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13:00
@melak47 too bad my academic mail is so shitty it doesn't even work
@CatPlusPlus you don't? I thought you and cosh were admins for clounge
Only cosh
sbi
sbi
> This, friends, is the end of the week as we know it. — NeinQuarterly
@LucDanton my brain must be on the wrong track. How would this not have been a problem with a more SFINAE-friendly spec of result_of?
Didn't you tweet you couldn't keep up and unfollowed him?
(inb4: "Nein")
@sehe The point is that when std::result_of cannot produce a proper type typedef (because there isn't one), it hard-errors. It should soft-error instead.
sbi
sbi
13:05
@sehe I did unfollow him. He's still great, though.
@sehe If it soft-errored, the bad overload would simply be discarded, and the right one picked. As is, it makes the program outright ill-formed and fuck you.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hmm. Yeah, agreed. It hard errors... how can that be, anyway? Since foo is a template too, why couldn't the compiler just drop the overload?
@sehe Because SFINAE rules :/
I guess I'll look at the actual definition of result_of when I get time
Thanks for trying to explain /cc @LucDanton
@sehe There are some types of errors that never SFINAE.
If you put a static_assert in your class, instantiating will make the program ill-formed, not discard an overload candidate.
13:09
@sehe As to the 'how', there's a simple rule to rewrite a metacomputation to be SFINAE-friendly. Example with a bogus trait that computes the result type of the increment operator.
Note that the decltype metacomputation in question is SFINAE-friendly. We're using SFINAE to write an SFINAE-friendly trait.
Food where's my food aaa
So I can't stick typename std::result_of<Whatevs>::type in a Void</* omnomnom */> and have my cake, too.
@sehe Amazingly std::result_of has another, unrelated flaw, too.
Make sure to look for it when you're reading the specs!
Tis all broken.
@R.MartinhoFernandes TIL. That is not what I'd have expected
@R.MartinhoFernandes using it as a verb makes it even more cryptic than usual
13:19
@CatPlusPlus with kyrostat I take it? well, we can do. I sort of want to carry on working on this windowing stuff though, even if it is done as just a windowing thing and then have a sepperate project for a game.
@LucDanton I actually understand that :) I'd be tempted to name Void<> SfinaeCheck<> or, just SFINAE<>, though. Any reason why Void is deemed more descriptive/appropriate?
Considering that after 6 months we have... loading OpenGL extensions
@CatPlusPlus You mean, GLLoad.
@BartekBanachewicz disagree. SFINAE is all about application. SFINAE is intrinsically an 'event' or 'action'
Writing this stuff from scratch makes the game not happen ever
13:20
@CatPlusPlus or GLEW
What?
We don't use GLEW
GLEW is crap
well, it works.
glload works better
@CatPlusPlus If you guys use ThePhD's definition of progress, you have accomplished a lot already.
I really don't know how works can be better than works. It's binary - 0 or 1
13:22
@CatPlusPlus duh. as if the name wasn't a hint: GL, Ew
I'm sorry but I have better quality scale than 0 and 1
GLEW is like 0.0001
@CatPlusPlus that's probably why you spent 6 months on it
user142019
@BartekBanachewicz C works so use C.
We use glload scrub
1
Q: What is the feature to use for( ;; )?

SugarFound code with this for-loop. What exactly feature to use it insted of while(true) for example? Is it uses less memory ?

Where the fuck do people get these ideas?
13:23
I'm not too fussed to be honest, I know you had desires to use something like unreal engine
@R.MartinhoFernandes It is uses less memory
@BartekBanachewicz lol, no, they spent 6 months on it because 1) they are slackers and 2) when they are not slacking they suck.
Well if you want to write windowing library
But it's boring
And also already done
vOv
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, I was well aware of the 2).
@R.MartinhoFernandes You were part of the team too
Slacker
13:24
yeah, but using the same justification you used for starting your glskel, they all sluck
Eh, I'd just use GTK now
everybody sucks.
@CatPlusPlus get lost
sbi
sbi
@FredOverflow From what I understand, that means, as I originally suspected, that you can have higher starting prices for free.
13:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes working on kyrostat does not pay my bills, and I am not autistic enough to devote all my time to it
@sehe I don't like the name too much either, as it doesn't convey that Void is a (constant) metafunction. ConstVoid doesn't seeh that much better though. I'm not tempted by a name that mentions SFINAE because sometimes I use typename = std::true_type as a dummy SFINAE parameter, where things like <T, Invoke<std::is_pointer<T>>> can be used for SFINAE-aware specializations.
(Yeah the example is stupid what with T*.)
it depends what we want to do, if we want to make a playable game, then we may as well use a full engine like unreal or source or what ever
@CatPlusPlus I didn't want to!
The fuck is this crap.
13:28
Windows
@R.MartinhoFernandes click debug :D
@LucDanton I don't see any match for T* (you mean T&? I agree then)
@R.MartinhoFernandes also, I've had gl extension loading working for a while now. it was just @thecoshman who couldn't get it to work on linux :p:p
@melak47 So what?
@sehe The example is stupid because <T*> is a saner way to do the same.
13:30
"It was half-working for a long time"
Compared with while(true), for(;;) uses 4 bytes less memory on your hard drive. — FredOverflow 17 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ignore.
the robot seems to expect a lot to come form an a hour or two a week
@Xeo What, is that from experience?
Xeo
Xeo
Aye
13:31
@LucDanton aha
Xeo
Xeo
Pops up sometimes, no idea what it is for, but works fine anyways.
@thecoshman Come on. Does it look like I am expecting "a lot" when I am expecting more than having GLLoad working with 24 hours of work? (six months * four weeks * one hour).
@Xeo Oh well.
guys....if I have template<typename T> class something : public std::unique_ptr<T> { /*constructors and stuff*/ }...do I get the destructor from unique_ptr?
@R.MartinhoFernandes intellisense crash
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... except it didn't work.
13:33
@melak47 Why would you inherit from a pointer???
@FredOverflow never mind that :)
@melak47 Public inheritance?
(Yes, you do)
Also, destructors are not inherited, but your destructor will implicitly call the base destructor at the end.
hmm
if I have an rvalue T[], is arr[index] T?
13:34
thoughtful puppies
a phenomenon
@FredOverflow ah, so that's how it still works.
@R.MartinhoFernandes most of that time has been spent either learning about stuff, or trying agree how we will do stuff
@DeadMG I'd say T&
@DeadMG I don't understand the question. Oh, you mean, is the element copied?
@FredOverflow What is the type of indexing into an rvalue array? Yes.
13:35
@DeadMG There are no rvalue pointers.
So T&.
hm, fair nuff
@R.MartinhoFernandes What? Of course there are. new int(42) is an rvalue pointer.
pointer rvalue.
Oh, you meant pointer to rvalue?
Xeo
Xeo
Result of *pointer is always T&, if that helps.
13:36
@DeadMG I hope you are not using rvalue arrays in anything serious.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo And what is it if that does not help?
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi Lie down, hold your breath and wait until it helps.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not much of an argument, considering how rvalue refs behave.
13:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes Will C++14 have rvalue pointers and universal pointers and pointer collapsing? :)
You don't need that. Use references. Or move iterators.
Every second star will mean 'rvalue'
@jalf Strange, it still works (and by "works" I mean it "underlines the fuck out of everything on sight").
Here comes T*****
Xeo
Xeo
13:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes Like I said, ignore.
How about T* is an lvalue pointer and *T is an rvalue pointer?
Also you're talking about pointers, I banned pointers :<
@R.MartinhoFernandes I get that error too, and it doesn't seem to affect intellisense at all.
Xeo
Xeo
I think it auto-restarts it anyways.
@FredOverflow And *T* is cheerleader pointer
13:40
@CatPlusPlus Xeo overruled that.
5 hours ago, by Xeo
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Hoping for a build-fail. [.you-suck] [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [get-out] [no-questions]
Xeo doesn't have authority to overrule that
Food food food where's my food I need food
It was supposed to be here FIVE MINUTES AGO
Maybe the cat food delivery service ran into trouble with the local dog gang.
@CatPlusPlus Someday, I will travel back in time and vote T__ as universal reference syntax.
@FredOverflow Why the double underscore?
13:43
@AndreiTita Because users cannot use __, removes possible ambiguity.
The rich pointers proposal uses T%.
Hm, maybe T&_ makes more sense?
Xeo
Xeo
T$
and T@
Also, T#
@Xeo That would break every tutorial about operator overloading.
