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Xeo
Xeo
09:18
Ugh. Note to self: Getting nausea on the bus is a bad idea.
is it an idea at all?
Hi
Hi, can anybody tell me how I can define a custom comparator for a STL map: gist.github.com/rmetzger/60f1104c889b04ffc410
@rmetzger You can't use a comparator with an unordered map
@rmetzger Use this one instead: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/container/map
09:27
but I want to change the behavior of the equality-check
Xeo
Xeo
@rmetzger An unordered_map is <key, value, hasher, comparator>
ah, cool .. thanks
@rmetzger Make sure to have sane semantics, I would think std::unordered_map has some expectations on the behaviour of the comparator.
Ah ok, sorry
user142019
09:40
Noobs y u no maths.
user142019
School y u no enforce math knowledge.
user142019
People don't know that 1 / x == x ^ -1 for any non-zero real number x.
user142019
Or that x ^ 0.5 == sqrt(x).
user142019
T_________T
Actually 1/x == x^(-1) for complex numbers too
user142019
09:45
I wasn't sure. :)
Visual studio question: How can I properly export a free-standing function in C++? I could do it using extern C, but it will be called by C++ code so can I also export it as a free-standing C++ function?
user142019
But man, I mean. You are studying CS and you don't even know the very basics of math.
user142019
What the fuck.
user142019
I am going to kill myself today.
@Nils Do you want cross-compiler interoperability?
09:46
lol
yes, but right now VS is my problem
Okay
Is there any issue or are you just asking just in case? There's no reason that exporting freestanding C++ functions would cause any issues
Xeo
Xeo
@Zoidberg Noob y u no maths!
user142019
@Xeo I'm talking about basic maths.
user142019
Things you learn in class -10 of elementary kindergarten.
So I just do __declspec(dllexport) bool myFunction(..)
user142019
09:49
I bet there are people here who don't know that 0 - 1 = -1.
@Nils yep
And my function also takes a ref to a class and an instance of an enum as argument.
I just fwd declare the class and the enum and it should work?
Ah it says: __declspec(dllexport) void __cdecl Function1(void);
You can forward declare the class yeah. For the enum I would advise putting it in a linked header file
So I also need to write __cdecl .. Whatever that means?
@Nils __cdecl is the calling convention. Lose it.
You'd need it if you were to call that binary file from code produced by another compiler
Or from FFI
09:52
ok
thx @kbok
Hi.
API, Y U SUCK?
Is it possible to get OpenVMS installed into a VM for free legally?
moar Jelonek <3
@wilx What's OpenVMS?
09:57
Hi @TonyTheLion
@BartekBanachewicz: Seriously?
lads
lol
90's much?
Xeo
Xeo
10:00
RAWRG. Seems that my problems with libc++'s std::bind were just a problem with my specific version...
Well that's good then.
What do you do when you find out you are an idiot? How do you forget again?
@Jueecy Alcohol usually works
user142019
@Xeo I've never had problems with libc++' std::bind.
Xeo
Xeo
r176015 has it
But I seriously can't find anything in the logs that shows it was fixed.
10:05
@Xeo welcome to the bleeding edge ;)
Xeo
Xeo
lol, "welcome"
szx
szx
is there a macro to test whether the sytem provides sys/stat.h ?
Xeo
Xeo
__has_include(<sys/stat.h>) for Clang, IIRC
user142019
@Xeo TIL. That is awesome.
You could probably get a way with some of the POSIX related defines.
10:17
@kbok hi
Can you do this myclass::myclass(int somevariable) : someotherclass(somevariable, this) {} ? I'm wondering if passing this here doesn't make that UB?
nope, explicitly legal
why does the compiler warn about it then?
because the compiler can't protect you from turning it into UB.
Xeo
Xeo
Because it's usually dangerous.
it's not illegal to have a pointer or reference to an object during it's construction, as long as you never access any member.
but the compiler can't prove that someotherclass's constructor does not access a member.
