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11:00
@Zoidberg How? It's UML
user142019
@sehe in the implementation you can do that.
ITT Zoidberg doesn't even get UML.
@Zoidberg If you're a moron. Doubly
user142019
Of course not.
user142019
It's pointless.
11:01
pointfree
It's just boxes and lines!
How hard can that be.
user142019
And characters with very long and straight arms and legs!
By the way, I rediscovered great band yesterday. It's called I:Scintilla
user142019
And ellipses.
umm, what's our current topic about?
user142019
11:02
Oh how fun.
user142019
State charts.
user142019
Fuck state.
@BartekBanachewicz You tell us. In Lounge<C++>, we almost certainly don't know either.
@Insilico it's not validated, but it's at least the 11th or 13th draft. It's been worked/reworked on for at least something like 2005 or 2006 ( i think). There's a plug in that implements it for Eclipse, that generate the java classes for it.
@Insilico that was by accident!
11:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes No one should.
@BartekBanachewicz It feels like something the cat would write.
What does UML give me that a bunch of boxes with text and arrows don't?
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: No idea what the topic means. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [get-out] [no-questions]
as usual
@Insilico Apparently leaky objects. (ask @Zoidberg; I have no idea what he meant)
11:07
@StephaneRolland What's the point of SCXML though?
hi, time for my random Q of the day. :D Should I bother learning conditional variables in C++11 or they are relict of the past and i should focus on futures mostly and sometimes explicit threads... cant ask this on SO since it is subjective :D
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes that was irrelevant to the UML, you fool.
@Insilico just like what the name says: State Charts XML. It's standardize the way you define state machines.
@NoSenseEtAl Depends on how much multithreading knowledge you have.
@NoSenseEtAl Use the (few) high level bits (futures, packaged tasks) whenever possible.
11:10
@In silico -mostly atomic<T> , std::thread std::mutex and std::unique_lock, and std::lock_guard
Avoid the low-level ones (threads, mutices, atomics) unless you need them.
@NoSenseEtAl Oh okay. Use the higher level primitives (as the robot has suggested)
And std::async sucks, so.
@R.MartinhoFernandes packaged tasks are PPL or ISO C++11?
@Insilico consistency
11:10
@NoSenseEtAl C++11.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which ones are the high level ones?
I want to suggest using thread pools and message queues but standard C++11 doesn't come with them
@NoSenseEtAl It's just a callable wrapper (kinda like std::function) that puts the result in a future.
consistent misery
1 min ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@NoSenseEtAl Use the (few) high level bits (futures, packaged tasks) whenever possible.
11:12
Btw, I expressly ignored std::async in that list.
@R.MartinhoFernandes btw for deamon thread is it ok to use thread wrapped in a class ? I once used it do do background statistics gathering
@NoSenseEtAl What do you mean by "wrapped in a class"?
@Insilico ctor runs it, dtor joins, thread waits for a shutdown flag that is set by calling a member of the class, ofc it loops over some common data structure in the meantime and does statistics on it
@NoSenseEtAl I assume this object is allocated on automatic storage?
That sounds similar to std::thread, except that the dtor of std::thread just fucks up.
11:14
packaged_task seems to be of little use if it's primary use case is the one illustrated in the cppreference example.
@NoSenseEtAl The problem I see with that set up is that it seems prone to deadlocks, depending on the order of destruction of the threads.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes is it std::async, or std::future? :P
What would be useful is the "wrap" class as presented in Sutter's recent presentation.
@StackedCrooked Packaged task is for giving tasks to threadpool like thingies and get values out of them.
@Xeo std::async.
@StackedCrooked packaged_task is just a wrapper for std::promise
Xeo
Xeo
11:14
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have to ask then, why?
@Insilico idk, never had that problem... but i did that only once :D
@Xeo because it creates blocking futures?
The shared state of the futures returned by std::async is broken. All other futures work fine.
Xeo
Xeo
@bamboon That's a future problem.
@R.MartinhoFernandes idk it is nicer to have a wrapper. you can have method call the cancel, no need to manually join...
11:15
@Xeo Nope.
Xeo
Xeo
Wat.
@Xeo no, futures don't block
that's even in the standard
@bamboon They do when created by std::async.
Xeo
Xeo
@bamboon In C++11, their destructor blocks, if that's what you mean.
@Xeo no, they don't. only the ones created from async
11:16
ahahahaha
@NolwennLeGuen have another giggle
Weren't thread pools proposed for the C++11 standard threading library?
