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user142019
22:00
@StackedCrooked except they never order you any pizza. :(
user142019
But they do get pregnant! :D
@melak47 irange
@melak47 counting_range, IIRC.
Hello all
22:00
Right, the factory function is named irange.
user142019
@melak47 mapM_ print [3..7]
@Zoidberg I...what.
user142019
lol
Also auto x, don't ever repeat the type
user142019
22:01
@IggY Hello friend.
int* p = 2u << 31;   // note that this doesn't compile with 64 bit ints :)
if (!p)
{
    puts("null");
}
@melak47 Haskle.
@FredOverflow That's C?
Hey, robot's drunk
@CatPlusPlus What?
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Bender?
22:01
I'm looking for informations about the way C++ works, compiler side, how exactly are implemented references, auto_ptr, etc.. but I ddidn't managed to find some good contents
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, that's C++. 2u << 31 is the constant 0, which can be converted to the null pointer.
could someone advise me ?
@FredOverflow Oh right. That will go away soon, btw. Your code is not future proof.
@IggY magic.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It will? Why? Where?
22:02
@FredOverflow Why? Because it's just plain fucking silly and was never intended.
@IggY just read Clang source code
Where? Somewhere in a DR near you.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But it also doesn't harm anyone, does it?
> Je bois / systématiquement / pour oublier tous mes emmerdements
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol, even int* p = false; works :) That is a compiler bug, isn't it?
@FredOverflow nope. it's implementation defined
false can be a 0 constant.
Welcome to weak typing
now bools aren't 0's and 1's
user142019
lol
22:04
Please enjoy your stay
@Abyx How is it implementation defined? Apart from integers sizes, that is.
user142019
In Haskell it would be BOOM.
@FredOverflow sizeof(unsigned).
22:04
@LuchianGrigore They can be implicitly converted to 0 and 1
@R.MartinhoFernandes I already commented "note that this doesn't compile with 64 bit ints".
@FredOverflow if result of << is too big, it's impl. defined
@Abyx Really? Even for unsigned integers?
@FredOverflow It allows things that you most likely did not want to write. Only something trying to obfuscate things would write it. In normal code it could compile unintended stuff.
@FredOverflow even for x32
22:05
typedef long penis; sizeof(penis);
haha
@EtiennedeMartel je suis arrivé à la conclusion que systematiquement c'est une erreur. C'est une peu comme faire throw std::exception, sans même renseigner un message d'erreur
it's late
@StephaneRolland English in the chats.
user142019
@LuchianGrigore typedef is redundant.
@StephaneRolland Eh.
@DeadMG Fun fact: "chat" is French for "cat".
22:05
@Zoidberg lol I see what you did there
@Abyx No. Unsigned always uses modulo arithmetic.
user142019
@LuchianGrigore in an hour it'll be early.
@LuchianGrigore using penis = long;
@DeadMG Etienne was in french, I poked on his statement
user142019
@LuchianGrigore me too.
user142019
22:06
@StackedCrooked long penis; looks funnier.
@Abyx 5.8 §2 says unsigned << uses modulo arithmetic.
Boris Vian was a real badass.
using penis /* all day */ = long;
user142019
struct luchian {
    short penis;
};
16
22:06
@Zoidberg jackass
capitalize my name, wtf
user142019
@LuchianGrigore lol
user142019
Not very standard to do that.
@StephaneRolland Merde.
user142019
Unless you want crap like std::ios_base::Init.
22:08
I've been fighting with my computer to not have feedback with my new headset for hours (connected to standard to mic and speaker jack in the front). Apparently the solution was control panel->Sounds and Audio->Voice->Voice Recording->Options->Properties->Enable Stero Mix->Ok->Stereo Mix->Enable Mute. Good job Windows.
don't you mean Std::Ios_Base::Init?
@FredOverflow Interesting. In some parts the modulo arithmetic is modulo 2^bits, and in others it's modulo max_value+1. (no difference, but the fact that it isn't consistent is weird)
user142019
@LuchianGrigore Also it's public so everybody is starring it now.
@StackedCrooked sorry if I upset you
@Zoidberg heh, I starred that
22:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes What difference would that make?
user142019
I didn't.
@StephaneRolland I won't forgive you so easily!
user142019
I can't. :<
Time for BL2. Later.
user142019
22:09
Good bye pal.
