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06:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes Problem?
@LucDanton No, I am waiting.
codepad.org/58MiEduC why is the answer to that code is 100?
I'm doing queries against a webby API, so the return type is usually IO Foo. Some results are paged though, so I'm considering adding a utility that returns some IO (Page Foo) and the possibility to obtain the rest of the pages. [IO (Page Foo)] seemed like the natural type to use, but then I had a hilarious overflow when I accidently wrote length l.
k=k++;
^ shame on you
@LucDanton Why an overflow?
06:03
Because there's always a (head . tail) which is the computation that tries to obtain the next page.
@Pubby ?
@AnujKaithwas Either do k++ or k = k + 1
the answer is the same anyways.
I'd rather have something that stops (there's a limited amount of pages after all), but I'm not sure how to express the 'shape' here. I have a first IO (Page Foo) and I need the rest to depend on that first page. I could sequence the whole into a IO [Page Foo] but my naive attempts meant that getting any page would query all pages.
@AnujKaithwas What do you expect?
06:05
expect?
@LucDanton That's because [Page Foo] does not have side-effects. It cannot lazily query the network.
(To clarify: length l is not a required feature. It's just how I figured out that I produce queries to non-existent pages.)
@AnujKaithwas What number do you think should output?
is it because k is iterated 100 times because it is within the for loop?
Yes
06:07
Isn't k=k++ UB anyway?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I figured as much, yes. Is IO [IO (Page Foo)] worth the attempt? I think that was my plan when I was thinking about it when falling asleep.
UB? @R.MartinhoFernandes?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ask that on stack overflow!!
@LucDanton That looks weird.
@Pubby lol, no. If was really curious I'd look it up. I don't want to ask yet another i+++++++i question.
that is i++ + + + ++i, isn't it?
06:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes It does! I need an outer IO (it is a network query, right), then the 'head' can be pure but the tail needs to be in IO and sequence with respect to the outer IO. I think.
the lexical analyzer reads it that way? or i++ +++++ ++i?
that might be an error?
List a = Nil | Cons a (IO (List a))? Then use IO (List a)?
i ++ ++ ++ +i probably
@AnujKaithwas I have no idea. I don't care either. I don't need to know. No one needs to know.
@LucDanton I think [IO (Page Foo)] can be made to work.
After all, with your IO [IO (Page Foo)], once you unbox it you are left with an [IO (Page Foo)] anyway.
21
Q: Why doesn't a+++++b work in C?

Barshan Dasint main () { int a = 5,b = 2; printf("%d",a+++++b); return 0; } This code gives : error: lvalue required as increment operand But if I put spaces throughout a++ + and ++b, then it works fine. int main () { int a = 5,b = 2; printf("%d",a++ + ++b); retu...

