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Xeo
Xeo
16:00
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You're focusing on the wrong things. What does it matter that you can pass std::function around without slicing? Is "runtime polymorphism" for you defined as "has to slice if passed by value"?
@Xeo FFS. Then why are there five upvotes on it when the question doesn't say that in any way at all?
Admirable decoding of intent on the part of you and Nicol, but you have to agree that that question is broken?
Xeo
Xeo
You can easily pass a Base* around and copy it without slicing - give it a virtual clone method. Incidentally, this is how value_ptr<Base> operates.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit How the fuck would I know. I also think the question is bad.
@Xeo I was simply answering the question posed to me. I was commenting on the resemblance, not all of runtime polymorphism ever
does anyone own a Nexus 7 device?
@TonyTheLion many people, yes
@Xeo std::function is not a pointer though, so it's not the same thing
16:02
@AlbertoBonsanto Also, way too little information IYAM - what is the input?
Xeo
Xeo
@LightnessRacesinOrbit And neither is value_ptr<Base>.
Is there a way I can make Visual Studio complete my braces? Very nice to put brace on line, enter, and it finishes it.
posted on March 14, 2013 by Herb Sutter

Bjarne Stroustrup, posted a few minutes ago on the concepts mailing list: Let me take this opportunity to remind people that "being able to do something is not sufficient reason for doing it" and "being able to do every trick is not a feature but a bug" For the latter, remember Dijkstra’s famous "Goto considered [...]

@LightnessRacesinOrbit I wanted to know how they found it, usability wise etc?
@Pawnguy7 VA-X.
16:03
Not avaliable without plugins?
@TonyTheLion then find a Nexus 7 forum and ask them
@Xeo Okay, so the phrase is "std::function must use runtime polymorphism internally, and therefore it incurs a runtime performance hit where a more specialised home-brew predicate object type may not." ?
see, that I'd understand
sure
i will give oyu the input
hold on
rather than this "std::function is runtime polymorphism and templates are not" confusing bullshite
people comparing apples and oranges
Xeo
Xeo
16:05
@LightnessRacesinOrbit And by using runtime polymorphism internally, std::function itself becomes a mechanism for runtime polymorphism
ok
so I understand Nicol's answer now. and I understand what the question was supposed to be
thank you
but I'm still pissed off that it got so many upvotes despite being a steaming pile of incorrect, misleading and confusing crap
and nobody's corrected it
@Pawnguy7 No, at least not that I know of (but the chances of my using VS without VA-X to try to figure out are effectively nil).
Every other IDE I have used does it: I would be surprised if it is not in there, somewhere.
@Pawnguy7 I'm surprised that anybody would bother even trying to use VS without VA-X, but to each his own, I guess.
I am a noob, so :D don't know how to use plugins.
Xeo
Xeo
@JerryCoffin VA-X costs money, so eh.
@AlbertoBonsanto You do realize I'm not typing that in. Perhaps add the info to your question instead
@sehe I did already
@AlbertoBonsanto Good
@Xeo I'd sign up for your Religion!
16:10
@Xeo Yup -- and when software is good enough, I (for one) find it a pleasure to support its development by paying for it. IMO, VA-X is worth every cent.
He's even got a religiousy-name.
Xeoism.
@ThePhD I think I'm getting Xeophobic already.
@JerryCoffin That's because you can't LOVE and TOLERATE, man.
@Xeo Also I hope you enjoyed a genuine tomalak schooling (as opposed to those times when I am just trolling you to pedantically and passively identify some problem with a question)
Xeo
Xeo
@JerryCoffin :'(
16:12
Yeah sure. It was enjoyable :)
@ThePhD Does it count if I tolerate men and love women?
@JerryCoffin Only if I can be your woman! <333
... It's only now I being to realize how exceedingly gay I truly sound.
Good morning, it's 17:13. :D
@DomagojPandža Did you just wake up or something?
16:14
ignoring me :(
TAKE IN THAT DARK MORNING SUNSE.
@ThePhD Sorry, but I'm already married.
@DomagojPandža You're turning into Cat.
Awww. :c
;~; my elaborate plans, dashed.
0
Q: For which standard container iterator returned by end() is persistent if any?