I remember seeing some papers on it.
@bamboon true, that surprised me when I heard that in sutter's speech
@Insilico maybe they run out of time, me remeber reading bout it
@R.MartinhoFernandes you tried to incorporate boost::asio with std::async once, right?
11:18
@StackedCrooked you were sutterly surprised?
3
@Xeo Their destructor just releases the shared state. As I said, the shared state used by async is broken.
Xeo
Xeo
I see.
It's bad design bar none.
@StackedCrooked it definitely is surprising/confusing.
Xeo
Xeo
Ain't that getting fixed for C++Next, though?
11:19
@Xeo oh, that's a new one.
@bamboon I was planning to write some thin wrapper with packaged_tasks.
Never really fleshed that out, but the idea is still floating in the back of my mind.
I think async should also take a (optional) thread-pool argument
@R.MartinhoFernandes hmm. where can I find more information about what you mean there?
@StackedCrooked it basically does, just that it is implementation defined
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do you mean std::async ought to return std::shared_future?
11:22
why on earth fstream constructor and open doesn't accept std::string, only const char*?

std::async is broken

Dec 17 '12 at 15:28, 51 minutes total – 137 messages, 9 users, 2 stars

Bookmarked 5 secs ago by R. Martinho Fernandes

@BartekBanachewicz NUL chars are not legal in filenames
@sehe waaaiiiitttt... wat? And that's the only reason?
@BartekBanachewicz in c++11 I think you can pass a string
@BartekBanachewicz why on earth not supporting windows? because the committee is political, that's why
11:24
@BartekBanachewicz I can think of
Dec 17 '12 at 15:34, by sehe
@R.MartinhoFernandes packaged_task... I really need to put that book on the list for christmas break
^ still true :(
@Cheersandhth.-Alf or because ISO C has a heritage with POSIX C libraries
we should make our own C++
@sehe same thing ;-)
With blackjack and hookers.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf How is this related to fstream constructor?
@Cheersandhth.-Alf So: meh
11:25
@StackedCrooked no wchar_t version, which means that it can't handle Windows filenames in general
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz C++11-version does.
@sehe What kind of reason would that be?!
@Xeo okey, that's a relief.
I am afraid that trying to maintain backwards compatibility can really hurt C++ language development
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Can't the implementation accept UTF-8 and then convert that to UTF-16 when calling the Windows API?
Xeo
Xeo
11:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes And that won't work with async?
@StackedCrooked not very practical. to wit, no implementation does.
lol, two students accidentally implemented partition instead of remove_if, and then I realized that partition is a valid (albeit inefficient) implementation of remove_if :) Well, if you negate the predicate, of course.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf How is that not very practical?
@Insilico same reason as for the arguments to main. the difference is that for main the standard strongly suggests UTF-8. still no dice, too darned impractical.
@FredOverflow I think you mean stable_partition?
11:28
@R.MartinhoFernandes tnx for the pack task info, another thing about C++11 I know nothing about and makes me feel dumb... ah joys of learning C++ is that it ends when you die... :D
@StackedCrooked Ah, not familiar with the intricacies of different partition algorithms yet.
@FredOverflow partition can change the order of elements. stable_partition preserves the order.
@StackedCrooked i was wondering the reverse. Perhaps remove_if has other ordering guarantees
@Xeo Nope. Will loop forever.
@StackedCrooked I think partition and stable_partition are the same for bidirectional iterators, aren't theY?
11:29
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I'm not seeing the connection. What's wrong with just allocating a buffer of UTF-16 characters, convert the UTF-8 argument into the buffer and passing that to Windows API functions?
@R.MartinhoFernandes as long as the loop is properly async...
@Insilico you're thinking at the wrong level of detail. what's wrong with using bits? nothing. the problem is at a much higher level, namely the conventional interpretation of char based strings in Windows programs. which by exremely strong convention is according to the GetACP function's dictate.
hmm, aren't packaged_tasks reusable, @R.MartinhoFernandes?
@FredOverflow Hm, I need to think now :)
The looping forever is not the problem, btw. That was just pathological on purpose to showcase the semantic difference.
11:30
@R.MartinhoFernandes I once wrote a similar example and changed the while(true) to simply some sleep because I had in mind that in C++11 compilers may remove infinite while(true)?