@StackedCrooked Borderlands 2.
user142019
@StackedCrooked Back lOps 2
Time for some company sponsored beer.
@StackedCrooked i won't hate you for that
user142019
@FredOverflow real-life UB!
@FredOverflow wow ;-)
my cpu is calmer
It's so stupid and funny :)
WTF
ZOIDBERG POINTERS ARE INTEGERS D:<
user142019
No, they aren't, you idiot.
22:13
They so are.
user142019
Pointers are pointers.
maybe they should should be fractionnal
user142019
Strings are strings.
Wheels are a kind of algebra where division is always defined. In particular, division by zero is meaningful. The real numbers can be extended to a wheel, as can any commutative ring. Also the Riemann sphere can be extended to a wheel by adjoining an element 0/0. The Riemann sphere is an extension of the complex plane by an element \infty, where z/0=\infty for any complex z\neq 0. However, 0/0 is still undefined on the Riemann sphere, but defined in wheels. The algebra of wheels Wheels discard the usual notion of division being a binary operator, replacing it with multiplication by a...
user142019
Integers are integers.
22:13
@ThePhD Nope
Pointers are integral values.
user142019
They are not.
They dictate offsets into memory.
user142019
No.
22:13
In C/ C++, they are.
user142019
No.
Yes.
user142019
That's like saying "42" is an integer while it's clearly a string.
What could I say If the postmann say I have a letter for you at the infinte address ?
22:14
You're not very good at this "abstraction" thing, are you
@ThePhD Are you trolling?
@StephaneRolland He probably wants to find out if you're interested.
user142019
Abstraction and strong typing are good.
@FredOverflow I am not! Pointers are also integral values. D:
@FredOverflow He isn't. It's a common confusion.
user142019
Pointers are not integral values.
22:15
@ThePhD There is no such thing as a far integer or a near integer.
@ThePhD lol
@FredOverflow of course I would be interrested
They should always be castable to integral values because that's what they, at heart.
user142019
No.
user142019
They point to objects.
user142019
22:15
They are pointers.
@ThePhD You cannot cast a far pointer on a 16 bit system to an integer, it just does not work.
@ThePhD Is chessboard position (e.g A3) a number? No, but you could invent a system that represents the positions as numbers. But that doesn't make the position a number.
@FredOverflow But it's still an integral value, you just need a larger integral value.
user142019
Pointers are pointers like vectors are vectors and Cyclopse objects are Cyclopse objects.
I'm starting to think that I hate the Dutch, because William is such a douchebag in Civ5.
22:16
@ThePhD Nope
user142019
@ThePhD No, why do you keep thinking that?
Thought experiment: what's std::map?
@ThePhD pointers aren't integers, but most are convertible to a pointer value.
A mapping or a tree?
It's the map of the United States, isn't it?
22:17
@Zoidberg Because it is represented as a binary value.
@CatPlusPlus a map (usually implemented as a tree)
user142019
They may be internally stored and understood by the computer as integers describing the number of bytes from the first byte in memory. On your architecture, maybe.
@CatPlusPlus : regular kind of std::unordered_map
@ThePhD Please post a quote from he standard that says pointers are integers.
@ThePhD protip: function pointers can't be converted to integers. But they're still pointers.
22:17
@ThePhD
:c
Fine.
And member function pointers aren't even pointers
@MooingDuck Depending on who you talk to, function pointers aren't pointers.
Let alone integers
@FredOverflow shush
22:18
@MooingDuck You can't hide the truth!
Should have stuck with your ptrptr
@ThePhD You didn't asnwer
:.
@MooingDuck So... a function pointer is actually a function integer? ;)
@Rapptz what'd you try to change it to?
@FredOverflow not if pointers aren't integers
@MooingDuck I'm making a reference to yesterday.
22:19
@Rapptz I'm aware
@ThePhD Are references also pointers, and hence integers? :)
You are? I swear it was late.
~Sigh~
Alright, I give.
user142019
When you talk about an std::vector<T> you don't talk about an object with T* and two std::size_ts. Likewise, when you talk about pointers you don't talk about its internal representation; it's not defined anywhere and it's not portabru.
But for all intents and purposes, most pointers can be understood as an integer.
22:20
@MooingDuck Not saying you are wrong, but this works. Is GCC performing non-standard behavior here?
