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10:14
:)
0
Q: Are member new/delete overloads in a derived class ever useful?

PotatoswatterI was just answering a question about the lack of placement delete corresponding to placement new. The reason seems to be the way operator delete is called according to the dynamic type of the object (corresponding to the type used to find operator new). Placement new has been useful to me. When...

I need like 3 downvotes to be exactly 40000…
(in unrelated news)
@sehe What's special about it? 2^16?
That is pretty cool actually..
@Rapptz What else :)
@Rapptz it's the next computer-relevant significant milestone after 40k :) /cc @Potatoswatter
Xeo
Xeo
10:43
Woot, finally interweb access again.
Morning all
Xeo
Xeo
Mornin'
I take it we didn't lose anyone to made up doomsday scenarios
Xeo
Xeo
*lose
crap damn it, I thought it might have only been one 'o'
10:46
ello
10:57
hi
11:08
wazaaap
0
Q: How compiler traverse printf arguments and gives output?

Tushar Mishraint main() { int a=1; printf("%d %d %d",a,a++,++a); return 0; } The above code is giving output 3 2 3 why????

Dupe.
sigh.
honestly this site made me hate seeing the prefix and postfix increment operators
Xeo
Xeo
Hey robot.
@Rapptz I've seen three of these today already. Two with the exact same code.
@Rapptz operators are overrated
11:11
@Xeo Howdy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh... maybe there is some sort of 'noob questions to annoy people with' site where they are coming from
Isn't it too early to go back to school? Maybe they're procrastinating and finishing their homework on the last day of winter break
lol codegolf question saying print 1 to 100 w/o loops, if conditions, and recursion and the last two are using loops
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Pff, easy. With templates, there is no recursion if done right. :)
1
A: print 1 to 100 without using recursion and conditions

marinusC++ (159 136) With templates. #include<cstdio> #define Z(A,B,C,D)template<A>struct P B{P(){C;printf("%d ",D);}}; Z(int N,,P<N-1>(),N)Z(,<1>,0,1)int main(){P<100>();}