@StackedCrooked I mean, for bidirectional iterators, there would be no performance improvement if the partitioning was unstable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes difference to what?
Dec 17 '12 at 15:41, by R. Martinho Fernandes
std::async(std::launch::async, fun);
do_stuff();
// runs sequentially, using two threads :(
@sehe I cannot link to a Coliru sample that timed out /cc @StackedCrooked.
^ that was a good sample on async suckage IMO
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know. I can't even compile my SO answers on there /cc @StackedCrooked.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf I'm still not seeing why the solution presented by StackedCrooked isn't practical as you've claimed.
11:31
@Insilico i
Ah, too much green on my screen.
What do you think is harder for students to grasp, decltype(*it) or typename std::iterator_traits<Iterator>::value_type&? :)
@BartekBanachewicz Reusable in what sense?
@Insilico you're incorrect in your hypothesis that i have claimed anything. it is not surprising that you do not understand. you are after all the first commonly recognized loung c++ troll, on this lounge's anti-troll-list. do you not think all the regulars here are aware of that?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Change colours. Pro tip: partially disconnect your SUBD connector to get immediate results
11:32
@bamboon Yes, they can :) Artistic license :P
@FredOverflow ... the latter, of course
@R.MartinhoFernandes I saw that in the sample code std::move is used to spawn a thread.
@BartekBanachewicz Are you wondering about the moving into the thread?
@FredOverflow question, assuming that is in a function where you get passed an iterator why can't you just say iterator_type::value_type?
11:33
Yes, that's the standard pattern. The callable object you use can be reused to make more packaged_tasks.
btw has anybody ever discussed fixing problems of vector of vectors (ptr jumping) or is that to specific perf optimization for ISO C++ comitee. Aka standardizing vector2, matrix or something like that
:D
6 mins ago, by Cheers and hth. - Alf
@StackedCrooked not very practical. to wit, no implementation does.
@FredOverflow agree with sehe, the latter
@bamboon That wouldn't work for arrays.
@BartekBanachewicz The idea is that each instance of packaged_task will yield one result.
11:34
^ That's not making a claim about StackedCrooked's suggestion?
@Insilico that's a fact, not a claim.
@BartekBanachewicz packaged_task is uncopyable, so move is necessary here.
If you wanted more tasks that do the same, you could keep the lambda and make two or more packaged_tasks.
@StephaneRolland allthough it would be instructive to teach the 'equivalence' (which it isn't, really, unless by convention and standard specs) /cc @FredOverflow
Teach them both C++03 and C++11, but focus on C++11
@FredOverflow ah, I get it thanks.
11:35
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Claims can't be facts?
@R.MartinhoFernandes which, IOW is that they aren't reusable :) thanks
@bamboon When Iterator is a pointer.
@BartekBanachewicz Same pointless example, but now with two tasks: stacked-crooked.com/view?id=45b927a3e8d80acc86f34a5fc5fbdaa9 Does it make it clear?
there is no C++11 or C++03 , there is a single light of C++ :P
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah.
11:36
@FredOverflow yeah, sorry brain stopped working
@BartekBanachewicz how do you define reusable in C++?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was just wondering if it's possible to make this little f*ckers work asynchronously every time I want them to.
I could feel like an overlord.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ;)
TRWTF #1: Windows
TRWTF #2: "Are you sure" (are you kidding?)
TRWTF #3: "Date modified: 2012-11-18"
TRWTF #4: ---Photoshop--- TRWFT #1
@BartekBanachewicz Don your top hat
@sehe I am at work, don't have it with me atm :(
@BartekBanachewicz Priorities, priorities
11:41
@sehe I will wear it when it gets warmer
@Insilico unfortunately it's still a fact even with g++ and its default UTF-8 basic source code character encoding
the reason that it's so impractical is that the default encoding for char based data assumed by most any Windows function, is the codepage specified by the GetACP function, called "Windows ANSI" as a general term. and that's not UTF-8. and can't very well be set to UTF-8 because many windows tools then fail.
That awkward moment when I cause a race for demo purposes and execution serializes perfectly. :/
@R.MartinhoFernandes stems from fifth amendment to Murphy's law
@BartekBanachewicz Like this? stacked-crooked.com/view?id=4bc1a5de4057568b4c4b52603060233a (tool before the second set of includes, demo after)
user142019
11:57
School y u no grades.
user142019
I made the test a fucking week ago and it'd be checked by a computer.