10:24
ah makes sense
it doesn't access any members
well, it probably could in some simple cases, but obviously doesn't try
anyways, it's perfectly safe, as long as you don't screw it up
like everything in C++
-1
Q: The difference between getch() and system("pause")

BacemWhat is the difference between getch() and system("pause") in the end of a c++ code

user142019
10:39
Woohoo teacher is unconsciously doing reactive programming.
^ lol
gifs, chat, rules
Xeo
Xeo
Aw
Too slow
aw dude, I just removed it
eh
what do I care?
Xeo
Xeo
10:45
0
Q: Runtime #define

user1508519I want to have syntax like declare a as integer Pretty easy so far, just do #define declare auto #define as = #define integer 0 But what if I want to use integer for something like integer main() { I've thought about using an #if and setting a boolean, but obviously it's computed at comp...

What the fucking fuck?!
@DeadMG wait, but he posted a link to a gif?
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion No
@TonyTheLion I let the gif run for a few seconds then replaced it by the link
For the record: highly distracting
user142019
10:46
@Xeo what a moron.
it was not funny at all
it was highly distracting
user142019
C++ Basic .NET
Okay
Better?
std::copy(std::istream_iterator<std::string>(iss),
			std::istream_iterator<std::string>(),
			std::back_inserter<std::vector<int> > (time_split));
Xeo
Xeo
-        typename __bind_return<const _Fd, const _Td, tuple<_Args&&...> >::type
+        typename __bind_return<_Fd, _Td, tuple<_Args&&...> >::type
haha!
There is the fix.
user142019
10:47
lol
Xeo
Xeo
Now I only need to find out what revision that was...
that doesn't work, because I'm converting string to int, but how could I insert the conversion in there?
@DeadMG Still, hanging there and complaining about being distracted... you asked for it
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion std::transform
pretty much that
Xeo
Xeo
10:49
std::transform(std::istream_iterator<std::string>(iss),
			std::istream_iterator<std::string>(),
			std::back_inserter<std::vector<int> > (time_split)
			std::stoi);
needs to be std::string(*)(long) for MSVC
Oooor... []std::to_string with my awesome proposal :3
Oh, wait
or just [](std::string s) { return std::stoi(s); }.
Xeo
Xeo
Pah
wait
user142019
That's not identity function.
Xeo
Xeo
std::stoi btw
10:50
to int
string->integer conversion the wrong way.
or [](auto s) whatever(s)
string to int
not the other way
Xeo
Xeo
[](int i){ return std::stoi(i); }
Ha, I just noticed another awesome advantage of my proposal over casting - default arguments get preserved.
In a completely inhomogeneous group of students, which want to learn (further) C++, what topics would you do?
10:52
anyway, that istream_iterator, std::back_inserter<std::vector<int>> make transform unreadable.
Apart from telling them "get a frigging book!"
Xeo
Xeo
@Zeta Do you want to crush their dreams or give them hope?
well, first, you need to figure out how far they are, as a group.
you can't do shit if half of them are pwning up the TMP with variadics and rvalue refs, and the other half can't de-reference a pointer.
@Xeo: Heh, I don't know yet. Depends on their behaviour.
@DeadMG: Most likely all of them know* C. And many of them used C++* for their programming assignments.
* depends whether you can actually call that C or C++.
hey, new to c++, Would like to use c++11 when I do my first program. I'm curently on debian 6. Where can I get the 4.8 version of the g++ compiler?
10:55
I guess I'll start with the basics and figure out what the hell they actually know. But since they learned C++ in additional programming exercises during their Numeric classes they should know at least a little bit, right?
or any other soulution for this?
@ErikLandvall yes. use Windows and MSVC.
Windows is not an option though
@Abyx
@ErikLandvall Do you need 4.8? Most of the C++11 stuff was available in earlier versions too
@ErikLandvall You can also use Clang, which is quite C++11-conformant.
10:57
Anything above 4.5 should be pretty reasonable
I don't know the exact Linux invocation for getting the latest GCC since, well, Linux.
