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Also, the word must be gotten out: nobody likes website where you have to load five videos and some pictures to see a bit of text.
What types would you choose for the when/select operations? Being naive and principled.
future<variant<T...>> when_any(future<T>...); I would say.
@LucDanton And this is the part where lack of monad support starts to hurt, to be honest.
You lose one layer of error though -- you can't tell if the exception came from a future that was waited for, or from the waiting.
Wait, did I miss monads entering C++ airspace?
Ah, good.
(Assuming the interface is asynchronous, as in the proposal -- if synchronous there's no loss.)
@DogPlusPlus Actually, you did.
You just did not miss the part where they are actually not-painful to use.
Handling that future tuple of futures is going to be a pain.
I'm guessing future<future<variant<T...>>> is the next 'best' (but naive and principled) thing. First future is the asynchronous wait, second future is... an error monad :s.
13:05
btw
robot, what did you think of my uncaught_exception destructor thing?
So I'm guessing they picked future<tuple<future<T>> because future is doubling as an error monad, there's no variant type. It still sucks so much.
I am curious - at what point does one know enough to propose new language features?
@DogPlusPlus They are there, they just are not acknowledged by the language, which is a pity.
@LucDanton That looks painful. :/
You still have to go over all the variants. It's terrible. It's a select that doesn't even select.
13:06
@LucDanton Yeah.
@DeadMG I think I missed that.
@DogPlusPlus It really is future_with_error<error<variant<T...>>.
future_prone_to_error more like.
13:11
Isn't that std::terminate...?
If there is an uncaught_exception, you throw from a destructor, AFAICS.
What am I missing?
isn't that only if there is an exception thrown whilst another exception is still active?
the pre-existing active exception is caught first, so there are no exceptions active, and then re-thrown.
I mean, the same exception enters and leaves the destructor.
er, actually, I'm not quite sure that is the same/valid.
you might be right.
The thing is, it isn't "caught first".
hmm
You determine which handler on the stack will catch it, and then unwind the stack.
you're right, it's gotta be UB.
13:17
If something throws while unwinding the stack, boom.
or std::terminate
I don't know if you can actually throw; it like that.
we did it in our throwing up exceptions thingymajigy.
but that was inside a catch block further down the stack.
Yeah, but at stack unwind time, there is no active catch block.
That happens later.
indeed
fortunately, I have been thinking about a feature to alleviate this issue in Wide.
not sure how viable it is though
consider something like
struct layered_exception {
    std::vector<std::string> messages;
};
struct ExceptionInfo {
    std::string data;
    ~ExceptionInfo() {}
    ~ExceptionInfo(layered_exception& e) { e.messages.push_back(data); }
};
user1357851
13:22
user1357851
robot & the dog
the dog is plainly way too small to carry the robot's weight
I'm not fat.
2
People constantly tell me I should be fatter, actually.
I can vouch for Robot's statement
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm wondering why I've never had that as a model... considering that's actually what happens.
13:29
@LucDanton lolwut
I've never tried to reason about exceptions outside of try/catch blocks.
@TonyTheLion Don't tell me you think I should be fatter. It's annoying.
using std := cpp("WideLibrary/test.h").std;
Main() {
    vec := std.vector!(std.string)();
    vec.push_back("Hello");
    vec.push_back("World");
    vec.push_back("Bruv");
    helper(vec.begin(), vec.end());
}
helper(std.vector!(std.string).iterator arg, std.vector!(std.string).iterator arg2) {
    std.sort(arg, arg2);
}
success!
Man, that syntax looks weird.
^that
13:32
any specific section of it?
user784668
@DeadMG :=
!(std.string)
user784668
@bamboon same in D
std.vector!(std.string).iterator
@Fanael doesn't make it better
13:33
@R.MartinhoFernandes Eh, it's not that much different to std::vector<std::string>::iterator.
except that it's not hideously ambiguous.
Weirdness is not a function of dissimilarity.
also, once I implement untyped arguments, you probably won't ever actually write the type.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tis true.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, I was referencing the statement before that.
@DeadMG Woah, Wide! :)
I think I accidentally implemented enums.
4
but not sure.
@DeadMG That has to be one of the weirdest accidents ever.
