(N). The maximum number of alignments has a very low upper-bound, so it's O(kN) but k is ignorable.
Xeo
Xeo
Mhm. You can make that true O(N) with conditional push on front or back I think.
Alright, significantly less errors but I can't get it to behave even in GCC -std=c++11
05:55
Dec 2 at 20:05, by Luc Danton
Multipass linear thingy without comparing is fun I think.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why not?
@Xeo Consider this current state: <1, 2, 4, 16>. Now you find a type with alignment 8.
Xeo
Xeo
Grah, screw it, I'm going to sleep.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hey I have some Haskell-related design considerations.

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