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06:00
Hey all, is there anyone present with a good understanding of V8?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Btw I've been progressing in my book and I now understand that bind is always a monad-specific operation. There's no 'generic bind' -- I supposed I was confused by the polymorphic value.
Well, at least GCC 4.8.0 gives a sneak preview of auto foo();
@CatPlusPlus ...in about an hour (here).
@CatPlusPlus Mornin!
06:07
I forgot, what's the fiasco with placement new again?
Is it safe to assume char[sizeof(T)] can hold a placed T?
Yes. Alignment is the usual consideration. I wouldn't call it a fiasco.
I've never actually compiled anything more than 500 lines in C++, but how much time does it take to compile something with 10K+ lines of code, including all the headers and cpp files?
Perhaps you're thinking of aliasing rules, esp. when considering trivial types?
Maybe
There was some book that listed example number of lines for hello world programs.
I can't remember which, but it included the ones brought in via #include.
Or it could have been an article.
Maybe it was the modules paper.
06:15
The Doug Gregor presentation shows that yes.
@LucDanton, That was it, thanks.
1.161 million headers for a C++ hello world program. That's....nice.
I can assure you there's more than 10k lines of code in there.
@Pubby It won't necessarily be aligned correctly
@GamesBrainiac 10K lines total doesn't take very long (to put it in perspective, just #include <windows.h> produces ~300_000 lines.
Geez, what is it with everyone using atoi lately?
@chris That time of the month semester.
06:20
@Pubby one hack is to put it in a union with an __m128i or uint64_t or something big
@doug65536 Hm, thanks for the info. I think I'll just avoid placement new for now.
@Pubby If you allocate it with new (or even malloc) it's guaranteed to be aligned for any type. If (for example) you use an automatically allocated array, all bets are off.
Did SO just go down?
nvm... it's back
@Mysticial Yeah -- hiccupped for a few seconds, but that seems to be all.
@JerryCoffin That really does sound scary! :P
06:24
Nothing like getting a good laugh from all my favorited deleted questions...
@JerryCoffin People still use malloc in C++, why would you need it?
when you have new?
@GamesBrainiac Sounds worse than it is -- probably at least half of those are blank lines.
@JerryCoffin What a relief! :D
@GamesBrainiac because new calls the constructor, and you might, for example, want a pool of memory space into which to construct objects later
@doug65536 I guess, but I suppose you would only need it for a niche bunch of things.
06:26
@GamesBrainiac Not saying there's a good reason to do it -- only saying that malloc guarantees what it returns is aligned for any type (or at least any type that'll fit in the space you allocated).
@GamesBrainiac yeah, it's for performance or other concerns
@doug65536 For that you normally want ::operator new.
@JerryCoffin Hmm, I guess you could say that malloc is one hell of a powerful tool
@GamesBrainiac Not sure about powerful, but certainly general-purpose.
@JerryCoffin Thats what I usually use
@JerryCoffin : Please take a look at this : stackoverflow.com/questions/53849/…
06:28
@JerryCoffin Not quite. Any type with fundamental alignment. No dice with SIMD types.
First question C++11 part
where can I get good documentation for boost?
cppreference does not seem to have anything on "tokenizer"
On the boost website!
Is it authentic?
Or is it something like cplusplus.com?
Gotta document it all... Library!
@GamesBrainiac yes, of course.
That's supposed to be sung in tune to the end of the old pokemon theme.
@chris lol! :D
@Mysticial, Don't suppose you have the accounting debits and credits one :p
But boost seems to be a separate library, is there a way to do it with native tools?
Visual C++ that is
@Mysticial, Oh, thank you! I just found a picture I had saved of it today.
@chris to document them is my real test. To maintain them is my cause!
@R.MartinhoFernandes "The pointer returned if the allocation succeeds is suitably aligned so that it may be assigned to a pointer to any type of object and then used to access such an object or an array of such objects in the space allocated (until the space is explicitly deallocated)." It may be that some implementations don't actually conform when it comes to SIMD types, but the standard doesn't make any exceptions for them.
strtok also seems to be a foriegn library.
06:32
strtok is standard C
strtok is C
@GamesBrainiac On boost.org.
strtok is Crap
@CatPlusPlus Please explain.
The Splitting a String in C++ FAQ question should have some nice alternatives.
06:33
strtok isn't thread safe iirc
Yeah, strtok_r for reentrant.
@Pubby strtrok is standard, but now that getsis gone, you could make a pretty decent case that strtok is the worst thing in the standard library.
I can't believe how close to that accounting person's syntax you can get on a conforming compiler:

int main()
{
accounting bank = 100_debits;
bank = bank + 200_debits;
return printf("bal: %accounting\n", bank);
}
@chris No macro abuse?
06:36
5 hours ago, by Mysticial
I suppose I could ask @BoltClock to search for deleted questions at and around -37 to see which one it is that I downvoted.
@Mysticial Hm?
@JerryCoffin No, support for over-aligned types is implementation-defined. There are only two guaranteed ways of getting such a suitably-aligned pointer: taking the address of a valid object of such a type, or using the pointer alignment functions.
I almost considered posting that as an answer, but it got closed and deleted.
@BoltClock Oh. We were talking about my downvotes. I've only downvoted 3 things (all of which are deleted). One of which is a question. Since question downvotes are free it doesn't show up in my rep history. So I can't find it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mmh is what you referred to as the range mailing list the reflector thingy? I actually find the discussion interesting.
@chris Why is that using stoi? (I didn't see the question)
06:37
@Pubby, Here's the question: stackoverflow.com/questions/13871091/…
@BoltClock All I remember is that it was at or around -37. I commented on it and linked to the 100k emails question. A user by the name "R.." also commented on it.
@GamesBrainiac I think I've looked at it before. In any case, there are a lot of answers there. What about it?
@Mysticial Hmm
Let me have a look
awesome!
@JerryCoffin What would you suggest is the best? strtok seems to be hated by most.
06:38
@chris That's hilarious
@GamesBrainiac Lacking a reason to do otherwise, I'd probably extract items from a stringstream.
The differences between my code and theirs were the return type of main and the underscore in the literals, since GCC forced me to do both changes.
@chris I'll keep that technique in mind if I ever want to enter an obfuscated C++ contest
But the semantics are what the OP was expecting.
@JerryCoffin That seems to be the best for me as well, it uses only native libraries.
06:39
I don't see what's obfuscated about it.
@Mysticial Can't seem to find any deleted posts with a link to the 100k emails question. I did find several deleted questions between -36 and -38 (and... no -37s lol)
I guess it would take work elsewhere if I didn't change main's return type, since they returned the result of printf.
@BoltClock I linked it in the comments. So it shouldn't show up in the normal search. (unless there's a mod ability to do it)
@chris it seems cool but seems like an easily abused operator
@Mysticial Mods can find deleted questions meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/134046/…
06:41
@doug65536, I like it in relation to units, but yes, I've abused it for fun.
@chris But stoi is not needed. liveworkspace.org/code/2KMG3d$11
@BoltClock What about comments on deleted questions?
@chris would be a really good interview question to see if they're really up on C++11. if they got it wrong it wouldnt be bad for them either
@Mysticial Oh, my bad... comments don't appear in search
@R.MartinhoFernandes, Oops, guess I forgot about that option. I always have to look up which I can use with which literals.
06:43
@BoltClock IIRC, the title hints at something very spammy.
Somewhere along the lines of the 100k emails question.
@Mysticial nvm found it
Which is why it got so heavily downvoted.
@BoltClock oh?
@doug65536, std::cout << (3, 50_point) + (2, -10_point) --> (5, 40). How's that for abuse?
@BoltClock YES IT IS!
Thank you!!!!
06:44
SS please. :(
I just realized the 100k emails question is historically locked. WHAT
-148
Q: How to send 100,000 emails weekly?

xRobotHow can one send an email to 100,000 users on a weekly basis in PHP? This includes mail to subscribers using the following providers: AOL G-Mail Hotmail Yahoo It is important that all e-mail actually be delivered, to the extent that it is possible. Obviously, just sending the mail conventiona...