@jalf: At least 4.7, 4.6 has some strange quirks in the atomics lib (or doesn't ship one, IIRC)
@Zeta sure, they don't have complete C++11 support, but most of it is there
@jalf In debian packages there is only 4.4.5 though .. But no, I dont need 4.8, I could settle for something less .. Debian is a bit slow on this though ..
hence my question of whether he needs 4.8
10:58
@ErikLandvall: You could install the experimental g++-4.8 package.
@ErikLandvall 4.4 has some C++11 stuff too, but yeah, you should probably grab a newer one then :)
@ErikLandvall Try Clang, you can probably get the newest Clang relatively simply.
@Zeta yea , I'm awerar of it, but it feels a bit risky to use anyting called experimental
gcc 4.4 - it's 2009 or 2010?
if you're starting out C++ it's highly unlikely that you'll run into any issues.
11:00
@ErikLandvall: Err, you know that 4.8 isn't currently a stable release anyway (see gcc.gnu.org/releases.html)?
@Abyx Something like that. So yeah, a few C++0x features then ;)
@DeadMG I give Clang a try, but I would prefer to use g++
@Zeta No I don't. As stated .. fisrt time with c++. So thanks for pointing this out .. What is the latest stable release one could expect? or should I settle for vanilla c++ for now?
2 mins ago, by DeadMG
@ErikLandvall Try Clang, you can probably get the newest Clang relatively simply.
@Zeta but it should become one this week
@ErikLandvall technically, C++11 is vanilla C++ now :)
@ErikLandvall there's got to be some gcc4.7 packages available for debian somewhere. Google it :)
11:02
@bamboon: Really? Great! However, I will have to wait till MinGW-4.8 will be finished, that could take a while.
@jalf , ok I go for 4.7 then .. thanks for all the help
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf Somewhere on sid, I think...
I found it easier to just build Clang from source than trying to get GCC from unstable :P
Hm. I believe they didn't use algorithms from the standard library that much in their courses. I'll guess I stick to iterators and algorithms. That should be easy enough for them.
@LucDanton: you helped me some time ago with my custom comparator. You've changed my string ptr to regular strings. But I want to use string-ptr's as the map's key. Right now, it does not seem to use the compare function (there is no output, but I expect a comparison) gist.github.com/rmetzger/60f1104c889b04ffc410
11:18
If you do new string I won't help you.
It doesn't make sense and I don't know what you would possibly want to achieve with that.
well, I'm a C++ beginner ;) I have a system that reads a huge amount of files and stores the words contained in the text in memory, using strings. But I don't want to store the strings multiple time .. that's the reason why I use string-ptr's as key.
So I'm having a linked list and a unordered_map to access the strings. And I want to store them only once
@Xeo what's that quote you have about magic?
If you are a beginner I highly suggest you don't use new.
4
@ErikLandvall why?
11:21
Don't listen to him
Use new
to whom.
@Cicada yea, maybe go full retard and use malloc, because why not
:/
Actually use sbrk
damn troll.
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion "Sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic"?
@TonyTheLion Insufficiently advanced technology is distinguishable from magic?
11:23
I'm not a beginner to programming in general .. just to C++. I know that it would be a bad idea to use string-ptrs that are hard coded because some compilers do string pooling
user1357851
air plane was 'magic' back in the 1300
Xeo
Xeo
Point is: Don't use new in C++ unless you know exactly what you do.
Point is: Don't use C++ unless you know exactly what you do.
Xeo
Xeo
Shaddup
11:24
but If I allocate the strings on the stack, I have to copy them all the time
@rmetzger I don't think you know anything.
using a linked list is much more likely to be a high bottleneck.
not to mention move semantics.
well, but I'm here to learn new things
Did you profile, @rmetzger?
Yeah. Now you know not to use new.
11:25
so just telling me that I'm stupid is probably a bad idea
we tell that to everyone, don't worry
Xeo
Xeo
We're telling you that you're going the wrong way.