13:37
um, yeah.
it's only templates where you have to catch every different kind of template separately.
regular types, you can just catch TypeDecl*.
but whether or not it actually works depends on what Clang says when I try to do enum.value;.
if it comes back with like, a VarDecl or something then good, if it's something enum-specific I'll have to catch that explicitly
Should the fact that I'm using a lot of friends warn me that my design might not be so good?
@kbok Give us some examples.
I think I have only ever used friend for overloading operator<<, but that could easily have been prevented with an additional member function.
user784668
@kbok using a lot of friends is a sign that you have a life
class render_window -> friend bitmap
class bitmap_decoder
class bitmap -> friend render_window, friend bitmap_decoder
It might mean they are too coupled.
13:44
I also think they could be.
#define fiend friend
I don't think render_window and bitmap should be mutually friends.
(bitmap_decoder sounds like a function)
#define acquaintance friend
class render_window {
  acquaintance class bitmap;
bitmap_decoder wraps WIC, so there's bitmap decoder factories and shit
fuck.
you can only get a const clang::EnumType*.
wtf's with that.
RWHGERHH; rmf as a username is already taken everywhere. I hate silly sites that use username for user identity.
13:49
Yeah, you get dumb stuff like Firstname Lastname 4
🍌 => At least one letter please
FUCK OFF
There you go, rmf🍌
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes 🍌🍌🍌💩
You mean to say, same names should be allowed?
@Pawnguy7 Yeah.
Oh, win8 supports those 💩
13:50
@Pawnguy7 (Look at Stack Overflow for an example)
How, then, do you tell them apart?
user784668
@Pawnguy7 ID and mail
@Pawnguy7 Why do you need to tell them apart?
Well, if you don't need to tell them apart, usernames are entirely useless.
That could work, though.
@Pawnguy7 That's a blanket statement coming out of the blue.
13:52
What use is there?
Do they seem useless on Stack Overflow?
there
I used a filthy const_cast.
No.
I use them to tell people apart.
@Pawnguy7 But they can be the same!
How often are they the same?
13:54
16 secs ago, by Pawnguy7
How often are they the same?
Thanks, I got a reply to your previous question now.
Not to mention, it doesn't really matter except in chat, SO is just Q and A. It doesn't matter so much who answers your question.
@DeadMG When is a const_cast filthy, and when is it not filthy?
It matters just as much as everywhere else. Stack Overflow is a website for people.
user784668
@FredOverflow always, never
user142019
@Fanael wrong.
user784668
13:56
@Zoidberg wrong is right
user142019
When you need a const_cast, you need a const_cast.
user784668
Really?
user142019
Is there another way?
user142019
Besides C-style cast which is even worse.
user784668
unsafeCoerce
13:58
volatile_cast!
user142019
lol
@FredOverflow Well, it's certainly filthy when it turns out you just got a type and a decl confused.
hmm
note to self: deal with enums a little later.
aright
I think that the next thing I'll have to deal with is getting all the primitive types and operators in place.
Y union_cast(X x) { union U {X x; Y y;} u = {x}; return u.y; }
interesting
user142019
@Abyx lol
14:15
@Abyx No need to name the union type, by the way. Anonymous unions are standard C++11, right?
@FredOverflow yep, I wasn't sure, so I named it
At least name it _ then ;-)
maybe they allowed only as nested types, dunno
user142019
They're allowed in functions.
user1357851
I really hate it when the program crashes on start and all I get is "program failed to launch" then some vague messages. Can I not see the program has failed to launch?
user1357851
14:20
need to find out who to use stack on eclipse
-1 because it's saying that it defines an anonymous struct. See comments above on the question - you are defining an unnamed struct, not an anonymous one. — Johannes Schaub - litb Mar 26 '10 at 21:47
Fuck, I wasn't aware of the difference until now!
user1357851
still pissed off at getting -1 for this answer, seriously it is a good answer and it works
user1357851
-1
A: Extracting qualities in a binary search tree

TelkittyYou can do something like this: int res = countLessThan(root, value, 0); // res is your answer Then implement this: int BTree::countLessThan(node *currNode, int value, int count) { if(currNode->left != NULL) count = countLessThan(currNode->left, value...

@Telkitty I want downvote it for bad code formatting.
An unnamed struct is a struct without a name. No anonymous structs in C++.
user1357851
14:23
@Abyx edit: nevermind
Also I'm not sure if C has local anonymous unions, unlike C++. Shit's crazy.