0
Q: Passing an element to a lambda by reference-to-const

FredOverflowInside an algorithm, I want to create a lambda that accepts an element by reference-to-const: template<typename Iterator> void solve_world_hunger(Iterator it) { auto lambda = [](const decltype(*it)& x){ auto y = x; // this should work x = x; // this should ...

@Zoidberg Grades are unimportant. Let your path lead you to mastery, not grades.
user142019
But I need to know the minimum amount of effort I have to do in order to get my propedeutics.
user142019
@FredOverflow A German compiler?
12:04
@Zoidberg A German compiler is not that unusual for a German programmer, is it? ;)
user142019
I would never appreciate a Dutch compiler.
user142019
I'd set it to English immediately. :P
I don't know how :)
@FredOverflow Are you familiar with std::iterator_traits?
user142019
I find non-English terminology confusing. My teachers also use Dutch terminology sometimes. :(
12:05
@BartekBanachewicz (Actually, I forgot to pass along the arguments when launching the threads... here's the same example with that: stacked-crooked.com/view?id=0933b00a470aad00600c821f6f78b2fb)
Ah, yes you are.
@LucDanton Have you read my question? lol
@FredOverflow An answer can get quite involved.
@FredOverflow Btw, IteratorValue<Iterator> const& is a lot less ugly than your options :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes wheels, I suppose?
12:08
@R.MartinhoFernandes That does look sexy. Is it real?
Arguably using std::iterator_traits is not TMP.
@FredOverflow It's a template alias.
I mean, have you just made it up, or is it available in wheels?
I knew it. Cheater!
12:09
I have used similar ones for ranges in ogonek.
all my coworkers are out building a snowman
srsly
user142019
lol
user142019
We often went out to saw trees and bushes.
@TonyTheLion Why aren't you joining in?
A snowman is a cool man, build out of balls!
user142019
12:10
Because he's a programmer.
user142019
@FredOverflow And carrots!
@R.MartinhoFernandes because, not my thing.
@Zoidberg He could still build snowman.cpp or something lol
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes If they adopted that for the base template, it'd be so much sweeter, since you only needed a nested ::type, which means Invoke would just work. :|
@FredOverflow will this work?
    auto lambda = [](decltype(*static_cast<const Iterator>(it)) x){
        auto y = x;   // this should work
        x = x;        // this should fail
    };
12:11
@Pubby No.
user142019
$ cat Makefile
snowman:
<tab>echo Go outside, Tony!
$ make snowman
@Pubby const iterator and const_iterator are two completely different things.
Xeo
Xeo
@Pubby const Iterator != const_iterator
Ah, right
@Xeo Yeah, it really annoys me when I write a new alias template and Invoke won't do.
I should make an Even More Type Traits post and put Invoke there.
12:12
@R.MartinhoFernandes i have to put on the goggles to read that
@sehe I missed your comment, what did it say?
@R.MartinhoFernandes saw that you discussed std::async : see here for A Williams A: stackoverflow.com/a/12510731/700825 See I have a talent for asking relevant Q, just not knowing anything relevant :D
@BartekBanachewicz Well, if the implementation looks funky just read the demo.
12:12
decltype(as_const(*it)) would work for the purpose of the question.
sbi
sbi
Oh. FlagOverflow.
Xeo
Xeo
Ohey ape.
sbi
sbi
Good afternoon.
@Xeo Should we vote to close as duplicate?
@FredOverflow I posted a TMP bit stacked-crooked.com/view?id=786bc7c76952ef0be76286cf7ab99a92. It was the wrong const :(
Xeo
Xeo
12:13
@FredOverflow Not sure, you only have an iterator, while I had the container.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Whatcha doin here in the middle of the day? I thought you have a job now?
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi I do, and I'm working while chatting :)
@NoSenseEtAl Yeah. Notice how he mentions that Herb mentioned being concerned about the dtor, and how he recommends "Make sure you explicitly wait for all your futures."
@Xeo I don't think that makes much difference.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yay. I just have to find a nice usage for it.
Xeo
Xeo
12:14
@FredOverflow Nah, the solution is completely different.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo I used to be chatting while at work — you are at work while chatting. I think you have your priorities wrong.
@R.MartinhoFernandes "Wait for the future", a Hollywood blockbuster featuring Herb Sutter.
2
user142019
typename std::add_lvalue_reference<typename std::remove_reference<decltype(*it)>::type const>::type x
user142019
^ lol
@sbi Wie geht's?