lol
does TMP recursion count as recursion?
11:22
I think so
Meh, just use the builtin indices builders.
@R.MartinhoFernandes There's a builtin index builder?
Both GCC and clang have them. (It's code golf; who cares about portability)
Tek
Tek
Question guys. If I have a float vector, and I want to make an iterator for it does the iterator have to be a float type too?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm, compiler incest.
11:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes "It's code gold; who cares" FTFY
I wish I had problems to do.
@Tek what is it iterating over? the components of the vector or vectors?
PE is okay but I'm kinda sick of math atm.
@R.MartinhoFernandes by that logic, cold golf can always be won by having your own compiler. "An empty source file will be interpreted as desire to have the numbers 1 to 100 printed"
I think if you went through the trouble of making your own compiler for that specific problem, sure :P
Tek
Tek
11:28
@thecoshman Just the index of the vector.
@Rapptz people apparently can't understand C and C++ != Python or Scala
@thecoshman Jon Skeet did that once. It isn't funny twice.
@R.MartinhoFernandes link?
@BartekBanachewicz Site rules say any language is allowed everywhere.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh. Is it a new spawn from 51?
11:31
This counts as a loop right? 1 to 100 foreach print
codegolf.se is quite old.
705 days public beta
Well, it's mostly for fun
like flash games for nerds among nerds
@Rapptz Hmm, can't find it. Maybe it was deleted.
By the way, Intel christmas gifts rock (I didn't have a chance to pick them up earlier). I got a keyboard made from chocolate, and corresponding chocolate touchpad.
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman Not really, since you call a new function.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The "hello world in 20 bytes" or something?
@Rapptz Basically, he invented a language with a single instruction, that consisted of performing the requested task.
Xeo
Xeo
11:35
I think he called it "h".
Turned out to be a subset of HQ9+.
I remember reading an article where someone won a codegolf tournament with a blank file.
I was trying to look for it.
@Rapptz That was for the ioccc.
HQ9++ is even funnier
lol
11:38
@Tek oh, are we talking a std::vector or a maths vector? if you mean a std::vector<float> then you should not need to manually write the iterator
"Whitespace with Syntax Highlighting"
@Rapptz well, it's pretty useless without
I actually spent a a week or so learning white space
the majority of those esoteric languages basically boil down to the same thing
@BartekBanachewicz The best is CHIQRSX9+. The X instruction "Makes the programming language Turing-complete. How this is supposed to be achieved is not clearly specified. (The Perl implementation generates a random number, adds it to each character in the program, and interprets the resulting program code as Perl code.)"
@R.MartinhoFernandes I love its name.
Tek
Tek
11:46
@thecoshman I mean just making the iterator for a for loop so that I can print all the elements. That's the iterator I'm talking about.
@Tek yeah, if you have a std::vector<float> you just need to get a std iterator from it
auto myItrAtStart = myVecotr.begin();
that's a long name you have there and myVecotr lol
11:50
@Rapptz vim is so awesome this comes out of the box.
Tek
Tek
@thecoshman Ah I was doing something like for( std::vector<int>::iterator it ...
that's right too?
@Tek s/std::vector<int>::iterator/auto/
you could also do for(auto& i : myVector)
I prefer the slightly more verbose for (auto it = myVec.begin; ... style
Tek
Tek
11:53
@Rapptz Yeap but where I was confused is that myVector is of type float. I didn't know if it mattered if the iterator type should be int or float in for( std::vector<int>::iterator it = myVector.begin()
I kind of always imagined it was kind of obvious that it should match the type.
@Tek it does not matter what type it is, thus auto. all you care about is that it is an iterator that does iteratory things
Well, assuming his compiler supports auto that way.
Tek
Tek
^
if your compiler does not support auto that way, it sucks and needs replacing
Tek
Tek
11:54
lol
I think VS2010 does it though, not so much the for-range loop though
it is not a lol matter
@thecoshman If it does support it and comes with Visual Studio, it still sucks.
@thecoshman lol
Tek
Tek
@thecoshman I'm sure I'm allowed to be facetious about it :p
now we have auto, I am surprised it took so long to be added
@Tek not even that
@R.MartinhoFernandes that would be an ecumenical matter
11:57
Not sure what you mean by that.
I cannot find a definition of "ecumenical" that makes sense there.
> promoting or tending toward worldwide Christian unity or cooperation
This one gets particularly weird.
ah, one sec
what dictionaries do you look at?
"worldwide or general in extent, influence, or application"
Tek
Tek
@Rapptz The reason it wasn't immediately obvious to me is because I didn't know if vectors had some internal index that had a certain type. Sure, that's a lot of assumptions but I couldn't find about the internals of it of this topic on the net
