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12:02
@robert Yeah.
@AndreiTita Maybe you can help me understand the following requirement: "A C++ standard library function shall not directly of indirectly modify objects accessible by threads other than the current thread unless the objects are accessed directly or indirectly via the function's non-const arguments, including this."
I would pose the following question: Why would a standard library function EVER modify an object (even if there is only one thread) that is accessed in a const fashion?
@AndreiTita oh thanks
The requirement implies that this is not self-evident.
@robert I am both a bit tired and rather unfamiliar with concurrent code to be able to answer that, but I think it would be a good enough question for SO.
1
Q: enum private member

assyliasWhy does the first code below compile, but not the second? First code: enum E { A { public int get() { return A.i; } }; private int i = 0; E() { this.i = 1; } public abstract int get(); } Second code (compile error: non static variable i can't be referenced from a static cont...

enum with getters
wat
12:09
java tag?
yes
I know, just was so baffled I had to mention it here
probably so we can laugh at Java again :)
lol
@robert Well, it could cache things, or do mutations that are not observable because they are merely optimizations (think splay trees).
(I don't think any component in the standard library could be implemented as a splay tree even without this requirement, but now it certainly can't)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmmm... that might be possible. But it doesn't seem like it has anything to do with that, because Sutter didn't mention such a thing.
What does thread-safe copy construction mean? That an object can be properly copied (by means of synchronization) even if another thread tries to modify it at the same time?
@robert It has everything to do with that: if a standard library implementer wants to implement something in that fashion, it must lock internally to maintain that requirement.
It means that you can be sure that const functions in the standard library do not change state (even non-observable state) in a thread-unsafe manner.
(There was no such guarantee before; const functions could change internal non-observable state if they wanted)
@robert It means that you can safely copy while another thread reads from it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why would another thread reading from it pose a problem?
12:20
@robert Because for some data structures reads change non-observable state.
@robert He does mention that. He just doesn't actually give concrete examples. But he talks about it all the time, very proudly referring to this 'earth-shaking' new line in the specifications
Something terrible happened
I've ordered food and it won't be here for another hour and 20 minutes
That's terrible.
@robert The example I gave above: reading from a splay tree alters the tree.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Then, by definition, it's not a pure read. So, yes, our definitions basically overlap, although I use a more strict definition for "read" and "write".
12:22
@thecoshman okay. can I see the build system you made, then?
Mine arrives within 40 min depending from where I order.
@robert Well, I am using "read" to mean "invoking a const function"
@robert External observability
Or "performing an operation that does not change observable state", i.e., the "logical const" thing Herb talks about.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: It's all fun and games until someone conquers China. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [lets-play-civ5]
12:23
@robert You can feel free to use stricter definitions all you want. The point is, unless that definition is backed in the standard, there would be no basis to assume these definitions to be used by the standard library.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What standard library functionality could be backed by a splay tree in C++98 and cannot in C++11?
14 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
(I don't think any component in the standard library could be implemented as a splay tree even without this requirement, but now it certainly can't)
But that is irrelevant. It just happens that I cannot think of an example that is more obvious :)
Right. :-/
std::list could cache length.
Nah, that might be silly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But it's already required to return length in O(1).
12:30
@AndreiTita No that's std::vector. std::list's size() is O(n), that's also why you should do container.empty() instead of container.size() == 0 (other than for clarity).
Right? :O
@robert Not anymore. It's O(1) now.
What?! :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes Poor splay trees
@robert Yes, you've missed the news, std::list is now completely useless
@CatPlusPlus Are you saying it wasn't before?
@robert Memoization, statistics; in general: all kinds of on-access optimizations
12:31
@CatPlusPlus It's been useless most of the time.
I honestly don't know of a nice example for this. But the point is that without that guarantee, the standard library had leeway to do whatever. Non-observable state was fair game for const functions. It isn't anymore.
That is the fundamental change.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I heard from a friend of a friend of my third cousin that someone at boost actually used a list to implement someshit and it was appropriate.
@AndreiTita Well. It can be appropriate because "don't optimize prematurely" and you want to model something that actually resenbles a doubly linked list
Xeo
Xeo
You should be able to decide whether you want O(1) size or splice. :|
I used a linked list to implement a cache once.
12:34
@Xeo You can. Use Boost Intrusive
@R.MartinhoFernandes Naughty boy
Linked lists are also used often for concurrent data structures.
@R.MartinhoFernandes If std::list's size() is required to perform in O(1), how can it do that other than by using a counter (i.e. caching)?
@sehe you a spelling mistake
@robert Yeah, I realized it was silly.
Xeo
Xeo
@robert By having O(N) splice.
12:34
@TonyTheLion Finally! I made one!
Xeo
Xeo
@sehe Congratz!
@Xeo How does that help to achieve O(1) for size()?