06:11
The thing with the double IOs seems worthless.
I wanted sequencing.
How do you know there are no more pages?
I have the info in the first page.
i.e. isLast :: Page Foo -> IO Bool. Can you have that?
@LucDanton Oh.
Yes.
If at all possible I wouldn't mind a pointer to a library type or thingy, that seems like a common thing.
06:15
Hmm, I ended up with the double IO thingy...
:)
Each time you fetch a page from within IO (which represents fetching the page over the network after all) that's when it is known whether the tail is nil or not. Original reasoning.
getThemPages :: [IO (Page Foo)] -> [IO (Page Foo)]
getThemPages (x:xs) = x:do {first <- x; if isLast first then [] else getThemPages xs}
Something like this?
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Robot! I find myself in need of you experience (even though no one here has any on any subject). Is there a way to for example print this: std::wstring tempStr =L"भाषाओं"; to the console, without using boost? (VS11 RC, Windows)
(where the input is whatever you had before)
@R.MartinhoFernandes That does seem sensible, let me try.
06:18
@Borgleader Woah, printing that kind of stuff to the console? No, I honestly have no idea.
Sorry.
Unicode on the Windows console is really broken.
Ah ok.
Alf did some research before. I think he wrote it down somewhere.
It was for a question on a forum I visit
but if it's broken, welp it's broken
@LucDanton Ah, no.
There are double IOs.
You would need to join with the head of the list or something.
You can figure that thing faster than I can hit a type error.
(In my defence I'm actually handling two levels of Either in those IO and I forgot how I do that.)
No, joining with the head would not work either without thatWhichShallNotBeNamedIO.
So, custom data type?
IO (Pages a) and do page <- flub; peek page; next page or something.
06:24
Yeah.
Lists just won't work: length l has no side-effects, so it cannot interact with the network, which it would need to.
Now back to templates.
Xeo
Xeo
You crazy Haskellians.
Now back to sleep-sleep.
@Xeo You know, the sun is about to rise.
Xeo
Xeo
Do I look like I care?
I think I would have been crazy to handle JSON without a sane library to do it.
Xeo
Xeo
I'll just sleep in until 12am or 1pm
5 1/2 hours sounds good.
06:27
12am or 1pm?
WTF?
17 mins ago, by Luc Danton
List a = Nil | Cons a (IO (List a))? Then use IO (List a)?
I'm using a moral equivalent.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes What?
FWIW, that's 00:00 or 13:00 in readable time.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, I always get confused with 12 o'clock and am/pm :s
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is it broken on Unix too?
Xeo
Xeo
06:28
I always forget which is which.
I thought 12am would be 12:00, since 11am is 11:00
@Borgleader I think it works find if you use narrow strings since UTF-8 is used all over.
Xeo
Xeo
Eh, so 12 is actually 0
Okay, so it's either 12pm or 1pm
@Xeo Protip: it makes no sense, so don't use it.
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah
You are a continental native after all.
Don't be a traitor.
Xeo
Xeo
06:30
Just saying "at 12 or 1" in English sounds weird, though.
I say that aloud as "at noon or one".
Xeo
Xeo
"Um Zwölfe oder Einse" would be what I say in German, where the 's' in "Einse" is a emphasized, like "z" in "emphasized"
Anyways, off, or else I won't get those 5 1/2h of sleep after all.
I slept 15 hours yesterday.
Xeo
Xeo
5 or so for me
Man, my right arm feels so sluggish. I tried to lift it just now to move my mouse, and it just fell down on my bed again with no power in it.
Been lying on it the whole time.
I am having a headache now. Can that be hangover-related, even though I have been awake for eleven hours?
Xeo
Xeo
06:34
Anyways, g'night.
night
I've been sorting through my photos of Japan. I took far too many of them.
@StackedCrooked Now you have to show some.
I'm creating an album with picasa and syncing it online.
It's a slow process.
Reducing from >2000 pics.
I'll show them though.
Every time I saw a tree I wanted to take a picture of it. Now I have hundreds of pictures of trees in Japan.
Never watch documentaries naked.
Don't tell me what to do!
06:46
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ahhh woot thanks :)
@Pubby First-world anarchy :)
06:58
I think I'm starting to get the hang of (. foo) sections.
Maybe it is a bad idea I installed pointfree.
Is there a name for (<*>)?
Addicting, isn't it?
@LucDanton I think there's a non-infix version of that.
ap is the one for monads, now that I remember.
@R.MartinhoFernandes A bit, but not too exhilarating I think. I like to give sensible names and express intent clearly.
I'm not actually dealing with IO a, I have two levels of Either in those a so I have a fmapR that does fmap.fmap for instance (except constrained). Concise, yet expressive. (The R is because I'm using a Result synonym, i.e. I'm handling IO (Result a).)
07:28
Awww yeah, Desktopography 2012 Exhibition is out
Time for some new sick wallpapers :)
FFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
Hit a GCC bug.
template <std::size_t I>
using index = std::integral_constant<std::size_t, I>;
template <std::size_t... I>
using indices = std::tuple<index<I>...>;
error: wrong number of template arguments (5, should be 2)
error: provided for template<class _Tp, _Tp __v> struct std::integral_constant
That sounds like an old bug.
I am running 4.7.2. Maybe it is fixed in trunk.
Now I need to put workarounds in the blog post :/
Oh right, how do I workaround it?
dunno
Partial spec I think?
Inlining the first alias does not work.
@LucDanton This has to be done with aliases because I need it for type deductions.
07:39
template<std::size_t... I> struct do_indices<I...>: identity<std::tuple<index<I>...> {}; then add an alias.
Oh um.
template <std::size_t... I>
struct indices {};
Well...
It was prettier with tuples everywhere :(
It's snowing outside, which compensates the loss of prettiness in the code.
08:11
That's what they all say.
Hey guys
Just a quick question: would you define the OpenGL Superbible as a "good" book?
Any edition before the fifth is severely outdated.
Dunno about the fifth, but I would recommend staying away from the previous ones.
@R.MartinhoFernandes, do you have any other suggested books?
Amazon reviews should give you an indication. (In my experience the ratings are quite reliable, although not everyone agrees.)
@Jeffrey No. All the good OpenGL content I know is this tutorial: arcsynthesis.org/gltut
Nicol needs to finish it though.
08:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes, Yeah, I know, I'm reading it. It has been suggested to me few days ago, here in this chat.
@StackedCrooked, @R.MartinhoFernandes thanks
08:59
Hey, @Luc, still around?
Wanna review the next part of my tuple series?
Go ahead
09:03
Why is there a picture of a stone with cuneiform inscriptions?
I don't think that's a common meaning of 'fabricate'.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That was in the Ghibli museum.
I don't know from which movie it comes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think it's in a rougher state than what you usually produce.
In the first half(ish), the word 'map' (as well as 'mapping') occurs a lot of times. You would perhaps benefit from a visual example of how the two (inverse) permutations relate to one another and to the input tuple and actual tuple storage.
Although to be fair I know that I easily get confused by all those <0, 3, 1, 2> things, I kept double-checking what index means what when I wrote my reorder thingy.
09:16
@LucDanton I have one of those the previous one, but it is too simplistic (it gave Xeo the wrong impression).
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think the post is easy to understand to those who already know what this is about. I'm skeptical for a first-time reader (even after they read the earlier parts).
Writing is hard.
Get rid of the arrows, they don't give information.
Instead, have an arrow go from on of the top element to its corresponding bottom element, and one go up. Relate them to their relevant index (perhaps via colour).
So e.g. an arrow from yellow up to yellow down labelled "2", because 2 is in the 0th position in the first map.
Does that make sense?
Ok. I'll see what I can sketch.
09:22
Do you think it's worth making a note for inherit_all that there's no risk of an ambiguous base? Just in case some reader gets the inspiration to write a template<typename... T> struct foo: T... {}; and hits an error.
Smokey wearing a raincoat and a spanish poster. You sure you went to Japan, @StackedCrooked?
@LucDanton Oh. I was going to do that but forgot.
@Pubby That should rather confirm it :D
There's something I don't get in that where is a two-level indexed constructed that you then deconstruct in find_level_impl via indexed2?
Ah, that's a bug in the last snippet.
09:26
Yay, I'm a human debugger.
I should copy the code directly back from the tests.
-5
Q: post and pre increment operator,different results in compilers,c++