Xeo
Xeo
We could also try T:::
13:44
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why? placeholder?
Xeo
Xeo
Or T><
@FredOverflow Everyone uses operator@.
Xeo
Xeo
How about Tä?
To make parsing even more interesting
13:45
I don't think I ever saw a tutorial on operator overloading.
T💩💩
@Xeo Allowed in identifiers. You lose.
Xeo
Xeo
I saw that coming.
@Xeo Tätärätä would be an elephant reference.
Pile of pointers
13:46
lol
On another note, both ä (precomposed) and ä (with a combining mark) are allowed in identifiers.
since when?
what about ą?
Xeo
Xeo
13:48
@R.MartinhoFernandes In which language?
@FredOverflow Dunno. C++11 at least.
@Xeo C++11.
user142019
Guys.
user142019
It's weekend.
what about └?
@BartekBanachewicz Think so too (that's "a" with ogonek, right?).
13:49
@Zoidberg So?
@R.MartinhoFernandes precisely.
Yes, allowed.
user142019
@FredOverflow three days of sleeping.
Oh wait, no.
The combining marks are explicitly disallowed.
13:50
@R.MartinhoFernandes what are rich pointers?
Well played, committee. Well played.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What's a "combining mark"?
@bamboon Some runtime reflection-y thing.
__ can't be used by users?
@melak47 Yes. It is illegal to name a variable __x, for example.
13:51
MSVC doesn't seem to care
3
int __xyz__ = 1;
Xeo
Xeo
Or x__
or T__T
212
Q: What are the rules about using an underscore in a C++ identifier?

Roger LipscombeIt's common in C++ to name member variables with some kind of prefix to denote the fact that they're member variables, rather than local variables or parameters. If you've come from an MFC background, you'll probably use "m_foo". I've also seen "myFoo" occasionally. C# (or possibly just .NET) se...

user142019
@melak47 it solves problems with implementing the standard library.
@melak47 =)) hahahahahahah loooool
@melak47 we don't care about MSVC either
2
Xeo
Xeo
13:51
@melak47 Reserved for implementation means fuck you if you use it.
user142019
Those problems are related to guess what.
@melak47 That is undefined behavior.
user142019
The most terrible thing to ever happen to C++.
@Xeo I think I have to rename a few functions.
user142019
13:52
Macros!
@R.MartinhoFernandes again reflection, I think I have to finally understand that thing
@FredOverflow "Combining character: A character with the General Category of Combining Mark (M)."
so what kind of fun things can happen if I use __ with MSVC?
user142019
Java didn't happen to C++. Java just happened to good programmers.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am not the wiser :)
@melak47 Anything. It's UB.
13:53
Kombinierende Zeichen () sind in der digitalen Typografie besondere Zeichen, die normalerweise nicht einzeln dargestellt werden, sondern mit dem vorhergehenden Zeichen zu einem einzigen Zeichen verbunden werden. Dies wird vor allem benutzt, um beliebige diakritische Zeichen zu bilden. So ergibt beispielsweise der Kleinbuchstabe y gefolgt vom Zeichen Kombinierende Breve ein y̆, ein Zeichen, was sich ohne kombinierende Zeichen nicht in Unicode darstellen ließe. Vom Konzept her lassen sich also die kombinierenden Zeichen mit den Tottasten auf der Tastatur vergleichen. Formale Grundlagen Ko...
user142019
@melak47 if you define macros with __ in their names, you can fuck up the standard library if you include standard headers after the macro definition.
All combining marks are in the "Ranges of characters disallowed initially" category.
user142019
@LuchianGrigore I don't see any!
13:54
@LuchianGrigore okay okay :p
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, they just restart the process, and the intellisense database is safe in a database file, so it resumes just fine. But the "package server" thing is basically intellisense
@Zoidberg There are some rabbits doing it in the background, behind those trees.
user142019
@FredOverflow I still don't see them.
@FredOverflow Ooops, how did I manage to link to de.wikipedia... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combining_mark
user142019
13:55
Probably because they're behind trees that are fully opaque.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I didn't mind :)
I'm gonna go to bed and read the Josuttis book.
user142019
It's 14:56.
user142019
Y u go to bed already.
13:56
I thought you don't like prolog
user142019
(Usually I wake up around this time.)