Well, there's Piskvor's answer (to the not deleted one), so I'll give him that
@BoltClock It has an amazing answer by Piskvor.
comments expanded
My only ever question downvote on SO.
06:47
Only one? They're free though!
I rarely upvote questions
I don't always upvote questions
But when I do, it's because the site asked me to
Jeff Atwood on May 06, 2011

When the wordpress.stackexchange.com community asked Why are questions not being voted on …

I have noticed a trend that questions (even good ones) that have multiple answers are not being voted on.

Out of our 5,550 questions only 41% have at least 1 vote which leaves around 3,000 with 0 votes and a few hundred with negative votes.

I had a strong sense of déjà vu all over again.

One of the longest running concerns in Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange history is Why aren’t people voting for questions? a question originally posed on Stack Overflow on August 5, 2008 — long, long bef …

I should be upvoting the ones that are asked properly, but I always forget to unless it's a genuinely interesting question.
Whats the difference between const std::string and std::string const ?
You can't modify one
06:52
the first one?
and if so, whats the point of the second?
oh, I misread that
@GamesBrainiac None
there is no difference between the position of const
@CatPlusPlus So, its just two ways of writing it, you can put the const anywhere then?
const std::string x; the string is const. std::string const x; the x is const. the same thing because the x is the string
06:54
std::string const is the coolest way
if x were a pointer it would matter
@ScottW : Thanks for that. So what would happen if it were to be a pointer?
Or a reference for that matter?
then one would have the value pointed-to is const, the other would have the pointer itse;f is const
You know, you can also ask the compiler.
#include <string>

int main()
{
    std::string const a = "Hello World!";
    const std::string b = "Hello World!";
    int testa = a;
    int testb = b;
    return 0;
}
I get these errors:
error C2440: 'initializing' : cannot convert from 'const std::string' to 'int'
error C2440: 'initializing' : cannot convert from 'const std::string' to 'int'
(At the lines declaring testa and testb variables)
[rmf@persephone ~]$ g++ what is the difference between string const and const string?
g++: error: what: No such file or directory
g++: error: is: No such file or directory
g++: error: the: No such file or directory
g++: error: difference: No such file or directory
g++: error: between: No such file or directory
g++: error: string: No such file or directory
g++: error: const: No such file or directory
g++: error: and: No such file or directory
g++: error: const: No such file or directory
g++: error: string?: No such file or directory
(see full text)
06:56
lol
g++ is bad at answering questions
 In function 'int main()':
7:17: error: cannot convert 'const string {aka const std::basic_string<char>}' to 'int' in initialization
8:17: error: cannot convert 'const string {aka const std::basic_string<char>}' to 'int' in initialization
7:9: warning: unused variable 'testa' [-Wunused-variable]
8:9: warning: unused variable 'testb' [-Wunused-variable]
Next time, I don't know a test answer, I'm turning into g++.
And if g++ fails, try gcc.
07:00
So functionality wise, there is little difference other than when it comes to pointers. When it does come to pointers const int something * is different int something * const in the sense that const int something * means that the reference cannot be changed and int something * const means that the actual value cannot be changed.
@GamesBrainiac I actually have a hard time parsing that sentence.
const something -> reference cannot be changed
something const -> value cannot be changed
@GamesBrainiac If you want to double check it yourself go try out cdecl.org
@GamesBrainiac, Look up the spiral rule.
07:03
int const *p reads as "p is a pointer to a constant int", whereas int * const p reads as "p is a constant pointer to an int".
@doug65536 That cleared up everything. Thanks man! :D
@GamesBrainiac np
But its still quite confusing though.
Pointers introduce a whole new level of confusion! :P
I'm telling you that nothing you add can hurt too much with the spiral rule.
07:06
@GamesBrainiac Yeah, C declaration rules are kind of screwy (to say the least)
7
Q: Difference between const declarations in C++

user59688What is the difference between void func(const Class *myClass) and void func(Class *const myClass) See also: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/269882/c-const-question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455518/how-many-and-which-are-the-uses-of-const-in-c and probably others...

