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05:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes Would that be possible to do without compiler support?
Wait.
@EtiennedeMartel Yes.
Oh. Well, no problem then.
I am actually wondering why it didn't work now.
Because you're tired?
I woke up two hours ago.
05:03
After how much sleep?
Hmm, cppreference has the signature wrong.
@EtiennedeMartel It could be made to work, but then you could not have calls with type inference work.
different_forward_as_tuple(1, 2) // nope :(
I'll stick to std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<T>(t)...)
I have no idea
05:19
You mean you guys don't hold your mashed potatoes in the air and everyone's pointing at it?
where do you get all these gifs?
reddit
on second thought, i dont want to know
I'm on /r/shittyreactiongifs for a good laugh
05:24
Do you guys think Tony gets his funny pictures on Reddit too?
They're from the default front page
@EtiennedeMartel Yes, he admitted it.
Well, well.
Then that means...
He's a half-man, half-asparagus creature.
> The three countries had objected to calls for all states to have equal rights to the governance of the internet.
What.
05:29
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hey, thanks for the hint with declval. Stuff compiles! :D Btw, are there any good places/discussion groups where I can bounce ideas/get criticism on a C++ library I'm implementing?
I'm not surprised about Canada. I mean, since Harper took power, those assholes decided to make sure Canada becomes the world's biggest troll.
@AlexanderKondratskiy Here? :P
haha good point :P
@AlexanderKondratskiy R.'s a pretty great library writer.
Depending on the library's domain there may be other interesting places.
05:31
The objection is a good thing.
@ThePhD He's made of win.
And steel.
I don't get this. I have the locale set to en_US.UTF-8, and I have set up PuTTY to expect UTF-8, yet I still get to see garbage :/
 error: ā–’Uā–’ was not declared in this scope
Haha awesome. I'm working on a "piping" library for C++11 here: github.com/KholdStare/plumbingplusplus . Unfortunately, I need to go sleep very soon, have work tomorrow. I'll be sure to come back to this lounge. Hopefully Martinho will be around :)
Arrrgh, hitting GCC's unimplemented stuff again :(
05:37
Pipes sounds like arrows
indeed
inspired by haskell and unix
Maybe you could overload || since nobody else does it
I found "|" got lost in the syntax, if I wrote inline lambdas for the functions
@R.MartinhoFernandes Using too many initializers? :P
No. Variadic templates.
05:42
@Pubby Thanks for taking a look, I'm off to sleep. Good night!
@AlexanderKondratskiy Night
Good luck on the library
05:55
Thank God for audio delay keyboard shortcut for VLC
@Rapptz Whyso? ;o
this audio for this video is off by 850ms
... Ouch.
That's really painful lulz.
06:38
The longest stretch of any unicode encoding for a single codepoint, if I'm not losing it utterly,
is 8 bytes. So I can use that information to stabilize conversions across the board.
What does the v stand for in MSVCRT?
1
Q: Any limit to view review per day in Stack Overflow?

Nik....Today I clicked on Review and saw the message below. You've failed too many recent review audits - looks like you might need a break. Come back in in 7 days and try again. Why does this type of message appear? Is there any daily limit to viewing reviews on Stack Overflow?

I think it means Microsoft Visual C Runtime.
06:46
but suppose a program is not written in visual c++ or visual c
@StackedCrooked DAMN YOU, you ruined my funny answer :(
what runtime would they use if they're not written in visual c/c++ and just written in regular C/C++ and compiled for cmd.exe or windows?
The one that comes wit the compiler I suppose.
Visual C/C++ is regular C/C++ afaik
so what is the visual for?
06:49
@barlop If they compile with mingw then they get glibc I guess... (I'm no expert here.)
Because the name of the IDE is Visual studio?
ah ok
I guess?
yeah makes sense, I was thinking it's to do with the IDE and MS writing the runtime have named it like that because of that
istream putback only manage to put back character which match the character that was previously extracted, what if i insist to put back
06:51
The C Library Reference explains language constructs. Isn't that out of the scope of the library?
We need a term for this... how about drive-by question inlining? xD
@OngMingSoon Hi.
@ThePhD You are losing it utterly.
@StackedCrooked imo yes but I'm no expert
I got my Kindle yesterday. I like it.
Not exactly the same thing, but I've had a nexus7 for a few months now, and I love it
first time i see a ā€œ...ā€ vs "..." question.
07:00
I asked this "vs" question once. They key is camouflaging it with a better title.
Although the question was briefly closed, it was quickly reopened again.
@Borgleader The errors don't seem to indicate that is the issue.
The smart quotes are probably just a transcription artifact.
I thought so as well. But you'll notice I did answer his main question (about the ambiguous call).
Transcription artifact sounds like a quest item.
@StackedCrooked I was being litteral. His pdf uses ā€œ...ā€ quotes around strings, where as he usually uses "...".
@Borgleader Ah. Silly me.
07:04
When I reincarnate, I will write a book titled Learn C++ in Two Lifetimes.
-2
Q: Can you have a triple minus signs in C programming? What does it mean?