@TonyTheLion > At a lecture by Sam Glasstone in the mid-1960s, he drew some concentric circles on the blackboard and then said, “It used to be classified to draw concentric circles.” forbidden spheres
@Xeo Yay. Beers all around
@sehe lol
12:37
@sehe Sucks: no moves. I remember I had to roll my own because of that :(
I can tell that I'm tired because I'm asking myself questions like "can I trust the users of this code with a default constructor which requires some extra initialization?" when I'm the only user of said code.
@AndreiTita lol
Ligatures are weird.
On the plus side, I finally have a use for delegating constructors.
Xeo
Xeo
@robert I may have missed the context.
12:44
I don't get the hang of it. "const now means thread-safe" feels very wrong to me. Currently I think the standard library only says "if your const-methods are thread-safe, then whatever I do with const-stuff will also be thread-safe". But that's not the same as saying "const == thread-safe". It is saying "your const-methods are thread-safe -> standard library functions working on your const stuff are threadsafe".
@robert Notice that there is also a requirement that any objects you use with the standard library follow the same restriction regarding const access by multiple threads.
(That is mentioned in the talk, IIRC)
I just fixed my mouse's unintended double-clicking behavior by following a movie on Youtube.
I'm so cool.
Hey, in the standard there is a note below the requirement: "This means, for example, that implementations can’t use a static object for internal purposes without synchronization because it could cause a data race even in programs that do not explicitly share objects between threads."
However, I also noticed that there are two versions of the requirement next to each other.
§17.6.5.9, 2 and 3
2 and 3 seem to contradict each other.
Or at least there is some redundancy.
In 2 it says "... unless the objects are accessed directly or indirectly via the function’s arguments, including this."
In 3 it says "... unless the objects are accessed directly or indirectly via the function’s non-const arguments, including this."
12:52
this <-----
@robert Note the use of "access" vs "modify".
@TonyTheLion ?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ahhh, you're right, of course!
@TonyTheLion It happens because cats are liquids
@AndreiTita hahahaha
Is it just me or MSDN is slow as molasses?
12:57
@R.MartinhoFernandes Probably not you.
@R.MartinhoFernandes opens fast here
If you are a geological era, it also opens fast here.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Opens for me. But I find MSDN to be rather slow.
@TonyTheLion Free honey on the road is inconvenient?!
Xeo
Xeo
12:59
@AndreiTita Free stings are.
I think that's the future in cycling snacks.
@AndreiTita As long as you dont piss them off
@sehe late, very late
13:00
@Xeo Use smoke.
Blow smoke on them bitches.
@CatPlusPlus ¬_¬ long enough for a nap by my thinking
@R.MartinhoFernandes you're getting confused with bees
@R.MartinhoFernandes That could be a legitimate advantage of being a smoker - if you have a wild bee infestation, it's marginally easier to get to the honey.
@thecoshman Someone mentioned honey. Practically only bees produce honey.
13:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes you know, honey is tasty
@thecoshman But yeah, smoking wasps may be counterproductive. I can't really tell if those are bees or wasps in the picture.
They do look beelike to me.
So, pro-tip: before smoking honey bees, make sure they are really honey bees and not some waspoid.
@R.MartinhoFernandes AFAIK wasps make honey too, just not in quantities worth farming
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes s/because/before/?
13:06
@thecoshman Most species do not.
A different question: Do you know of any decent PDF reader that allows me to read the same PDF document at multiple locations next to each other (split window)?
Xeo
Xeo
@robert Adobe Reader allows that... but I wouldn't call it a "decent PDF reader" :|
@R.MartinhoFernandes do not make honey at all, or not in farm-able quantities?
@thecoshman At all.
@R.MartinhoFernandes is that so...
13:08
Something horrible happened
Food place is out of tortillas
is that how you start all things here now?
with "something x happened"
makes a change from saying things suck
yea now they're terrible/horrible/shitty/awful/worse-than-ever/
Okay for now I will just use different PDF readers (other than Adobe, because I hate it as well).
13:10
@CatPlusPlus's motto: "I had fun once. It was awful"
Well I could say "something xxx happened" but that's your department
tits
it was tits wasn't it
It's never tits
13:11
maybe boobs
perhaps knockers
@robert I use Adobe Reader at work (I work with PDFs, and it is rather important to have them work fine in Adobe Reader for some reason) and SumatraPDF on my laptop.
@R.MartinhoFernandes 'managers'
@thecoshman What?
Xeo
Xeo
@robert Still, it allows multiple views.
Also about bees/wasps
13:12
spiders
Aw, thread images died
Nevermind then
@R.MartinhoFernandes I use PDF xchange viewer mostly. Multiple documents can be opened in tabs (no separate windows) and the annotation capability is great.