@GamesBrainiac, Outside of SO, see also: c-faq.com/decl/spiral.anderson.html
3
A: Difference between const declarations in C++

jalfA rule of thumb is to read the declarations right to left: void func(const Class *myClass) is a pointer to a const Class (or strictly speaking "a pointer to a Class which is const") void func(Class *const myClass) is a const pointer to a Class

^ this one does a good job
@Rapptz : Well jalf wrote it, it has to be good.
But I think chris can add his to the community wiki
it explains the whole thing.
Appeal to authority btw
Community Wiki doesn't work that way
07:16
btw, sorry for late reply, my PC crashed
I need to name myself...
Don't worry, there are a lot of declaration questions with the spiral rule and cdecl linked in them.
Well. Time to find a Physics Library to use.
opende
opende ?
07:25
open dynamics engine. quite easy to use physics engine that has a good solver (not cheesy penalty based methods)
Can you roll your own physics engine?
physics engines are fairly easy. it's the collision detection and response that's a pain (opende does that btw)
It makes a little sad that when people talk about physics engines they mean classical mechanics. For example, I'm writing an electromagnetics and hartree fock simulator . but nobody mentions those :-)
yeah, when people say "physics engine" they probably mean "rigid body dynamics simulator"
~Sigh~
Well, I need a Rigid Body Dynamics Simulator.
07:29
I dream of the day when people will write video games with my quantum mechanics simulator.
I will be colliding boxes, capsules, spheres, planes, and once those resolve, perhaps exact mesh geometry.
But for now,
Planes and Boxes.
the opende manual is pretty good. look at the joint types and collision stuff
I used PhysX for that kinda thing, it worked pretty well
Does anybody still use PhysX?
A bunch of game companies do.
physx's too monopolistic for my taste
07:31
BulletPhysics and OpenDE looks nice.
They're both open-source, with BulletPhysics being zlib and OpenDe being BSD.
@doug65536 I hear there are "physics coprocessors" that basically implement PhysX
Does mystruct() value initialize its members or default?
I have no idea if they're any good or not.
if you want to play with bullet check out blender "game" renderer. it uses bullet. significantly less physically real than opende but I definitely don't know bullet API well at all
bullet goes for speed, opende tries to be more real, AFAIK
@Pubby Calls a function doesn't it?
07:33
@Rapptz I mean as a default constructor. I'm trying to figure out if this is UB: stackoverflow.com/a/15183438/964135
@Pubby, Value I believe.
@Insilico I've heard of them too. never actually heard of someone having one in real life
@Pubby Value.
That answer isn't what I would have recommended.
:|
@LucDanton So no UB?
07:35
Nope.
@Pubby, If the initializer is (), the object is value-initialized looks promising.
Idiom goes t = {} in C++11. It's adorable.
@LucDanton, I thought that would work, but it didn't when I tried.
@LucDanton that doesn't compile for me
I agree that it is adorable though
Now I feel like my suggestion is shitty but might as well post it.
07:38
liveworkspace.org/code/KwLT4$0 ; I disable that warning for my code.
Bad code ID!
@ThePhD I'm not just saying use opende because I like the manual. I've used it and it worked as expected for just about everything. I'm happy with it
@LucDanton cool!
Get the $0 with it.
$x is edit x and without either is the latest edit.
that's another reason why I like coliru
no stupid $ :|
07:42
Yeah, LWS was better without that URL stuff happening.
I like the compiler choices and the fact that it doesn't hate me if I drag outside of the editable area.
Bleh.
Looking through all these physics choices, I can't pick one.
Oh, never mind. Coliru doesn't hate me for that anymore, yay!
Is there a library in C++ that you can learn a lot from by looking at its source code, for example in javaScript that is jQuery, you can learn a great deal just by understanding how the source code works.
Do you guys know the class of a qt line? (<widget class="Line" name="lnSizer">) I'm having some trouble searching for it using a QWidget* sizer = ui.lytControls->findChild<QWidget*>("lnSizer");
0
Q: Translate bools to bit sequence