user1888385In Visual Studio and in the GCC compiler, I give the following code: int b=1; int c= (b++) + (++b) + (++b) + (++b); And the result is: Visual Studio 2012: 16 GCC/codeblocks IDE: 11 First of all I think that this would be 13. Is it true? Because I got confused I decided to print the stateme...

There we go again :)
Nothing like shuffling around about 50 TB of data...
That'll take a few days. And when I go home in another week from now, I better get to the airport early.
@Mysticial How do I call fsincos with intrinsics?
@FredOverflow I think there's one in math.h. I'm not sure though.
09:41
@Mysticial Nope, no match for sincos when searching inside math.h :(
@FredOverflow damn... I guess you'll just have to go with sqrt(1 - x^2). That's faster than calling both.
But there is an fsincos x87 instruction, isn't there?
@FredOverflow I dunno. I've never had to call sin/cos in critical code. So I never really looked into it much.
09:45
Make the two arrows relate two different pairs imo.
But yes, like that.
10:08
@R.MartinhoFernandes You should really put the numbers in the boxes.
the colour coding is very bad
@Luc I added some text and the pictures at the beginning.
@FredOverflow yes, there is.
@rubenvb Do you know how to access it with intrinsics?
what compiler?
for gcc you could try __builtin_sincos, but I'm not sure that won't result in a plain libc call if GCC thinks it's better.
Visual Studio 2012
10:24
There's a sincos in AMP. Otherwise use either inline ASM (x86) or a seperate assembler file (x86+x64).
@Luc nothing to say? :/
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's awesome
Cool.
I'll push then.
@rubenvb So I can use SSE with intrinsics, but not x87?
the difference is that SSE isn't a giant pile of crap
10:31
Puppy, you think your sequencing requirements have a chance of being accepted?
meh
FWIW, not even C# does the last bit regarding associativity.
if they give a good reason for rejecting it, then I'll have learned something, because I sure don't see why it should be like it is now
@R.MartinhoFernandes linky?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nah, I'm pretty sure they specified left-to-right always.
10:32
@FredOverflow Man, that would require me to find it on the Web. It's on the std-proposals mailing list. I read it by e-mail.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Will C++1y support pass by email?
@DeadMG That's what I meant. Even when right associative operators, they are evaluated left to right.
right, but it doesn't really matter
Belgian national news site reports that "The Walking dead" has been elected the game of the year. This is the first time I've seen them reporting game news as actual news.
10:35
I think parser order is more intuitive
but LTR would hardly be a disaster
@FredOverflow Ooh... looking forward to it.
newspaper? No thanks, no raw pointers for me!
posted on December 09, 2012 by R. Martinho Fernandes