Not knowing is the natural state of thing.
user1357851
@rmetzger no, you are just ignorant ... and we don't think you are particularly bright either
anyway, 1# Rule of modern C++, don't use fucking pointers.
11:26
@rmetzger I don't see anyone here telling you that you're stupid; merely wrong. The two are quite orthogonal. I wrote utter shit when I started out too.
@rmetzger This is how loungers speak, it's not against you in particular.
Who else dislikes the new parallel-algorithms library?
I don't expect anyone to start with C++ knowledge. How would that work?
Xeo
Xeo
> implying you improved
@bamboon why do you dislike it?
Xeo
Xeo
11:26
:)
kek
> implying
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, I noticed chat can quote things when replying now
Reminds me of this freak phenomenon of youtube.com/watch?v=h7GsBMRd9PIsehe 2 mins ago
wtf, a new chat feature?!
user1357851
11:27
also you tend not not learn anything if you don't already know C++ either
impossibru
@Xeo Always has, for over a year (since comment links)
Xeo
Xeo
Erm, no
Only for comments
Ah. So trying
Xeo
Xeo
Not for direct quoting syntax
11:28
okay, but if I'm going to use regular strings as the map's key and also in the linked list, I'm having the string twice in memory, right?
> workiness? YAY
That's actually genius and solves my problem, but I will persist in my ways to see how far I can go. — user1508519 1 hour ago
@BartekBanachewicz the syntax is ugly IMHO also I don't understand some of the rejected stuff
god these people.
@rmetzger Why would you keep a separate linked list of them when you can always find them again in the map?
11:29
@BartekBanachewicz Did you look at my comment? It can be much worse
@DeadMG the hashmap is just there for fast access into the linked list .. I don't want to iterate though the whole linked list (that I wrote on my own) to find a string, thus i'm having a hash map to find a string in the list.
@sehe I love how everything he uses has "Pro" in it. QuickEd Pro
@rmetzger The hashmap contains a linked list.
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
god these people.
there's no point in having a hashmap of iterators into a linked list of the same type as the key or value in the map.
11:31
> linked list (that I wrote on my own)
because the map already stores a list of them.
and already offers you access to that list through iterators.
and also permits fast lookup.
user1357851
@DeadMG I think this newb has no idea what he's talking about, he thinks he does but he doesn't
uh, coming from you?
if you want to find a string really fast, you can just use unordered_set<std::string>::find().
there's no need for external storage.
i'm using the unordered_map so I guess it does not have an order or any linked list. (depending on the impl. of the linkedlist, it might have ll for each bucket)
I have never observed any intelligent code or questions coming from you
the fact that you worked on it is irrelevant.
Xeo
Xeo
11:34
@rmetzger An unordered map is a combination of a linked list, and a vector of iterators into said linked list
the only thing that would have meaning is if you showed some of your contributions
@Xeo thank you.
Xeo
Xeo
20
Q: Make quotes work when I reply

fredleySometimes I like to reply to people. Sometimes I like to quote things. This is all fine. However, sometimes I like to do both these things at once, which is when the trouble starts: Most things format correctly when I'm replying, so why don't quotes?

@sehe @DeadMG ^
> checkers
@Telkitty Yeah, cause people totally come into the Lounge to steal code sample.s
user1357851
@DeadMG I wrote unintelligent code in this lounge? When?
user1357851
11:38
Please, give me an example
y'know, it's really just a vague memory for me, but I'm pretty sure that when you first came here, it was very apparent to everybody that you had no idea what you were talking about.
maybe I'm getting you confused with someone else, though.
my memory is far from the robot's.
Xeo
Xeo
Talking about Telkitty?
user1357851
Also for your info, hashmap that has a list of keys is a java concept
user1357851
stl has not standard hashmap lib
11:40
well, thanks for demonstrating my point
Xeo
Xeo
Spouting bullshit aaaaall day~
user1357851
please prove me wrong (aka, evidence)
I guess that std::unordered_map is just a fantasy of mine.