SlavaI need a way to quickly access data in a container. So I remember iterator of that data position. Container maybe modified (elements added and removed) after that, but if I use container type that does not invalidate my iterator (like std::map or std::list) I am fine. Also my data maybe not in th...

16:15
I was going to stay with Xeoism for a while before marrying Jerry, and then after a while defecting and starting Coffinism, just because it sounds more dark and macabre.
is this title English?
Xeo
Xeo
Okay, time to head home
@ThePhD I've been trying to start a religion (with me as their god) for years, but I figure I need to come up with a better name. Actually, I'm less concerned with the "god" part than the "send me money and virgins".
@TonyTheLion Switched day and night, worked until 7am today.
@DomagojPandža You're a cat now.
Welcome to the Feline family :)
@JerryCoffin pokerface :|
Xeo
Xeo
@JerryCoffin Ever seen Achmed the Dead Terrorist?
user142019
makeLenses y u no work.
@Xeo Silence!
Xeo
Xeo
@DomagojPandža I was specifically referring to where he mentions that nobody ever said anythng about 72 female virgins. :)
I kill you!
DKN
DKN
16:21
Guys
Xeo
Xeo
litb in disguys?!
4
Aww
DKN
DKN
is it true to calculation progress download
__progress = (int) (count / downloadedSize) * 100;
My answer is totally terrible for that question. :c
@Xeo Well, 36 of each kind? You just shoot the males. Or something.
16:22
Nooo
I'm getting downvotes. ;~;
@ThePhD There's a downvote too.
But... but but std::list works. ;~;
Xeo
Xeo
Damn, I can't seem to completely overtake the starboard. When a new message gets starred, it pushes an old one off. :<
Does anyone know, when does deallocation of automatic variables take place relative to the construction of the return value
DKN
DKN
Is there any body looking for 50 reputation :-D?
Xeo
Xeo
16:24
@SethCarnegie Right after the return object has been initialized.
@TonyTheLion "For which standard container, if any, is the iterator returned by end() persistent?"
DKN
DKN
*anybody
@ThePhD Iterators remain valid, yes. I don't know if the question is about that, though.
@Xeo thanks very much, that makes everything way easier
@Xeo Nope. Doesn't sound like I missed a lot though.
16:24
C++ is so smart
Hm.
Maybe I should just delete my post. =/
OP i s a C++ developer working for a financial company that doesn't require any knowledge on how to use "the" and "an"
Well, FUCK YOU GUYS I DON'T NEED TO GIVE YOU GUYS MY EXPERIENCE ANYWAYS.
Xeo
Xeo
@SethCarnegie How would { int i = 5; return i; } ever work otherwise? :P
What is wrong with private std::vector<std::string> pages;?
16:26
SimCity status: cracked
Xeo
Xeo
The missing colon after private
Oh...
@sehe done
This is what Java does to me haha
16:26
@Xeo well I only recently realised that returning something by value requires constructing two objects, not one, and it hasn't sunk in yet
DKN
DKN
Is there any programmer in there :-D?
Woow
I'm getting so many downvotes
@CatPlusPlus They're getting sloppy.
q_q I hate all of you.
16:27
@ThePhD Delete the answer, yo.
user142019
Hmm.
I don't know how!
It won't let me!
user142019
Something akin to LINQ to SQL using Template Haskell.
Then suffer!
I hit the delete button and it just gets more downvotes. ;~;
DKN
DKN
16:27
@ThePhD -2?
user142019
@DKN yes: you.
@ThePhD Well, you didn't delete it, because I can see it.
@ThePhD For what?
user142019
@CatPlusPlus For bad posts.
hey you yes you @SamDeHaan you looks like a C++ pro, may you help me with my bad programmed code? :)
@SamDeHaan it uses MPI!
16:29
hahahahahahahaa
HAHAHAHAH
@ThePhD Link?
DKN
DKN
@Zoidberg How did you earn 17k reputation :-D?
user142019
@DKN by posting a lot of questions and answers, and immediately deleting posts when they got downvotes.
@DeadMG If you see it you'll just downvote me some more. :c
16:30
@DKN Whored himself out <3
Nooo
Cut that out!