(The answer is burn them)
@R.MartinhoFernandes their fault
There there
13:13
@CatPlusPlus Kinda dangerous if there are workers up and about outside the hive.
@CatPlusPlus shut it
It can only be done with relative safety at night.
can i has write number to stdout in asm plz help kthxbai
It really looks like a nice template
@BartekBanachewicz Use g++ -masm=intel -S --fverbose-asm and see how it is done?
I should make a generator of it: "How long did you look in google : a) what is google b) 30 minutes and lol nothing found lol"
@R.MartinhoFernandes it was in connection to today's questions. I honestly didn't think you'll take it seriously
we already knew that
Gérard Depardieu is a Russian citizen.
I don't even know who that is
13:22
Famous French actor.
What
How can you not know
@R.MartinhoFernandes Obelix?
@FredOverflow Yes.
@CatPlusPlus I can barely even name any famous English actors.
@DeadMG do you mean British?
13:25
did I say British?
If you did, what would be the point of my question?
I remember there's a British actor with a 'Hugh' in his name.
lol, @thecoshman, I can't believe template wankery earned you 3 stars... it's so old
my point is that your question has no point anyway.
@DeadMG Akka
13:27
In the C++ standard, "shall" and "shall not" means not binding, right?
@BartekBanachewicz ¬_¬ do we have to lecture about about England is not Britian
@DeadMG I hope you have at least heard of Jodie Foster.
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait - doesn't Intrusive require you to supply your own backing store (hence, move-enabled)? And doesn't it follow, that since the hook mechanisms are pretty trivial (at least the member structs used with traits) these will benefit from compiler-generated move semantics?
Or are you saying that things would break because the ownership semantics on those hooks are broken?
13:28
@robert No, it means "UB if violated".
@BartekBanachewicz meh
@StackedCrooked Contact 3>
Then I argue that the standard is broken.
@sehe You inherit from hooks or compose with them. That makes your types non-movable.
@FredOverflow That movie really had me glued to the screen.
Xeo
Xeo
13:28
@robert You're not the first to say that. What is your exact case?
@robert "shall" is a standard keyword defined in a standard as "either you do it or else..."
We should make our own standard
everyone should make their own standard
@BartekBanachewicz with black jack and hookers!
@BartekBanachewicz Le Petit Prince was way ahead of the game: (/cc @Robot woot cultural reference): home.pacific.net.hk/~rebylee/text/prince/13.html
"And what do you do with these stars?"
 "What do I do with them?"
 "Yes."
 "Nothing. I own them."
 "You own the stars?"
 "Yes."
@BartekBanachewicz insert XKCD commic
comic -FTFY
13:30
komiek
@StackedCrooked dangerously close to "commie"
(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
@BartekBanachewicz my thoughts exactly
oh gawd, my ears. I did listen for crappy offspring for too long, and now I finally launched a decent guitarist, I feel the difference
stupid keyboard navigation plugin
13:32
@R.MartinhoFernandes How does composing hooks make a type non-movable (unless, indeed, the hook's ownership semantics are borked - IIRC that is pretty hard to do because all the hooks are non-owning, instead have 'triggers' to reflect back on the backing storage, right?)
>> "(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻".reverse
=> "\273\224\342\201\224\342\273\224\342 \265\270\357\257\225\342\211\274\357\260\302\241\226\342\260\302\257\225\342("
@TonyTheLion I guess it's paran*id and sh*t.
Ruby flippin tables.
@sehe I love Le Petit Prince. I own one copy in Portuguese, one in English, and one in French. I saw an Italian copy at a Portuguese bookshop here in Berlin so I am kind of planning on expanding my collection with an Italian and a German copy :)
@sehe The hooks are not movable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Erm. Strangeness
13:33
Wait a second. Is §17.6.5.9, 3 mostly (or maybe exclusively) referring to the copy constructor (in that it must be threadsafe), because standard library functions don't know anything about what other methods the inputs may have?
@robert No. It refers to everything with const in it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I only started listening to the little prince a while ago as I gave my daughter the audio book (actually, it's a "sound play")
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 never heard of it
@robert But yeah, a reason for the change is because the standard library couldn't possibly make any guarantees about thread safety unless copy constructors are threadsafe
@sehe Audio books are too slow for me. And I'm still looking for one with decent music in background.
Xeo
Xeo
13:34
@StackedCrooked The fuck.
@StackedCrooked What language is that?
Ruby console.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why does §17.6.5.9/3 imply that my const-declared member functions must be threadsafe?
(I hope it does, or else I am on the wrong track entirely.)
@robert Herb mentions that in the talk. Give me a moment to find it.
@StackedCrooked ew.
13:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thank you, your help is invaluable.