The gist is
6 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
You're not very good at this "abstraction" thing, are you
@ThePhD And I was just about to ask you about array-to-integer decay :(
No, pointers are understood as pointers
You don't think of std::map as a tree
user142019
@ThePhD s/under/misunder/
@StackedCrooked oh curses. I meant member function pointer. :( Function pointers are pointers (AFAIK)
22:20
It might not be a tree
ALRIGHT FIIIINE
Pointers are POINTERS.
@ThePhD Are you talking about the general concept of a pointer, or pointers as defined by the C++ standard?
It's an abstract type
God.
user142019
ThePhDs are NOOBS.
22:21
@Zoidberg I would believe that abstraction.
user142019
I'm in the mood of belittling people.
@ThePhD I know your frustration. They try to make you believe things dogmatically.
user142019
First Luchian, now ThePhD.
@StackedCrooked I don't know about those scrubs I'm trying to explain with rather simple analogy
We should split into Lounge<NullAintZero> and Lounge<PointersAreIntegers>
22:22
But really you need to have a grasp on thinking on higher level than implementation details
With concepts and abstractions
user142019
> In computer science, a pointer is a programming language data type whose value refers directly to (or "points to") another value stored elsewhere in the computer memory using its address.
I can't explain that :(
user142019
> In computing, memory address is a data concept used at various levels by software and hardware to access the computer's primary storage memory. Memory addresses are fixed-length sequences of bits conventionally displayed and manipulated as unsigned integers.
Most people see pointers as an index in memory. Hence they consider it to be a number.
user142019
It says nothing about how they are stored, and it's too different anywhere.
user142019
22:23
> [They are] conventionally displayed and manipulated as unsigned integers.
Yeah and Wikipedia's articles are conventionally bad
user142019
Doesn't say they are unsigned ints.
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Just like you.
So that's not really a proof
@StackedCrooked I see them that way, myself.
22:24
It still counts. :c
user142019
But you don't use pointers to count things.
user142019
You use integers for that.
indeed
Pointers don't really satisfy laws for integers
What's p1 + p2?
For any two pointers
Also that fact that you can do pointer arithmetic enforces the idea of pointers as numbers.
22:25
p3 !
Hint: you can't add pointers
@CatPlusPlus You cannot add two pointers.
user142019
lol
user142019
instance Integral (Ptr a)
You can only advance them in either direction
22:25
p1 + (unsigned_ptr_type)p2 = p3 :D
No, there's no + for two pointers
But you can do p2 - p1.
user142019
@ThePhD (unsigned_ptr_type)p2 ain't a pointer.
@Zoidberg we have one virtual machine at my work (with a custom language for it) where each type is placed in its own region of memory, so given an address, we immediately know the type. Requires one stack pointer per type though. It's an interesting model.
And if it was possible to add two pointers, what on earth would the result signify?
22:26
Nothing meaningful, that's why you can't do it
@FredOverflow A pointer of course.
user142019
@MooingDuck that must be awesome when debugging.
But where would it point to? What would that address mean?
decltype(T + T) = T
@MooingDuck Its <-> it's
22:26
@Zoidberg it is actually :D
@FredOverflow It would point to your mom.
@AndreiTita good call
user142019
@StackedCrooked Every possible pointer does that. Not hard to miss.
@MooingDuck I meant in both instances :)
@Zoidberg lol
@MooingDuck I wouldn't really bother correcting every little mistake like that but in that case I thought it was funny.
~Sigh~
user142019
Is it possible to explicitly delete an object in Java? (Compare with C++ delete.)
@Zoidberg No
@AndreiTita huh, I don't remember a moose. Where are you from? Another Canadian?
22:29
You can destroy a reference
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Then my teacher is terrible.
@Zoidberg System.exit(...)
@MooingDuck I like moose.
@Zoidberg Most teachers are.
user142019
@StackedCrooked lol good one.
22:29
Well, I guess you could trigger GC sweep
But that's only for trivial cases, where you're absolutely sure there's no alive references to that object
user142019
THE GC HOLDS A REFERENCE TO IT
user142019
:P
No it doesn't stop being bad
@MooingDuck I'm from Europe tho.
user142019
@AndreiTita +1
22:31
@Zoidberg Inconceivable!
user142019
OHaskell.
user142019
I wish Java had RAII.
user142019
And no GC.
It has try-with-resources
user142019
No wait
user142019
22:32
I wish Java didn't exist.
user142019
@ScottW Except @GamErix.
I don't care. And I have a twitchy Return key.
user142019
Java has a hungry cabbage collector.