DKN
DKN
@DomagojPandža Very well :-D
does @ThePhD have* a Phd?
@AlbertoBonsanto I wish.
I'm working on it.
16:32
With the amount of downvotes he's getting, he's far off. :Đ
Could you imagine if getting a PhD was an upvote downvote system?
I'd be so fucked. :c
-1 abstract too big
-1 methods unclear
Well someone reads your thing and grades it
-1 useless research
OH OKAY
SO STEVE JESSOP SHOWS UP WITH A STANDARD QUOTE
THAT BASICALLY SAYS WHAT I SAID IN FANCY STANDARDESE
AND HE GETS UPVOTE
I'm carrying around a pocket standard, fuck all of ya'll. ._.
SO likes them standard quotes.
Most of them can't even decode them, they just see a quote and auto-upvote.
If the signature for main is int main(int argc, char * argv[])... how do I use argv? A pointer to an array?
16:35
It rhymes!
What do you guys think of my handicapped fast pimpl scheme codepad.org/risMIsSe
It sucks
Besides that
alloca, macros
So many managers and factories. :$
16:36
Pointer fiddling
Managers
No explosions.
But it works
@ThePhD It's not just the standard quote. It's the system of SO - rep begets rep. He's got 130k rep, so clearly we should trust him, so upvote.
It's fugly and probably unsafe
herbsutter.com/gotw/_101 is the PImpl implementation
@CatPlusPlus only the implementation is ugly, code that uses it isn't really, and also the point is to avoid heap allocations
16:39
Alright, so. My brother's girlfriend is entering a girl drummer competition. Can you please drop a vote there? Thanks!
@SethCarnegie Most of PImpl overhead comes from indirection not allocation
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Oh, you.
don't make me flag you for spam
user142019
@SethCarnegie Java also works and it's also bad.
16:41
Tsk tsk.
user142019
Your code is bad and you should feel bad.
@EtiennedeMartel But she's off.
not to mention french.
@CatPlusPlus I read gotw.ca/gotw/028.htm and mine doesn't have the brittleness of the one he talks about
16:41
Can anybody explain to me why the syntax is Type identifier[], not Type [] identifier?
@Pawnguy7 Why should it be like Java?
@Zoidberg Jump on the bandwagon
@SethCarnegie Your implementation is overcomplicated for no good reason
@CatPlusPlus why do you say that
It's hardly complicated and what it does is to avoid new
Ahaaaa!
Vindication!
At least I came out with even upvotes/downvotes.
Now, back to work.
16:43
inline void* get_offset(void* mem) {
Yup not complicated at all
Well, yes, but I have to admit, the java version makes more sense to me in this case. I read the latter much better, and it makes more sense for parameters: I could say I want a method, say: print(string[] strings) - it is easy to see it is an array of strings. Or, it would be print(string strings[]) - it is like saying "I have dollars 5". I get compiles errors on this kind of thing all the time.
Also splits construction and allocation
Also alloca is not standard
@CatPlusPlus so do the standard containers
Also stack is extremely limited in size
Congrats you avoided new have a cookie
@CatPlusPlus lol, then you can't use objects by value anyway
Even Sutter said "Standard malloc() and new() calls are very expensive" in the article, so he didn't think it was pointless apparently
user142019
16:45
@Xeo hey that's my joke. :v
> widget_creator_creator
Jesus
AbstractFactoryFactoryCreator
@CatPlusPlus that's just for the macros, because I'm not good at them, someone else could do it better
@CatPlusPlus Meta creator.
A creator of widget creators? Hm.
user142019
16:46
@SethCarnegie and macros are bad.
user142019
Go figure.
@Pawnguy7 It's a false problem anyway, because arrays suck.
@Zoidberg boost uses macros
Yes you do it better by dropping the dumb macros
@CatPlusPlus how
16:46
@EtiennedeMartel as in, using collections/containers?
Use unique_ptr
user142019
@SethCarnegie Facebook uses PHP so PHP must be good.
@Pawnguy7 Yes. That's how you should do it in C++, in Java, in C#...