Joseph LeeI got this from page 113 on the "An Embedded Software Primer" by David Simon. I saw this statement below: iHoursTemp = iHoursTemp + iZoneNew ---iZoneOld; Can you really have three minus signs in this line? What does a triple minus sign mean? I believe it is a C programming statement.

People who don't separate - from the decrement operator are assholes.
0
A: Can you have a triple minus signs in C programming? What does it mean?

doynaxIt's nonsense. The compiler will see a decrement (--) followed by a negation (-) of iZoneOld, which won't work since you can't decrement an r-value.

I don't understand this statement
lol, so many wrong answers.
correct me if im wrong, the reason this is a - --b and not a-- - b is because - has higher precedence over -- ?
@Borgleader It isn't a - --b.
Precedence is irrelevant here.
a---b gets lexed as <identifier token "a"><decrement token><minus token><identifier token "b">.
07:16
Then what is it o.o
Huh...
Why doesnt it find <minus token> first?
The lexer always tries to match longer tokens first.
Ah... makes sense
stackoverflow.com/questions/13874255/… Yet another givemecodezplz thread
Bleh I typed out the exact same thing as Rob but didn't post it because it was a stupid dupe question
That 70 rep could have been mine!
5 downvoted answers, 2 deleted. I think that's a new record.
But the other question had two -7s... stiff competition.
07:25
@Mysticial When I find those questions I always downvote everything on sight.
I find it funny that people claim it could be two things. I obviously cannot, the compiler will never choose an option if it has more than one.
It raises an error when you call sqrt with an in because it doesn't know if it should use the float or double version, no way it's going to pick between a-- - b and a - --b
Hmm, "Feuer" is "fire", "Zeug" is "stuff", so "lighter" is clearly "Feuerzeug".
@Mysticial I like those users that after someone finally posts the correct answer will amend theirs instead of deleting.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I liked how he added parentheses to a problem that revolved around the lack of parentheses in order to prove that the wrong answer was right.
@R.MartinhoFernandes There's nothing in the standard, that mandates either interpretation. So it's up to the implementation, which one it chooses. — Olaf Dietsche 1 min ago
6
Q: Revoke review queue badges after an audit

ManishearthA user with 5 review queue badges recently got a 7 day review ban after hitting too many audits Shouldn't his stats/badges take a hit1 in such cases? Even better, keep a warning on the queue (or at least on the first failed audit message) that "badges/stats will be revoked if you hit too many au...