Xeo
Xeo
12:15
@Zoidberg decltype(as_const(*it)) -- Yeah, I think I like that better.
user142019
lol
@Zoidberg With TMP, do I still have to remove the reference before I add the lvalue reference?
@Zoidberg Borked. Turns rvalue refs into lvalue refs.
@R.MartinhoFernandes btw im in the process of watching Herbs concurrency video from CppaB, so you might wanna check it out, parts which i saw mention futures. :D
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am fighting for my apartment. It's grim.
Xeo
Xeo
12:16
@FredOverflow You want to add const inbetween
@Xeo lol, stupid me
user142019
Oh fun teacher is going to explain exceptions and nobody is listening except me.
@Zoidberg You are chatting.
:7254271 Toast him :P
user142019
@R.MartinhoFernandes in between.
sbi
sbi
12:17
@Zoidberg Is that an exceptional situation?
@Xeo Oh, the solution is very nice, liky liky!
@FredOverflow Don't do that, that is borken.
user142019
@sbi not really.
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@Zoidberg Borked. Turns rvalue refs into lvalue refs.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Um. Some would argue that that's what they are for...
@Xeo You're wrong.
12:18
@Zoidberg Nobody is listining... except you? Was that intentional? lol
@sbi That is the joke...
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz I wouldn't know about that. This one definitely is, though.
Oh hey sbi is on Monday already
auto lambda = [](const auto& x) { ... };   // C++11 y u no polymorphic lambdas? :(
@Zoidberg You are the exception. Nice pun
user142019
12:20
@FredOverflow Use Haskell.
user142019
@FredOverflow pun not intended.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was sure you did this intentional. But since nobody seemed to have caught on it, and since starring it now would be pointless, I replied.
@FredOverflow Use these instead of add_lvalue_reference.
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus Actually, it's Friday here.
user142019
    Pun indented.
3
Xeo
Xeo
12:20
@sbi There's absolutely no transport between 1 and 6 am, and all busses change to 30 min cycle from 7pm onwards.
@sbi I did star
@Zoidberg Pun unindented
sbi
sbi
@sehe Oh damn. I missed that.
@sbi caught? The perfect of catch? Was that intentional? :)
thaut waughs indentional
12:22
@sbi If you actually take everything they (I won't give you the pun regarding hypothethical "she") say with a grain of salt, they can even be likeable.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Well, I had offered a job in Berlin...
Xeo
Xeo
Shaddup.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel I have a smartphone. I have an Internet flat rate tariff. So I am almost always online.
well, gamedev
sbi
sbi
12:24
Did you guys notice that Xaade has revealed his (supposedly) real name?
Are people really arguing about solving world hunger now? lol
I'm solving my own hunger
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Nonono! I won't be silenced! I will keep saying: "YOU DID THAT TO YOURSELF! You had other offers! You turned them down!"
user142019
Java y u mandate throw specs.
sbi
sbi
12:26
@FredOverflow What do you mean, "now"? That was already discussed when I was a kid.
Xeo
Xeo
In other news, I finally got my money from the Jobcenter... 1.2k Eur. :) In total, I have gotten something like 3.5k from them until now.
sbi
sbi
Has anyone else got underwear offered by SO?
@Xeo What is your job?
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi Noo, I'm on page 9 :(
@FredOverflow C++ Gamedev
sbi
sbi
12:28
@FredOverflow He's to put up with the awfully bad code of some game shop.
@Xeo Sissy.
@Xeo Doesn't this answer invalidate your solution? Oh wait, I think I had another brain fart.
@sbi Yes.
@sbi You can sell at ebay this weekend without fees ;)
sbi
sbi
@DeadMG I don't think I'll take them up on this. That shirt they sent me is all nice and well. But underpants? Seriously?
@FredOverflow Oh, you mean, they won't charge any fees this weekend? I have a few things I want to sell at a minimum price.
@sbi I don't think a "Cornhole toss game" is underpants.
12:31
@FredOverflow At this rate I'm wondering when you'll conclude that "oh no not TMP" std::iterator_traits is more user-friendly than decltype.
I think it's some thing where you try to throw the bean bags on the left through the hole in the thing on the right.
@sbi Erm... no, just the Anbieten fees :)
@LucDanton It shouldn't be, but is.
Okay, I'll bite the bullet and explain iterator_traits then. — FredOverflow 1 min ago
sbi
sbi
12:32
@DeadMG Oh. I should have looked closer, I think. What is a cornhole toss game, anyway?