@Zoidberg it's not good, it's just the only way to do it
@CatPlusPlus then you lose the advantage
widg->~widget_real();
16:47
@EtiennedeMartel I was in this case, but I don't know if main accepts a vector for command line args
user142019
@SethCarnegie You don't need macros for pimpl.
There is no advantage
user142019
Not even in your situation.
@Zoidberg yes you do, else you can't call alloca in the caller's function
@CatPlusPlus Then why do the elites discourage new
You're optimising something that hasn't been proven to need optimisations
And also from completely wrong side
Besides try to make this code generic
@SethCarnegie Who does
16:48
@CatPlusPlus you have to tailor the class to it, like normal pimpl
user142019
@SethCarnegie no.
@EtiennedeMartel not to mention, those are all built on top of arrays: I don't knows what is wrong with persay - the concept of contiguous memory makes sense, it is just... more friendly to use abstractions built on top, as you said. That, and you avoid the template compile errors that give me nightmares.
user142019
You can call alloca manually.
@CatPlusPlus Basically everyone
Normal pimpl is one data member
@SethCarnegie [citation needed]
16:49
@Zoidberg Your logic is irrefutable
@Pawnguy7 std::vector or std:array.
But not raw arrays.
user142019
Also don't use alloca really.
@EtiennedeMartel std::array? Is that C++11?
user142019
It's fucking terrible.
@Pawnguy7 Yes. It's essentially the same as boost::array.
16:49
@Zoidberg [citation needed]
user142019
You don't need alloca in 99.99999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999‌​999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999‌​9999999999% of situations.
Basically everyone says to not use alloca
user142019
40 secs ago, by Zoidberg
It's fucking terrible.
@Zoidberg I guess this is the .0000000001 situation
Basically everyone says that your code is dumb
user142019
16:50
@SethCarnegie it isn't.
@EtiennedeMartel never used boost. Anyway, though - assume, for whatever reason, you DID need a raw array. Do you prefer Type [] something or Type something[]?
For some values of basically everyone
Basically everyone says that it's awesome
user142019
You're not everyone. Plonk.
user142019
Problem solved. (Y)
16:50
Yeah I hope I'll never have to read or maintain any of your code
@Pawnguy7 something[], because it's closer to the actual use.
I mean, when you access an element, you don't type Type[3] or whatever.
Categories in my password database are dumb
I never remember which things belongs where
@EtiennedeMartel I see your point, but even in java, you use it the same. In both cases, we could use something[3].
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Use the searching functionality instead of categories.
@CatPlusPlus It was just a POC anyways, not like everyone is going to need this efficiency
I think I'll do a benchmark
16:52
~~~~performance~~~~
Rofl. "My code is super efficient" ... "I think I'll do a benchmark".
user142019
@SethCarnegie (Result of benchmark: your implementation is slow as fuck compared to the sane ones.)
Result of benchmark: some meaningless numbers
4
No matter what the benchmark says, I find it hilarious that he's decided its mega-efficient... and is now going to create a benchmark to prove that.
I haven't decided it, I just guess
16:54
6 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
You're optimising something that hasn't been proven to need optimisations
If I had decided it, I wouldn't be benchmarking it
FFS CHAT SCROLL DOWN
No, but you're so convinced, based on these things that "everybody said X" and you're going to (intentionally or unintentionally, don't care) tailor the benchmark to prove it.
And then when you come back in, so excited with your benchmark, and someone points out what's wrong with your benchmark, it'll be "but everyone says X!"
And the cycle repeats.
How scientific
@SethCarnegie did you even read the article? "3. Maintenance Cost. When sizeof(X) grows beyond sizeofx, the programmer must bump up sizeofx. This can be an unattractive maintenance burden. Choosing a larger value for sizeofx mitigates this, but at the expense of trading off efficiency (see #4). 4. Inefficiency. Whenever sizeofx > sizeof(X), space is being wasted. This can be minimized, but at the expense of maintenance effort (see #3)."
@SethCarnegie your code appears to overallocate by a HUGE margin
16:57
@MooingDuck No, you didn't read the code closely enough
Though I appreciate your glancing at it
See, too complicated
It overallocates a maximum of the alignment of the class minus 1
@SethCarnegie is widget_real an allocator buffer?
Also casting pointers to integers ew

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