Is anyone familiar with line-plane intersection problem?
07:36
@user1217203 wikipedia is
@melak47 wikipedia is my best friend as he or she had been
@Mysticial Sigh. Forcing me to dig through the C standard...
but I have something else in my mind that Wiki did not conver much
@melak47 I could explain my situation if there's a chance if u can point me to the right direction
All intersection problems consist of solving the system of equations that contains all the equations that describe the sets being intersected.
Yes, there is. In C99 that is §6.4 Lexical elements, paragraph 4: "If the input stream has been parsed into preprocessing tokens up to a given character, the next preprocessing token is the longest sequence of characters that could constitute a preprocessing token.". This is informally known as the maximal munch rule, as stated various times in comments and other answers here. — R. Martinho Fernandes 3 mins ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes "NOM NOM NOM," goes the lexer.
@user1217203 how about you tell us what you want, and then we'll see if we can help you? :p
What is a review audit?
Because those words together is pretty weird
@Rapptz A review item with a known expected result, planted to test reviewers are actually reviewing and not just rubber stamping.
user142019
Hello.
Things like posts that have already been deleted, or are highly upvoted.
I suppose they might fuzz them a little when showing them, to hide their auditing nature.
Ok, I should be leaving for work now. See you after the break :)
07:46
I have a line and a cube that has 6 sides( planes ). I want to find out which plane intersect with the line first.
*intersects
7 days is such a long ban but it's such a good length too
first i mean the closest, the problem rises because a line can intersect two planes at a time
user142019
@user1217203 If a line intersects with a cube it must intersect with at exactly two planes. Which one is ā€œfirstā€?
user142019
(Donā€™t confuse line with line segment.)
actually it is possible to intersect with all four sides
i mean isn't it? the plane equation virtually expands forever across the space
user142019
07:48
How?
line as well
user142019
Oh in that way yes.
user142019
Okay, at least two planes. :^)
Why can't I retag in the review queue?
user142019
Iā€™m terrible at geometry so I canā€™t really help. :P
07:50
(sad face)
I am having such a hard time getting the right direction on this problem in fact... I am a college student majoring in Game Design. No one in my department seems proficient enough to guide me either.
user142019
Maybe they can point you in the right direction at Mathematics.
Neither are people in physics department because they don't understand programming
What do you need help with..?
@Zoidberg'-- that's a new link
Oh I see. Intersection.
Are you having a hard time with collision?
user142019
07:52
@user1217203 itā€™s quite old, actually.
user142019
Man.
@Rapptz I am trying to build a simple physics engine based on one primitive type, a box like shape. I need to solve that intersection problem first in order to make it happen.
user142019
Iā€™ve been on Stack Overflow for three years and four months.
@Zoidberg'-- yes.. I know man, that's why it's so odd that I am having such a hard time building it.
@Zoidberg'-- I feel like I should have finished this project in a month but it's taking about a month and half, and still I am not finished.
user142019
Work harder!
07:54
barely pointing myself to the right direction.. that's all I am doing right now
(cry) yes sir!
user142019
Today is a nice day.
-3
Q: Is there only one good answer to a serie pattern?

maxthxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

lol
I got an idea I am going to try that one out
user142019
What a fool.
and I fail again, try, fail, try, fail, try....
user142019
07:56
I love C. So much boilerplate.
is this how am I supposed to code though?
user142019
void handle_request(uv_tcp_t *client, char const *req) {
    retain_client(client);
    size_t length = strlen(req) + 1;
    char *request = malloc(length);
    memcpy(request, req, length);
    /* TODO: Handle request. */
    free(request);
    release_client(client);
}
am I supposed to fail like this? or is something wrong with me? because I feel like other programmers are like plan things and do code and get done with stuff
user142019
So much crap and this is all memory management and bookkeeping.
user142019
@user1217203 are you a beginner?
user142019
07:57
When I was a beginner I also did it that way.
user142019
And same with Haskell a few months back.
@Zoidberg'-- I have been coding about a year. Spent some time for recreational purpose. I am not a horrible programmer, but just a bit horrible programmer.
so I guess I am a beginner?
@user1217203 what exactly is the problem?
a cube with that consists of 6 planes. I have a line. I want to figure out which one plane intersects with the line FIRST.
if you are intersecting with a ray, i.e. something that has an origin, then once you have found the intersections, it's trivial to find out which intersection is closer to the origin
08:00
but it could be such a case where back of the cube being intersected or front,
user142019
Geometry is one of the reasons I dislike game development. :P
@Zoidberg'-- jajajajaja
@user1217203 I don't understand
if you are intersecting two planes, take whichever intersection is closer to the origin of the ray. that is your "first" intersection
user142019
@melak47 Heh, that was easy.
08:02
omg thank's man
omg
however!
you can also hit edges and corners
in that case, do whatever
user142019
@melak47 highly unlikely with floating point math. :^)
ok
enlightened face
i am like so smiling and so happy
I love u
omg
you still have to find the intersections though. :p
I can't believe this was this simple
user142019
08:04
lol
finding intersection point is easy just en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line-plane_intersection
user142019
2
Q: Intersection of line with cube and knowing the point of intersection