Ell
Ell
I like java :3
user142019
Fuck you. :P
22:34
Java FTW
@AndreiTita Drink less
I wrote my first non-trivial programs in Java and I felt proud of them.
@Mysticial You don't even know it
user142019
@Mysticial MUST. FLAG.
@CatPlusPlus That's terrible advice.
22:35
@CatPlusPlus Oh no, no... Java I know. I just don't know C.
0
Q: String compare being weird

DeekorIve been racking my brain here: cout << orig << " * " << count << endl; string check = multiply2(orig, count); cout << "Check was: " << check << " and number is: " << number << endl; cout << "the compare result: " << check.compare...

What.
user142019
That explains some things
And unexplains other things
@Zoidberg Yeah, that's terrible and shows absolutely nothing
@Zoidberg HTML version: hello world
user142019
> There are things such as reserved keywords, such as xor and const that don't do anything so that people who write on C++ don't get confused.
user142019
22:36
Wait. Wat.
Did you know that some dude outsourced his job to China? I thought I'd mention it again.
@Zoidberg What, you mean I don't have to do all that #include crap in Java? Sold!
@Mysticial Yeah I read that.
@Zoidberg Where does that come from?
Is anyone here good with WPF?
22:37
@Mysticial are you jealous of him?
@AndreiTita Just wait for modules.
user142019
@EtiennedeMartel Google Images.
@EtiennedeMartel Some idiot that thinks this matters
@StackedCrooked You didn't get it. :(
22:37
@Rapptz I was. Am? Sort of. @EtiennedeMartel is an expert too.
@Griwes I'm with Bjarne on this one, in that I don't really understand what you people mean by "modules".
I tried googling it but
@ThePhD If "using it every day" makes me an expert, then sure.
@Mysticial Huh?
There should be autoban for posting anything from memegenerator
22:37
What's the Resize event for a WPF window?
@StackedCrooked Sigh... room topic
@Rapptz RejiggleWindow
@Griwes But er... I'm looking forward to it?
@Rapptz just use WinForms.
@AndreiTita yes you do, for most cases.
22:38
@Mysticial Ah. I hadn't noticed :P
I tried this.ResizeMode += new EventHandler<EventArgs>(miminizedWindow); but that obviously doesn't work
because well, it doesn't make sense
@MooingDuck Damn. Guess I can stop the Eclipse download then.
@AndreiTita N3347
@Rapptz SizeChanged.
Thank you.
22:38
But that sounds weird to use.
What are you trying to do?
@Rapptz SizeChanged
Wow I'm
so slow.
user142019
> Generics are probably not Turing-complete.
user142019
This article is hilarious.
If the window is minimized, put it in the notification bar
See? Etienne is DA MASTER.
22:39
unless you have a better way of doing that
Java generics?
It's "probably" because probably nobody bothered to prove it
@Rapptz You're using ShellNotifyIcon and Win32?
But they're so primitive it's rather strong "no"
No I'm using NotifyIcon
Hokay.
There's a StateChanged for
22:40
@AndreiTita What languages have you used?
Or WindowStateChanged
@Rapptz Check the WindowState property.
type deal thingy, I'm pretty sure.
Basically module is a self-contained compilation unit, that can export for and import stuff from other modules
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Java and PHP.
22:41
This in contrast with C++ compilation model which is glorified automated copy pasting of file contents into each other and then compiling the same shit over and over again
user142019
lol
Until you either get 1000 errors or die because of old age
Modules is like code folding.
IOW it's outdated piece of shit, and module proposal is a fix for that
@ThePhD Thanks, that worked :D
22:42
Of course, this being C++, they'll screw it up and modules won't actually be much better but still
The concept
Ell
Ell
What are templates? As in the non-generics part of them, what do you call it? Like compile time computations
user142019
Templates.
Templates
Metaprograms
Magic
user142019
Pure-functional programs.
Hey, @CatPlusPlus When using OpenGL, do you think
OpenGL ContextCreation is the responsibility of the Window,
or is that the responsibility of the GraphicsDevice?
user142019
22:44
@ScottW LOLS
@ScottW ... Lulz
user142019
@ThePhD it's the responsibility of the program that wants to use it.
@ThePhD What other things that GraphicsDevice does?