@Zoidberg Because I can only read books in bed.
@FredOverflow Basically, instead of U+0104 ʟᴀᴛɪɴ sᴍᴀʟʟ ʟᴇᴛᴛᴇʀ ᴀ ᴡɪᴛʜ ᴏɢᴏɴᴇᴋ you can have a sequence of U+0041 ʟᴀᴛɪɴ sᴍᴀʟʟ ʟᴇᴛᴛᴇʀ ᴀ followed by U+0328 ᴄᴏᴍʙɪɴɪɴɢ ᴏɢᴏɴᴇᴋ. A process that follows the Unicode standard should treat the two the same way.
user142019
@FredOverflow oh :P
@DeadMG lol, that reminds me of some currently unimplemented language...
13:58
@R.MartinhoFernandes A lot of the proposals I've given were from work I did there.
user142019
Can I do something in Vim like strlen("qualified") x?
But I don't remember ever bringing such a big syntax change.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, for Wide I simply scrapped the original syntax, but obviously the Committee couldn't do that.
I don't think the name "prolog" is the best, but I can't bikeshed a better option.
oh great... work to do
14:04
hmm
that doesn't bother me so much
IME the Committee is pretty good at bikeshedding
@R.MartinhoFernandes lamelog?
Some wording needs to be clearer: "indicate why the function failed" is a bit confusing in that context; "attributes" means something else: I think you mean "qualifiers";
right
I find return a weird choice too. I think something along the lines of "valid" would be better. This is not so much bikeshedding but more to reduce potential confusion and people going off in tangents.
I picked it because it's already a keyword
and you can't have x = { ... }; in the current grammar, no?
as initializer_lists are not proper expressions
14:12
@DeadMG It's allowed.
ok
well, I think I'd leave the bikeshedding to the Committee
they seem to like that
Have you seen the string_ref bikeshed thread?
@FredOverflow the standard library book?
no
and I think that return is the most logical choice.
That thing got super popular in no time.
14:14
if you consider the compiler, they are effectively calling the prolog, to determine what dafuq to do.
lol
sbi
sbi
Looking forward to the end of winter.
@sbi You mean March?
sbi
sbi
14:17
Not sure what to think of that.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes From what I have seen you wearing on Tuesday, when it was barely below 0°C, you should cheer every time you think of this.
BTW, have you seen the forecast for the weekend? You might want to buy another sweater.
Well, speaking of the weekend... I'm gonna pick up the kids a bit earlier today. See you, folks!
@sbi FWIW, I am terrible at this. You will find that I am often overdressed, or underdressed. Recently I began to prefer playing it safe and picking "over".
@sbi Have fun.
Ell
Ell
I need convincing that iterators are a good idea
@sbi see you.
14:24
@Ell That's a bad idea
Ell
Ell
I just dont see the benefit in them really
you know what I love even more then coding Java... twating around with testing shit for the most terrible Java programs
Id est, what do you think is the non-worse alternative?
Ell
Ell
well a .each method taking a lambda
Oh wait you can do that can't you?
14:26
@Ell What about all the other scenarios.
Ell
Ell
What like?
How do you sum all the things?
Or sort them?
Or search in them?
Ell
Ell
.inject or .sort
Basically I like ruby's system
@Ell Good. Now you implement those all the time for all containers.
Have fun.
Ell
Ell
Or implement a <=> and an access then do the Enumerable mixin :P
I can't pinpoint what I don't like about iterators , I just don't :L
14:29
@Ell Iterators are the enumerable mixin.
Ell
Ell
I need to read up on them
How do you write an iterator for your class?
What is that?
Ell
Ell
Sorry typo
Try not to; usually by returning the iterators of some underlying container.
@Ell In many cases you can just return the iterator of the underlying container.
14:30
If you have to, boost::iterator_facade.
@Ell they suck. Ranges are better.
@Ell But yes, "new" kinds of iterators are a bitch to implement.
Ell
Ell
Isn't a range just a pair of iterators?
@DeadMG are these concepts?
14:32
No fucking idea.
@Ell yes and no.
@BartekBanachewicz No.
@Ell No.
a pair of iterators is a range; but a range is not a pair of iterators.
I don't care what you call 'em. I want iterators that know if they are at the end.
@DeadMG looks similar
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, we call that a range.