Rajdescription lines are originating from origin(0,0,0). lines are at some random angle to the Normal of Top face of the cube. if the lines are intersecting cube, calculate the intersection point. mainly I want to know how much distance the line traveled inside the cube. I don't know exactly wh...

user142019
@user1217203 what language are you implementing it in?
c++
I am trying to build a simple racing game based on box shapes
user142019
Oh okay.
user142019
08:06
C++ is a terrible language. :^)
shush!
user142019
Haskell ftw!
It is
but.... the most prominent language in my field..
don't spoil the surprise :)
08:07
i need it to get a job.....
I feel this guilt every time when some other programmers come up and tell me how terrible it is.
user142019
Ah well. Itā€™s at least not as terrible as Java. Youā€™re lucky.
....and we use Java as well.
user142019
Java gives the word ā€œterribleā€ a whole new definition.
user142019
@user1217203 I said you were lucky? Scratch that.
user142019
Iā€™d rather write a game in PHP than in Java.
08:08
scratch that? I scratched the word with mouse, I don't understand ur expression.
user142019
ā€œScratch thatā€ means something like s/.*//.
I googled " s/.*//"
S: Summary for Sprint Nextel Corporation Comm- Yahoo! Finance
WUT?
user142019
You cannot Google s/.*//, silly.
li,linux
user142019
08:13
Any POSIX system, really.
user142019
08:26
Hurray.
user142019
Todayā€™s class is about classes.
user142019
What a useless lesson.
user142019
lol class diagrams
user142019
If I need to sketch my design on paper I use boxes and arrows.
08:33
..what are they doing?
user142019
No need to standardize it.
user142019
Dear teacher, I kindly ask you to stop talking bullshit.
That --- question is on the multicollider... geez...
evening
08:38
you alright?
user142019
afternoon
user142019
No.
ahahahahahah
me neither
user142019
Teacher is talking about access modifiers and itā€™s boring as fuck.
user142019
I already know all these things.
08:40
they don't need your overqualified ass then :p
go flip some burgers :p
user142019
Teacher says that all programming languages have at least public and private.
user142019
T______________T
what about C
user142019
@melak47 pointers to incomplete types come close.
user142019
But take Python for example. Everything in Python is public.
08:42
Except there is a convention.
user142019
Thatā€™s true.
Separation of interface and implementation is kind of expected everywhere.
user142019
I rarely use opaque structs in C.
I'm expected everywhere
@brunonery I see what you mean with the 'extra work'. I was gonna explain in this comment, but it grew a bit big, so I posted it as an answer instead :) — sehe 2 mins ago
People abuse spirit so easily
@melak47 overqualified, you say?
@TonyTheLion That was unexpected
08:46
@sehe if he already knows everything, he clearly doesn't need to be there :o)
@Zoidberg'-- Who else wonders why they want linux to die? I wonder what is at windows.die.net
user142019
@sehe no DNS entry.
@melak47 I was flustered by the apparent contradiction with burger-flipping adhortations
@Zoidberg'-- Oh cool. It's already dead then
user142019
Or itā€™s never been alive.
user142019
08:49
My teacher has no idea of what heā€™s talking about.
@sehe lulz
die.net/den/Herrn <-- making up for bad Dutch pun
@Zoidberg'-- What do you think he's talking about (maybe I should scroll up, but first.. I'll go to work)
user142019
@sehe he says that the set of integers is commonly denoted N, while it is actually Z. He says unsigned integers are always positive. He has syntax errors in his code.
user142019
Just to name a few things.
@Zoidberg'-- :)
user142019
08:52
He says an array has always got one or more elements.
user1182183
error C2668: 'SString::SString' : ambiguous call to overloaded function \microsoft visual studio 11.0\vc\include\utility 138
Now try to find which SString::SString causes this in thousands lines of code :/
user142019
While itā€™s actually zero or more.
@Zoidberg'-- Well, what language?
user1182183
is there a way to track where the error came from?
@Zoidberg'-- Erm, no.
user142019
08:53
@sehe Java
Do it, but only if it's a fart noise. Because that would be funny. — DA01 2 days ago
@Mysticial which one (^that?)
@Zoidberg'-- Wokay
user142019
ArrayList, that is.
user142019
Donā€™t know about [] arrays.
08:53
@Zoidberg'-- Clearly, he's wrong. There's even RemoveAll (or Clear) IIRC
@Zoidberg'-- I think you can allocate 0 length arrays in java just fine
user142019
afk
user142019
k
user1182183
09:06
do you guys maybe know how to get the line from the source if the error points to a default include?
user142019
What is a default include?
user1182183
Error 1 error C2668: 'SString::SString' : ambiguous call to overloaded function z:\programs\microsoft visual studio 11.0\vc\include\utility 138 1 Client - Deathmatch
user1182183
z:\programs\microsoft visual studio 11.0\vc\include\utility<<
@sehe If you're just gonna go and downvote it for the same reason you've tried to kill other popular questions, then I rather not say. If you want to that much, feel free to find it for yourself.
09:07
There is likely a cascade of information with further links to other places in the code.
user1182183
only that error is showing, maybe there are some options in VS2012 to show it?
Are you looking at the Error List, or at the Output?
user1182183
error list, hmm ill look at output, thanks :$ forgot
The Error List sucks because it skips all the template goodness. I don't even bother opening.
user1182183
hm errorline1: explicit SString ( const char* szFormat, ... )
: std::string ()
errorline2: SString ( const char* szText )
: std::string ( szText ? szText : "" )
{ }
errorsource: std::pair < SString, CMapEvent* > ( pEvent->GetName (), pEvent )
GetName() is a const char*; hm what could be wrong
09:13
Ewww, own string classes.
user1182183
const char* matches both (const char*) and (const char*,...) ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Indeed. Error list is pretty much equal to Intellisense underlining these days
user1182183
Not mine at least :P
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, but VS is great.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of course it is. I wish they supplied variadic templates in Update 2, tho. I don't want to wait till 2014 to use C++11 -.-
09:14
Buggyadic templates.
user1182183
fixed that stupid error ;F
Seriously, even GCC and clang still require goat sacrifices.
user1182183
SString toinststr = pEvent->GetName();
m_EventsMap.insert ( iter, std::pair < SString, CMapEvent* > ( toinststr, pEvent ) );