(removed)
user1357851
@Abyx but people should vote for the contents not looks, you wouldn't hire a software developer based on her dress, would you?
You could hire them based on the look of their code.
user1357851
@R.MartinhoFernandes or based on her lack of a dress :x
14:26
@Telkitty if code looks bad, it doesn't worth reading.
user1357851
and the preferred answer was horrid
hm... I have a strong feeling that I didn't put sugar in my coffee =\
Coffee with sugar is for wusses.
user1357851
@Abyx feeling? something wrong with your tongue? >_<
Is it me or are minecraft physics a bit off?
14:29
@Telkitty well, as it tastes it really feels wrong %)
user1357851
Seriously though, you are doing SO a huge favour for upboating my answer. I don't usually ask people to upvote me, but seriously it is wrong to mislead people with a terribly bad preferred answer
user1357851
At least take some time to read the thread before you decide what to do?
oh fuck, else after return! that answer really suck
hey man
user1357851
If you have a b-tree, try out my answer, it works
14:38
hahaha, I think people that post crappy answers and then complain about some "SO mentality" thing are lovely.
i have to use visual paradigm and i have some question like how to properly do abstraction, how to show i have a property that is a List<t> etc... where can i find those answers or ask question
o.O
user1357851
@R.MartinhoFernandes I modified a few things, it is a really good answer now
user1357851
maybe I should delete and re-add
14:42
maybe you should change you nickname. you know, there is some temptation to downvote all stuff of yours.
user142019
lol
robot
I've been thinking about overload resolution
how does C++ compare overloads, after each conversion has been ranked?
user142019
@Dave your design is bad and you should feel bad.
user1357851
... I spent time to write a good answer and this is all I get ...
user1357851
I am so heart broken
@Telkitty will you commit suicide? please
@DeadMG Ask @Xeo
Xeo
Xeo
What's going on?
user142019
14:45
Badness.
user1357851
@Abyx yes if I can get 50 upvotes in that answer and there is no promise
@Xeo How does C++ compare overloads, after ranking their conversion sequences?
user1357851
Can I get upvote now?
is it just like, add the ranks together, or least-sum-of-squares, or?
@Telkitty nope.
14:47
wat
user142019
@DeadMG in my experience, it depends on the implementation, the whether and on which time of the day I woke up.
Btw anyone knows why that constexpr operator()() was proposed for std::integral_constant?
user1357851
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Checks every ICS of F1
And compares with the respective ICS of F2
F1 is better than F2 if none of the ICSs is worse, and then a bunch of stuff
like one ICS being better
one being a function template and the other not
user1357851
Thanks for the 1 upvote
14:50
hmm
Xeo
Xeo
13.3.3 has a list
And I think it's relatively OK to understand
cheers
That "s/bound/extent/" proposal is aptly named.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Yeah, basically 4 points to ranking the overloads themselves if neither has an ICSi that is worse than the same ICSi for the other overload: any one ICS is better, conversion operators' return type, template vs non-template, and template partial ordering
14:54
@zoidberg fuck you c++ snob
user142019
Wat.
yeah fuck you
I applaud the idea behind n3550 Proposed C++14 Value Classification but does it really only change the value category of non-static rvalue ref member access?
im bad cuz im trying to learn a new program?
yea right?
user142019
Plonk.
14:54
asking for ressources, how bad
What is going on.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Dave asked about Visual Paradigm, Zoidberg insulted him.
I'm leaving the binning (if needed) to someone else.
eh, I don't feel especially inclined in this case
I'll make some tea.
14:56
@DeadMG A roundabout way of saying I won't be watching those messages.
And by that, I mean "my tea is ready; I will drink it now".
lads
what is that visual parathing anyway?
IME you don't want to know.
@DeadMG What is Visual Paradigm?
14:57
NFI
It's a UML thingy.
google says it's some UML-related tool
user142019
@FredOverflow UML program crap.
UML is for modelling, not programming.
Also, UML is overrated.
user142019
@FredOverflow It's a program for dealing with UML.
14:58
@Dave lol
so zoid guy
user142019
@Jueecy nice avatar.
what should i use
since my professor is a dumbass
@Zoidberg You mean rm? :)
user142019
14:59
Haha.
please share your knowledge
@Zoidberg, shows personality doesn't it?
@Dave violet uml

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