@Rapptz I still don't understand how that fits.
I kind of see it
It's a universal matter, e.g. VS sucks no matter what.
basically, a poply thing
I' just being a silly pirate :P
That video confused me more than your sentence. :(
Should have accepted my explanation.
12:23
@Tek Imagine you are writing your own template vector with iterator nested class. It's just a pointer, right? Now, tell me what does ++ do to it?
Tek
Tek
@BartekBanachewicz Ah, just moves on to the next container then
@Tek You are thinking about a list. A vector is contiguos and memory, and all you have is a starting pointer, element count and element size
Thus, the iterator has to know the element size to advance
Tek
Tek
Ah okay, I see.
struct the_iterator { void* the_pointer; size_t the_size; } // yes, I am evil
@R.MartinhoFernandes kill yourself.
vector::iterator<int> would be funky, though :P
12:30
Are the mathematical functions from tr1 ever going to be standardised?
@Rapptz probably in C++17
I'm talking about the C++03 TR1 cmath header
A stronger reason why the type needs to be known is the signature of operator*. How does it know what type to return? While you can move the size to runtime, the return type is compile-time only.
@Rapptz No.
Why?
@Rapptz What, which functions?
12:31
C++ Technical Report 1 (TR1) is the common name for ISO/IEC TR 19768, C++ Library Extensions, which was a document proposing additions to the C++ standard library for the C++03 language standard. The additions include regular expressions, smart pointers, hash tables, and random number generators. TR1 was not a standard itself, but rather a draft document. However, most of its proposals became part of the current official standard, C++11. Before C++11 was standardized, vendors used this document as a guide to create extensions. The report's goal was "to build more widespread existing prac...
Oh, I thought they were in some other header.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, the ::iterator<T> would theoretically work. It's still evil, though. Iterators are in general.
I learned about those 3 days ago, I just thought it was cool that they exist and got a little upset they dumped them away.
I honestly don't see why those should be in the standard library. Sounds like a really niche thingy.
"These functions will likely be of principal interest to programmers in the engineering and scientific disciplines."
shrug sounded fine to me
12:35
What about GLM? Is it "general enough" for you?
Completely different use case.
Because honestly, I don't give a fuck about (for example) uniform random distribution
I'm confused. What?
There's no general math in programming.
Matrix optimized for GL isn't really matrix for fluid simulations etc.
You mean his niche comment?
12:37
more or less.
@Rapptz The problem with adding all those nice little things is that you put a bigger burden on standard library writers (they need more expertise on other domains). Do that too much and you end up with crappy or incomplete implementations everywhere.
They exist, I tried most of them under GCC by including <tr1/cmath> but they just weren't standardised in C++11. Then again, I don't know how their standardisation process is, I figured all of the stuff from TR1 was added to C++11 since it was complete.
In a perfect world, we could write std::vector3<float>. But we ain't living in a perfect world
I am ok with having that in GLM and not in the standard library.
@Rapptz If I remember correctly numeric algorithms like that are way nontrivial with respect to floating point error accumulation. It would be largely useless to have a single implementation of these functions in the std library, while you'd be much better of using a complete library with (tunable) versions of the algorithm families?
I wager 95% of c++ projects would never need any of these functions. Is it specialized? -> make it a specialized library
12:40
Exactly.
Oh. And happy new year :)
I don't particularly care why it wasn't standardised, I was wondering if it will be since it was complete. However all of the replies so far have.. the same argument.
That it's specialised or very niche, when truth is I can argue that for components that are in the standard..
@sehe and the same to you!
Yeah, there is some accumulated crap in there.
brb, I have to go for a quest for lunch (lunchroom in our building is closed :( )
12:43
@Rapptz Which ones? a asb/sqrt seems rather mundane. I'm trying to picture anything else that could be considered out-of-mainstream.
valarray!
Complex numbers!
yeah never used both of those.
What the standard library really really needs is more machine abstraction (like networking), and in general, stuff that cannot be done in the language.
I disagree, partially.
12:48
I believe that such things should be done like the XML DOM bindings are done, by defining interfaces that are not bound to a single language.
So we can all use the same crappy interface in all languages?