@BartekBanachewicz It's really not that similar, although I've often argued that SFINAE and static_assert could be used like concepts.
14:33
@BartekBanachewicz Not quite.
@DeadMG are you going to send it to isocpp?
> A Range is a concept similar to the STL Container concept. A Range provides iterators for accessing a half-open range [first,one_past_last) of elements and provides information about the number of elements in the Range. However, a Range has fewer requirements than a Container.
@BartekBanachewicz This is me getting a couple impressions first
@DeadMG well, you certainly have to get rid of "prolog" word.
why?
14:35
because Prolog.
I experimented with this quite a bit in Wide, and you really need a keyword
else the grammar is a serious issue.
@BartekBanachewicz Dude, you are talking to the puppy. He hates that stuff. If he can use the word, so can you.
@DeadMG it can't be a keyword either. It can have contextual meaning like override
@BartekBanachewicz Oh gosh, the grammar.
Oh gosh. Did I just write "It can has"? Internet did terrible things to me.
2
14:36
@R.MartinhoFernandes This, pretty much.
@BartekBanachewicz And "that's can't"
Get some coffee.
How do you iterate over a directory with <filesystem> ? (Which I think is pretty much the same as the boost version)
@AndreiTita easily :D you have end iterator iirc
oh, robot
14:38
Grab a directory iterator and something?
std::vector<std::string> { "lol", "cakes" }- valid?
damn
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can do that but I don't know how to stop iterating.
fuck you, silly Committee :(
14:39
oh you know you are in trouble when they use one long to store the magnitude of a value and another to store the sign
@AndreiTita Prolly like with the istream ones: default-constructed iterator is an end iterator for any range.
@DeadMG wazzup with them?
@DeadMG Wait, maybe I'm confused.
@thecoshman ouch
@BartekBanachewicz They fucked up uniform/list initialization.
14:40
Gimme a moment to fix this compiler error and I can look at it.
@DeadMG yes, because any other initialization doesn't fit. (I think so)
@DeadMG why? would you rather have = { ... }
@melak47 No, it should have to be {{ ... }}
because then, you can get rid of worthless initializer lists and replace them with proper tuple support
which is much more flexible, and also frees you from many unfortunate uses of variadic templates
why not {| ... |} :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yep that worked. Cheers.
@NoSenseEtAl Thanks.
btw can somebody tell me if examples on this page are good way to use those things : en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/future Looks ugly to me
14:47
@NoSenseEtAl that are basic use cases, right. you probably use them most of the time like this in a taskpool or something like that
@DeadMG Ok, yes, it is.
@bamboon I like async way of doing things better, this looks ugly, async is just one nice auto with .get at the end :D
@NoSenseEtAl std::async sucks.
@DeadMG yeah ppl said that, I even linked to A from A Willimas
@NoSenseEtAl yeah, async is definitely the way to go, but beware of its pitfalls. You will rarely need a packaged_task.
is boost::async actually equal to std::async?
14:51
@NoSenseEtAl FWIW, packaged tasks can relegate the need for promise to a few rare cases.
@R.MartinhoFernandes is there a way to easily explain what promises are for? I dont see need for them, I mean I get async as some (tadaaam ) async operation that executes a function and you get a result wiht (tadaaam ) .get()
@NoSenseEtAl they store futures.
@NoSenseEtAl I would say they are mostly the building block for packaged_task. I can imagine them being used in other cases, but I have trouble coming up with a reasonable example.
Basically, anytime you need to produce a future in some way that standard library does not already provide for, you use a promise.
You can think of them as the most basic and primitive source of futures, upon which the others can be implemented (more or less).
@R.MartinhoFernandes does not already provide?
14:58
Tnx for the answers, so promise is something like std::atomic_flag of async world :D
Another way of thinking of promises is by seeing promises and futures as the two ends of a directional single-use channel: a future is something you can get a value out of; a promise is something you have to put a value into.
4
Q: Call nonconst member version from const

Yolai have two members A &B::GetA (int i) { return *(m_C[m_AtoC[i]]); } const A &B::GetA (int i) const { return *(m_C[m_AtoC[i]]); } for now i just duplicate code, but may be there exists nice way to do it. I certanly dont want to deal with type cast from const to non-const. EDIT...

ironic question timing

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