WHO EVEN CARESLooking for some operator (I'm guessing in place of + ?) that will do unsigned char bits = true + false + true + true + true; // 1 byte is sufficient to become to following bit pattern: 00010111 Then how can I check that bit pattern in an if if (bits == 00010111)

^^ That's not even possible right? Since they're primitive types?
07:47
@Mysticial No, it's not possible. At least one of the operands has to be a user-defined type.
He's looking for std::bitset or something similar anyway. At least I think so.
@Insilico Yeah, that's what I'm thinking too.
is a long long considered a long...thats just long..
Are you high
Imagine the kind of chaos you'd get if someone can just drop in a header that overloads the operators for int + int.
07:49
im just saying some one told me to use a long and it was not long enough so i used long long.
@Insilico Does it have to be any of the operands? Or does it actually have to be the first/second one? IOW, is the compiler going to assume + is associative?
@Mysticial I think it can be any of the operands, as long as one is user defined
flagged?
Who the fuck flagged that?
Heh, someone new to flagging?
07:50
Yeah...
Anyway, for operators that must be defined as a member of a class (e.g. assignment)
seriously...
Someone ban the flagger
Okay someone is going full retard with the flagging thing.
unsigned char bits = true +x+ false +x+ true +x+ true +x+ true;
07:51
Operators that must be defined has a member of the class do not need an operand that is a user-defined type, for obvious reasons.
^how you can define new +x+ operator
That's not a new operator
"operator"
Anonymous downvoter, could you please explain? :| — Rapptz 12 secs ago
@Pubby You can't define completely new operators, if that's what you mean
07:53
I've become that guy :(
You're limited to the set of operators that already exist in the language
You overload + on x's type
And return another type that overloads +
Yes, that's what I meant
my_struct = {}; // how about for C++ 12? — user2117427 21 secs ago
heh
a reset method can introduce bugs?
huh?
When you add new data members and forget to update it
07:55
You have to update both the reset method and the constructor every time.
@Pubby Wait there's a C++12?
It becomes tedious when the type expands.
I agree it probably would be better calling it from the constructor.
@chris But then you might be double-assigning some things.
No, it's better to not have it at all
07:56
But the way they're going on about how reset sucks is insane.
@GamesBrainiac no
You don't need it
I wouldn't even make it.
If object has a default state, make a default ctor
I'd just let the object go out of scope, why reuse it.
07:56
If not, you can't "reset" it anyway
In this case, yeah, it's definitely not needed. Move semantics help out if you need better performance for = {} too.
It's in the same league as "init" member functions
tldr it's retarded don't do it
So basically, just do { my_type my_object; my_object.foo(); } // my_object destructed here
@CatPlusPlus Any recommendations for physics and shit, yo?
07:58
what if the constructor does other things besides constructing though?
other than being bad design
Dunno I never done that
question's retarded so might as well throw retarded suggestions.
@Rapptz Then you're shit out of luck try better next time
What about smart pointers? They have reset functions.
They don't reset to default state
07:59
Oh, right
Why the fuck is it called reset then? Shouldn't it be set?
~~reset~~
folks, for `stringstream` , are these two ways of doing the same thing : `std::stringstream ss(someString)` and `std::stringstream ss' and then
`ss << someString`

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