I'd say it's responsibility of the viewport, because it should know how to init itself
If your viewport covers entire window then I'd put it in the window creation
If you do GL widgets in larger windows, then in widget init
If the viewport can be separate ofhow large the window is, then it doesn't belong on something like a LinuxWindow then, I guess.
user142019
GL midgets in larger windows.
22:46
WELP. Gonna put it in dat dere GraphicsDevice.
@ScottW Never.
There's window and there's viewport, two different things
user142019
Do it in the GraphicsDeviceManager.
user142019
dammit
Though can be conflated if you never have windows with viewports smaller than the client area
user142019
fuck you :<
22:47
But I don't really see the need for GraphicsDevice
user142019
Just do it in the main function and store it in a global. :P
Well, as a result of query about GPU maybe
But not really as an active object
Well, at the moment, I was thinking of GraphicsDevice holding things like the OpenGL Context and performing things like BackBuffer resizing, changing the BlendStates through it, etc.
My idea was that it would hold most of the Graphics-Related state information.
Context is bound to the window
You can't have two windows and one context
But the Context only needs a single Window Handle to get going, right?
22:49
Unless you want them to render the same thing, but that probably wouldn't work anyway
user142019
withOpenGLContext $ do
    -- OpenGL shit
    return ()
user142019
Also time to shit. On a toilet.
You'd need a GraphicsDevice for each window
But then it's not really GraphicsDevice, is it
It's just GL context
GraphicsContext, then, I guess?
Yeah could work
But it really needs to be created as part of window init
22:51
Pass it a WindowHandle, does all the work it needs to do, destructs on its own, separately from the window itself.
Ell
Ell
what is a viewport here? An area to be rendered to?
Or that, if you really want to
But then it's not that self-contained
Context outliving window doesn't make sense
user142019
Don't use OOP and problem solved.
Window without context isn't very useful
Yeah, it's a one-way kind of dependency.
I mean, you can make Window without a Context,
but you can't make Context without a window.
user142019
22:52
Composition or aggregation. Choose.
user142019
Make a UML diagram. :P
Window in this context doesn't need to be a top-level decorated window, though
Hence viewports and window/widget I mentioned earlier
I guess it would make it easier, then, to have the GRaphicsContext separate. That way you can 'attach' it to the window or the Widget
@Zoidberg That should do it.
It really depends on what you want to do with it
22:54
@CatPlusPlus You know, I haven't really answered that question yet. Which is probably an indication of bad design direction. :D
I always created my UML diagrams after writing the program :P
As I see it, you either do full-client-area viewport and conflate the context and the window
Or non-full-client-area viewport and conflate the context and the widget
In this scenario you can still do full-client-area by putting the widget in the normal window and resizing it to cover entire thing
So no need for separate context really
So the context will really just be a fullscreen widget in this case.
You can't do much with a detached context
And a Window is just a giant Widget.
So then all roads lead to Widget.
22:56
Yeah we're getting into GUI toolkit design area
user142019
Do it in Java.
You just have GLWidget and windows where you put widgets
@Zoidberg That would require beans, and I don't want to crap later, so no. :c
user142019
   .---------.         .--------------.         .--------.
   | Context |/\_______| OpenGLWidget |/\_______| Window |
   '---------'\/       '--------------'\/       '--------'
       / \
        |
        |
.---------------.
| OpenGLContext |
'---------------'
user142019
Problem solved.
user142019
22:57
lol
Is that a UML diagram?
user142019
Yes. :(
Ell
Ell
What does Context do?
I would go with GL widgets only when you already use other toolkit-level widgets
user142019
Well, the diamond near Context must be black and Context must be in italic font.
22:58
Well, no, other way
user142019
@Ell Abstract base class so you can do OpenGLContext, DirectXContext etc. xD
If you're writing a toolkit and it will have other kinds of widgets
Ell
Ell
right :L how useful that sounds
Having virtual dispatch for all DirectX drawing functions and other context-related stuff?
That sounds pretty painful.
If you use already-written toolkit then writing a widget will probably be simplest integration
user142019
22:58
I don't know how DirectX works, but
I think it should just be GraphicsContext, with #ifdef 'd stuff inside.
user142019
context->makeCurrentContext();
@ThePhD It's really not.
user142019
Then just OpenGL drawing stuff.
Different binaries for different renderers are painful and require external launchers
22:59
remember that virtual dispatch is already involved in every single D3D API call.
it's really completely negligible to add a few extra virtual calls per frame.

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