Do you find XML DOM interfaces crappy?
They do not fit the idioms of many of the languages I have used them in.
So yeah, crappy.
The point is that once some common ground is established, you can build up C++11 solution on top of it.
Lowest common denominator is always sub-par.
What do you gain with that anyway?
12:51
Also, Python has a large standard library. Wouldn't that be considered a reason for its success as a language? You have some stupid shit in the Python standard library too.. Looking at you.. Pickle..
@Rapptz I'm still trying to optimize 12, doing things right with a very low frequency :) (Don't want help btw)
I think 15ms is the lowest I can make it
That is pretty decent
One reason is that I fear that things like boost::filesystem are not general enough. The library has come through at least 2 (or 3?) incompatible versions. Having something smaller and common to many languages and OSes is some guarantee of stability, at least for me.
Similarly, BSD sockets work but lack abstraction, IMHO. Better abstraction could be established and such better abstraction could be used as a basis for such standard library. (Dunno if ASIO is the answer here.)
@wilx If boost::filesystem is not general enough what makes you think designing a general enough interface but with a common interface for all languages is any easier?
12:57
So, I guess, for me, the conclusion is, make better libraries/bindings/abstractions but do not push for inclusion into ISO C++ too hard.
Interface for all data retrieval systems for all languages = HTTP
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Nothing makes me think of that. I have never said it were easy.
I still don't know why it is worth making the interfaces pan-language a goal.
@R.MartinhoFernandes seem rather mundane, at least compared to bessels, gammas, riemanns, runge-kuttas etc.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah. well, valarrays is not "too specialized". it's just a broken abstraction.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: IMHO, portability improves quality in general, not just the portability itself.
12:59
@wilx Don't you?
@wilx Why do you need to port the language-level interface?
We already have several relatively portable binary interfaces for various tastes (C, .NET, Java).
@wilx I'd give an arm to erase the XML DOM API specification from history. I mean, the SAX API was already orders of magnitude more usable and fit for general purposes, IYAM. Now look at the popular engines: they all had the guts to deviate (drop XML DOM)
I rarely find myself needing source portability between languages. (I am joking; I never need it)
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I do not NEED it. I just think that once that is done pan-language, it has a certain quality, that C++ centric, with less input from less people, might not have.
The problem is that a pan-language interface will feel awkward in all languages.
13:02
@wilx A big CLR believer, I guess? The interoperability between C# and VB.Net, which amounts to making VB.Net visibly obsolete, as you can do the same things and are required to do the same things in largely the same way as in another language.
I am not talking about following camelCase in C++ standard library adapted from ECMA standard. I am talking about following the abstractions of a proven interface.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I sorta like the learning-curve dampening effect of CLR on F#, Nemerle, Boo etc.
Seriously, have you tried iterating the XML DOM in Java?
@sehe: I do like .NET, it works for me.
Guess what, it sucks tremendously.
13:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes: No, I have not, in Java.
It is not about camelCase, or whatnot.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or in jscript, or in python, or C++, or in ...
It is about not having Java iterators.
It just plain sucks balls.
Look, here's the interface for a node list: docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/org/w3c/dom/NodeList.html
I think XMLDOM API specs have merit only at the engine implementation level: a way to make sure any engine implementation can be wired 'relatively easily' into any platform/runtime's native XML support wrappers
And here's the interface for everything else that can be iterated in Java: docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/Iterable.html
The biggest difference here is probably the fact that the latter can use the for each loop, but the former cannot and requires the silly old-school C-style iteration with indices.
13:08
cue: error prone
You also have to give up on all the goodies you have everywhere else, like all these utilities in Guava guava-libraries.googlecode.com/svn/tags/release02/javadoc/com/…, which work with everything else, but with the DOM you are just fucked.
Point well made. Wait for smoke to rise. Have another oliebol :)
I do agree that in that case iterators are a better solution. But that does not invalidate my point about common abstraction.
-1
Q: Is standerd C++ STL library is thread safe