In part 2 we got our types sorted properly for optimal layout. The next step is building the mappings to and from the storage indices. Before we start, I need to make clear what these mappings are. The code can be quite confusing and difficult to follow without a clear idea of this. When we have a call like get<0>(some_tuple) we need to know where in the storage is the element 0, sinc

2
> Although we don’t know yet the quality of the booklets — isocpp.org/blog/2012/12/algocoders
WTF.
Maybe it's just copy paste from boost-con notes and related blogs.
10:47
> In defence of the authors, this book isn't intended for competent, intelligent users. It's more for the students of the hundreds of cs mills in India that still teach C++ using Turbo C++.
lol
Yeah, I read that :D
where's that?
He's a redditor for one day.
Morning.
10:53
I think the low-quality content provided by isocpp demonstrates that community moderation has far surpassed the old moderator-boss system.
hmmm
Ahahaha those covers are so ugly
I mean, compare to the content that stackoverflow provides.
is int* p = new int; (*p)++ + ++(*p); still UB?
@CatPlusPlus You are being generous.
10:54
5 hours ago, by Pubby
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ask that on stack overflow!!
And it's not just the ugly. They are actually hard to read.
@DeadMG Puppy, Y U new. -1.
@CatPlusPlus That's like, not even sarcasm...
That lightning cover looks like it was made in MS paint
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because it's quicker to type than to declare a local int and the pointer pointing to that
@DeadMG Yes it is.
10:56
@StackedCrooked In this case, the problem is not low-quality content. It's mostly no content at all.
That was offensive.
We should parody that with our own book.
If you go to their website all you can get is ugly covers and tables of contents.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure. Change passwords. :v
I need to eat breakfast
also buy a shitton of chocolate and whatnot whilst my parents aren't watching
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am very sorry. Here's something to make it up to you: stroustrup.com/3rd_front.jpg
10:57
but first, I should put some clothes on
@R.MartinhoFernandes They use tables for layouting? Eeuw.
I wonder what "breathless paranoids" means
@Pubby That's ugly too.
@Pubby Where's that from?
@R.MartinhoFernandes It is on their logo: algocoders.com/sites/default/files/logo3.png (NSFW image)
Engrish, also what's NSFW about this
lol the cover of the book on the right has mistakes. Why am I not surprised.
I just didn't want it to get binned for being offensive
@CatPlusPlus It looks like a horizontal vagina.
11:01
What.
partition_copy, as the name indicates, makes copies so it is not a mutating algorithm.
This is the best cover:
Ell
Ell
is it a gremlin pre transformation?
> "He has been programming in C++ since last 12 years. He loves to [...] pour inside the works of Knuth"
Did anyone proofread this shit?
> Template hijacking
lol
Ell
Ell
@deadmg why do you need to hide buying chocolate?
11:26
@Ell Garments help to keep parasites away.
@Pubby The other algocoder guy proofread it.
@StackedCrooked I have a feeling he only made it worse
Ell
Ell
garments?
Hm, Googling algocoder returns a HFT-like site. Perhaps there is an urban myth that "hard-core" C++ can make you a millionaire..
@R.MartinhoFernandes I like your rule of zero. In about a year, you could probably bundle these blog entries into a good book ;-)
11:48
I still want a book by Robot, Danton, and Fred
The Lounge<C++> Book, by @R.MartinhoFernandes, @LucDanton, and @FredOverflow - A tale of angry Cats, drunken Canadians, and rabies-infected Puppies. And some of the most awesome C++ you will ever see. Until Part Two hits the shelves.
It would be a sermon directed at the choir.
they could be known as the 3 of rules
I read that as "hello forks"
11:53
fire. sorry, lost
Hello fork! is a malicious variant of hello world.

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