As is your patience. :D
@robert Any called by the Standard library.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't actually listen to it. It's just that I overhear some of it. This one is, like I said, more of a 'play' - with roles and ambient sounds. And, yes, some music as well
@DeadMG Exactly. I would put it this way: Any called by the standard library, directly or indirectly. Then it should also be emphasized that "indirect" calls are much more common that direct calls (by nature).
@BartekBanachewicz @R.MartinhoFernandes luisterrijk.nl/luisterboek/1519/de-kleine-prins
@robert That comes from §17.6.4.10/1: The behavior of a program is undefined if calls to standard library functions from different threads may introduce a data race.
13:39
It used to be a radio series
If you use the standard library with any type that does not follow that requirement, BAM, UB.
@sehe my copy has the same image on the front cover
I reckon they have the printer duplicate it :)
lololo, thread-safe printer.
so you can print while you print.
haha
13:42
@thecoshman You suck.
@BartekBanachewicz All my copies have that image.
I would not buy one without that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes welp, glad I learnt something today
If I have a -70 12 hours ago removed today, does that mean I'm repcapped at 130?
@LuchianGrigore I think that is a bug.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, that's it, I guess. Again, thank you very much - as I said, your help is invaluable. My thanks also go to the others, of course. ;-)
> Is there someone who learned it by internet?
lol
13:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes erm... liar. You would buy a leather-bound with a linen dustcover
@R.MartinhoFernandes look at my answer.
I honestly have never seen a copy on sale with a different cover.
@sehe But yeah, I may like the book too much.
Also, fuck ligatures.
Disclaimers not-withstanding, this could handily be converted into a comment without losing anything — sehe 5 secs ago
@BartekBanachewicz ^ in fact, if you had left the disclaimer out, it would probably get auto-converted into a comment
@R.MartinhoFernandes where? di>ff<erent?
@sehe Bah, that's the fun of it, because it does answer the original question :P
@BartekBanachewicz That doesn't make it a good answer, IMO. It is still a comment. Some questions have no good answer, even if it is technically an answer
Xeo
Xeo
13:52
@LuchianGrigore user removed?
And no, it's still 200.
@Xeo question deleted
Xeo
Xeo
Same thing, basically.
@sehe I don't want anyone to upvote it. I just wanted the OP to see that his question was bad in a nice way
Xeo
Xeo
You're repcapped when you have a net +200 from upvotes.
@sehe Well, it's not really an issue with ligatures per se, but more an issue with me not being able to convince InDesign to tell me that it is using the ligature glyph for some character. Bastard keeps telling me the character uses the regular glyph. I know it isn't because I forcibly selected the ligature glyph by hand.
13:53
If it isn't OK, I'll take it down.
@BartekBanachewicz cough. comment.
ok, that's good :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes interesting. Wouldn't that just use a different unicode code point? Or is that a feature, where it gets automatically transformed
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes There was a series "Der kleine Prinz" on the German TV channel "Kika" not too long ago, my little brother liked that one.
Though it sounds wholly different from what the books are about (according to Wikipedia)
@sehe flagged as "not a real question" and deleted my answer
13:55
Oh, woot, another hat. Who'd have thunk
@sehe Well, if you use the codepoint for the ligature, yes. But you can get ligatures with two regular LATIN SMALL LETTER F if your font (and the font rendering code) supports it. The latter is what I am doing.
@BartekBanachewicz mkay. I was ready to just leave it, just pointing out that one could frown upon this answer. Also pointing out that answers are not for discussing meta topics :)
Xeo
Xeo
@LuchianGrigore Which is nice if you're getting an exessive amount of upvotes (say, from getting reddited). Just dump that bounty you've been meaning to award for months, and don't waste those precious upvotes. :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sounds like a nice job for a robot
@Xeo I like that I read the book as a kid and as an adult and it feels like I read two different books. That "replay value" may be easily lost in an adaptation for TV.
13:56
@Xeo not the case. What bounty though?
Xeo
Xeo
@LuchianGrigore Just a bounty on a question for, say, 500 rep. Frees up 50 upvotes for you to receive. :P
You do know bounties count towards the repcap, right?
hm. someone just downvoted my luarings question again. What the... What's wrong with it so much? -.^
Xeo
Xeo
@LuchianGrigore Err... what?
13:57
@LuchianGrigore They don't.
Xeo
Xeo
That's wrong in any way I can interpret it.
@LuchianGrigore Consider for a moment the fact that there are +500 bounties.
How the fuck would that work if they counted towards the repcap.
13:58
You're stuck at -300 for the day, that's how
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes The TV series is about the little prince hunting an evil big snake across all kinds of planets.
@LuchianGrigore Really?
@LuchianGrigore Oh. You mean offering them.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, that's what Xeo was talking about
@Xeo yup (of course, subject to accepted answers)
@Xeo Ok, that is a rather... liberal adaptation.

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