pp.I am using standard C++ stl (Standard Templet Library) which comes with (LINUX)GCC or (Windows)VC. Can any one please points it out clearly if stl library is thread safe or not?

It doesn't?
13:11
Anecdotal evidence?
What you have demonstrated is that the common denominator should be higher than the lowest. I am ok with that.
Aren't you dropping languages by doing that?
You either give up on several languages, or give up on important language features.
Perhaaaaps @Wilx do you mean that native and convenient interfaces could be constructed on top of the 'common divisor'? Then you're actually heading to my 'route' (here)
Like templates in C++, or workflows in F#.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or runtime features
I have never said it has to be "all" languages.
13:15
This all evades the problem with XMLDOM that it doesn't support a low-overhead mode (like streaming, or parial parsing etc)
Ok. Let's agree to disagree.
man
turns out that I left a broken link to my tuts on my careers
Guess what I want to say now.
Your face is ugly?
Nah, he sucks.
13:22
(hint I like to think of the slightly less expected possible answer)
Ell
Ell
Hi guys.
In other news, I gt the "New Year's Eve" badge hat: "post a starred message in chat on New Year's Eve". I wasn't even here, AFAIR
@sehe They don't use UTC for hats.
They cover at least 48 hours of each day (possibly the whole 50 hours if they decided to fix it after I mentioned it)
@R.MartinhoFernandes UFC instead perhaps?
@R.MartinhoFernandes muhahaha
13:25
@thecoshman What?
@R.MartinhoFernandes UFC => Ultimate Fighting Champion(ship)
TIL astronomers are as stupid as programmers when it comes to naming.
A martian day is called a "sol".
user142019
Good morning.
Morning & yes it feels like morning
Ell
Ell
I want wide to be released
13:31
@Ell you mean the puppy's thing?
@R.MartinhoFernandes citation needed
Ell
Ell
Yeah
@Ell why?
Xeo
Xeo
@Ell Come back in 10 years.
> A Mars solar day has a mean period of 24 hours 39 minutes 35.244 seconds, and is customarily referred to as a "sol" in order to distinguish this from the roughly 3% shorter solar day on Earth.
@Xeo that's very optimistic of you
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh... curiously close to our own day
Ell
Ell
13:33
@thecoshman because I want a new language to try out :P
one with RAII
Could be worse though. Could be called a "static".
@Ell there are better options
@R.MartinhoFernandes a night
user142019
@Ell D :P
Ell
Ell
D has raii?
user142019
Yes?
13:34
Not quite.
user142019
Objective-C++. XD
That's just Objective-C with C++ stuffs bolted in. And Objective-C is C with crazy stuffs bolted in...
acording to XKCD, half a billion years ago, an earth day was 22 (or was it 23) hours long
> The word "yestersol" was coined by the NASA Mars operations team early during the MER mission to refer to the previous sol (the Mars version of "yesterday") and came into fairly wide use within that organization during the Mars Exploration Rover Mission of 2003. It was even picked up and used by the press. Other neologisms such as "tosol" (for "today") and "nextersol", "morrowsol", or "solorrow" (for "tomorrow") were less successful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes kind of like of c++ is just C with C++ stuffs bolted in :P
13:36
@thecoshman It gets worse.
@R.MartinhoFernandes odd message to reply to.. still, that is very odd
@Zoidberg'-- please not again
Ell
Ell
I like manual memory management
@Ell fool
user142019
I like GC as long as there is something like Python's with or C#'s using.
user142019
13:41
@Ell Yeah in languages that don't have exceptions.
automatic is the way to go people
user142019
RAII + undirected cyclic graphs = hell. xD
Ell
Ell
actually no, its explicit ownership semantics I like
Like unique_ptr and shared_ptr
@Zoidberg'-- What?
(Broken design = broken, btw)
@R.MartinhoFernandes hipster, don't worry
13:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wat. FTFY
@Ell Lately I have been wanting to give Rust a spin.
Ha. My pedantic ass has just commented 3 (major) nitpicks on the latest dWTF: thedailywtf.com/Comments/…
Muhahaha. I'm evil
@R.MartinhoFernandes link
Ell
Ell
Have never heard of rust
13:44
@sehe sounds like you need to learn to control your ass
2
Perfect for decontextification.
@thecoshman Is it better if it is sloppy?
:O what the fuck was that slidy shit effect on github? just load the fucking content, don't give me no shitty html animation crap (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
@R.MartinhoFernandes God please no stay away from it. What if it's contagious?
Ell
Ell
Ooh blocks look like ruby
13:46
@Ell ...exactly! But wait, there's more, and it's worse!
@thecoshman No idea what you are talking about.
user142019
Rust is a terrible map in MW2.
My New Year’s resolutions: 2560 × 1440, 2048 × 1536, 1136 × 640, and 1366 × 768.
^ ha. ha.
@Ell What do you mean?
Oh, the syntax?
Ell
Ell
Yeah
user142019
13:48
@sehe Die grap is al zo oud als Metusalem.
That's just it. They are not broken like in Ruby.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ¬_¬ on github... click folder... stupid shitty slidy animation... rage
@thecoshman That... has been there since ages ago.
user142019
@thecoshman disable JavaScript and voila.
Ell
Ell
Why are they broken in ruby?
13:49
@Zoidberg'-- ... ha.
@Zoidberg'-- ah, but I like AJAX loading things in a seamless way
@R.MartinhoFernandes I neither use nor look at github much
user142019
I like Ajax. I like it when Ajax wins from Feyenoord.
@Ell There's the weird special casing for taking them as last parameter; there is the weird yield thing to calls that implict block; and there is the OMG HOW MANY FUCKING INCOMPATIBLE DIFFERENT KINDS OF FUNCTION TYPES CAN THEY FIT INTO THE SAME LANGUAGE factor.
user142019
Ruby has a billion different ways to do everything. xD
@Zoidberg'-- Feyenoord?
13:51
Maybe, not really "broken", but certainly not great.
@thecoshman Dutch football club.
user142019
@thecoshman Ajax and Feyenoord are Dutch football clubs.
user142019
Ajax FTW
I see...
football (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
user142019
I was once talking to some merkin about football.
Footbal sucks (by default).
user142019
13:52
She thought I was talking about something else.
user142019
xD
@thecoshman You don't play football with tables, son.
Ell
Ell
I think they are awesome. And taking a block is a way to bind it to a variable so you can pass it somewhere else if necessary, yield doesn't do that (makes it quicker iirc)
@Zoidberg'-- Sex?
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes merkin football.
13:52
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes you do...
def method_missing(...
Ell
Ell
Type specifier is like as2
A hat?
user142019
I like Ruby.
user142019
13:54
It's a nice language.
user142019
Pity that it's an ISO standard, though.
@Chimera What? Where?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Topic
@Zoidberg'-- why pity?
5 hours ago, by Cheers and hth. - Alf
@ScottW oh it's a dog! i always thought it was a brown hat!
It's from here.
13:55
ah
Ell
Ell
I never knew ruby was an ISO standard
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz why the hell is it necessary to make Ruby an ISO standard.
user142019
It's just a waste of time.
why is it a problem?
@Zoidberg'-- Why pity?
13:57
Not that I care, because I sincerely think that Ruby is useless. But IMHO standarization helps to maintain one code that's at least portable
@wilx He is allergic.
Ah.
not a shitfuckload of smalltalk, which effectively led us to the point when there's NO smalltalk at all, because everybody implemented it differently
And you can't just write code and call it "Smalltalk"

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