@sbi I have no idea, except that it's presumably some kind of game.
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow Ah, you mean you don't have to give away a share of the money you get?
@DeadMG Involing corn and holes.
@sbi Grmbl... I mean to Inserieren fees, I guess :)
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow But when you start at €1, it's always free, isn't it?
@sbi It is? I didn't know that. Haven't sold on eBay for a while.
sbi
sbi
12:35
@FredOverflow Sigh. What exactly was that "free of charge" offer you saw?
Mar 7 '12 at 22:17, by Luc Danton
I tend to not use decltype in generic code. value_type & friends are still the preferred options.
Guess who's getting bitten by decltype in that conversation?
You suck.
For attempting to use decltype that is. It's normal to get confused by it.
@LucDanton What are good use cases for decltype?
12:38
@sbi Last time we talked you had good news. Got some new bad ones to compensate?
@FredOverflow Some aliases you need to implement with it. But at least when you figure out a bug you only have to change the implementation.
@TonyTheLion preordering
Another way to put it is 'if you have to use decltype, at least firewall that behind an alias'.
@sehe lol
(If you use a trait instead of an alias make sure to make it SFINAE-friendly.)
12:41
@LucDanton hum, care to explain?
@sehe std::result_of.
@sehe Why, how, both?
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's all ups and downs. I will have to get more legal counseling, but it seems there's little I can do against most of the issues that cost a lot of money. So my (our, really, we're half the renters in this house by now) hope is to exert pressure on them, by denying where there's a chance, thus slowing them down, which, due to their tight timeline, would cost them. The hope is that they'll make concessions because of that.
One good news is that I gave a radio interview this morning. The interview will lead to what probably amounts to 15secs in some discussion on the subject, so it's worth next to nothing, but the reporter wants to have a statement from the company who owns this house, too, so they'll know we go public. :)
Yeah, you told me on Tuesday.
@LucDanton both...
12:44
huh, sounds messy
I thought there was something new.
template< class >
class result_of; //not defined (spec)
// vs
template< class >
class result_of {} // defined in a way that unpicks bad overloads
@sbi that's something. keep it up
@R.MartinhoFernandes you mean, "make it SFINAE friendly" basically meant "make it open to specialization"?
@sehe Whaaaaat.
Yo hold your horses I'm still writing an explanation.
12:53
@LucDanton good, I'll wait
@sehe As mentioned, std::result_of is borked. An example where the two overloads are obviously non-overlapping when a functor has only one, non-variadic operator() yet still fails.
@R.MartinhoFernandes (right back at you. that snippet is a bit sketchy for me)
@CatPlusPlus yoes
Note that the error is not even that the two overloads are ambiguous or something like that.
@melak47 What?
12:55
@CatPlusPlus hi. did you hear? clounge has an unlimited bitbucket plan now :)
@LucDanton I think you messed up something.
@melak47 what's the occasion?
Note the "candidate expects 1 argument, 2 provided".
Yeah, I've seen the pings
@BartekBanachewicz we found out an academic email address gets you that :)
12:56
@LucDanton erm did you mean foo([](int) {})(42);?
@melak47 wow.
sbi
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@R.MartinhoFernandes There's always some new information trickling in. I've just been afk because I had a lawyer on the phone who gave me new information regarding some twist I was thinking about. Some of it is good, some is bad, most, however, is in the gray area in between, keeping me hanging in suspension, wondering whether I should risk them suing me....
@sehe The 42 is a mistake, it's not supposed to be here.
@CatPlusPlus so now you can keep ALL the people in clounge, if you want to. :p
12:57
Pass the lambda in, foo is supposed to figure out how to call it: either pass nothing, or pass 42.
I don't have admin rights on that team
@LucDanton buttt... the point was the invocation. You invoked foo with 2 args
@sehe No, that was not the point. He borked the point.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thanks.
12:58
@LucDanton ok. so no invocation :)
@thecoshman You still want to write everything from absolute scratch?
sbi
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@sehe I try. In fact, I have to. Financially, I'm with my back against the wall. There's no way I can pay the new rent they want, and there's no way I can get something affordable suiting for me and the kids in this part of town. I can't move elsewhere either, though, because this is where the mothers of my kids live, and where the small ones go to kindergarten and school. I either wrestle some concession out of them, or I am fucked.

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