@BartekBanachewicz well spotted
user1357851
@DeadMG woah microsoft C++
user1357851
11:41
I am amazed
unordered_map is not a Microsoft-specific library.
user1357851
I thought we are talking about standard C++
HINT HINT: std:: is for "standard"
I thought it was for sexually transmissible disease
11:42
what's that one that would let you use Clang? lws?
Xeo
Xeo
@Telkitty §23.5.1 [unord.general] p1: "The header <unordered_map> defines the class templates unordered_map and unordered_multimap; the header <unordered_set> defines the class templates unordered_set and unordered_multiset."
Now just shaddup please.
Damn. It must be monday.
ATTENTION: All drones: Return to basecamp! Collect brain from bedside tables! END NOTICE
@Cicada good morning
ohai @sehe
oh, and Clang (fuck you broken lws urls) liveworkspace.org/code/40tucj$0 has it too.
No shit
11:45
so I think that given a Standard quote and that the big three compilers all support it
it's fair to conclude that, in fact, C++ does have a Standard hash map class.
It completely unfair!
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG LWS doesn't encode the compiler in the link
That is saved locally
oh
damn, lws, you used to be so good :(
did Stacked put Clang on his?
WUT? It "used" to be "good" without support for clang then? LOL. It didn't forget about changing compilers, because you couldn't
new project: online IDE
Xeo
Xeo
11:46
lol, it didn't even have different compilers back then
@Xeo At least it could generate links that worked.
also, stacked has clang, it seems, but it's broken.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG They work, the $N part refers to a specific revision of a script
the chat won't parse them as part of the URL
and I believe that we concluded that $ was illegal in a URL
Xeo
Xeo
$ clang++ --version
clang version 3.3 (trunk 176391)
For Coliru
11:48
@Xeo Yeah, but the include paths are broken.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG So what? The rest of the link works, and shows the snippet
if you try to compile one that includes <type_traits>, for example
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah
@Xeo Huh, so it does. I never tried using only half the link.
Also, @sehe, tis so awesome I will keep reposting. I think you might like it (attended live yesterday).
Xeo
Xeo
11:50
@BartekBanachewicz That just looks so weird, hard rock with a violin...
user1357851
@BartekBanachewicz I've refrained from commenting since you raved about it last night :|
@Telkitty IOW you suck? Old version of gcc? Perhaps you still need to use tr1/unordered_map
@Telkitty gcc version?
Don't blame us if you're using compilers from last century
user1357851
last century was only 13 years ago :x
11:53
@sehe I am totally under "omg" impression. You don't like it? :(
Xeo
Xeo
Rule __COUNTER__: Telkitty sucks, no exceptions.
@Xeo it's more of metal than hard rock, imho. And well, he is unusual certainly
@BartekBanachewicz Nope. I think he makes the violin sound dull. No articulation whatsoever. You're just buying into the energy and the genre. Don't be fooled by the guitars :)
(The band is quite ok, IMO)
@sehe That might be it. I mean, live it was just great, but I agree that he isn't the best violin player in the world.
@Telkitty Right. That means you were still in diapers then :)
11:55
The athmosphere he creates is wonderful nevertheless.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't mind he wouldn't be "great". I mind it sounds dull to me :) But I can totally imagine you had a great time
@Telkitty A fair eternity in technology terms
@sehe Okay. Just wanted to share positive emotions and chills I still have :)
My GF was amazed too. Also, I think we finally found an instrument for her.
@BartekBanachewicz Go for it :) I was refraining from comments for a reason
@BartekBanachewicz Ah. Cool. Is she into classical or pop?
@sehe I can tell she is impressed and inspired by all the new creations, but she has actual musical education, so will probably try to get best of both worlds. At least when learning.
@sehe The one we found is a luthier one; it so happens GdaƄsk has some nice violin makers :)
Though the price tag is still too much for me ATM :<

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