I hate such workarounds..
std::tuple<T1 t1>;
std::tuple<T1 t1, T2 t2>;
std::tuple<T1 t1, T2 t2, T3 t3>;
....
somewhere around 1000
// I hate my life. please kill me. Sincerely, variadic templates implementer.
@BartekBanachewicz GCC cannot handle 1000-sized tuples by default.
At least not my variant of them.
user1182183
09:16
@BartekBanachewicz what about macros?
@GamErix That was supposed to be a joke.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have to go to my manager and ask for a copy of ICC
I'd like to play with it, really.
user1182183
@BartekBanachewicz okok :p
I was benchmarking compilation times of my tuple vs the standard one and had to stop around 500-sized tuples, or add flags.
I strived to have my tuple do all things in linear instantiations, but then the dumb underlying tuple from the standard library compiles in quadratic time.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did you send your implementation to these guys?
My implementation works on top of the standard one.
09:22
So it's pretty useless, in fact? :P
Or does it have some kind of magic the normal one doesn't?
I mean, O(n^4) + O(n) = O(n^4)
@BartekBanachewicz It uses minimal space.
Hmm
what kind of information should
/**
* @brief anonymous namespace
*/
namespace {
give?
I mean, FFS, I can see it's anonymous
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz uh, nothing?
09:34
mornin
If I run a command in cmd, I can say command >> file.txt to have the output in a text file. How can I have it both in the command prompt & the text file?
cpx
cpx
Maybe read the text file?
that's a workaround
user142019
09:56
There is blood on my keyboard. :/
sbi
sbi
Good morning.
user142019
Hello.
sbi
sbi
Yawns.

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