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11:02
lol, I remember times when 2KiB/s was good. damn kids.
@BartekBanachewicz Lucky bastard.
I can download here at 300kb/s max
lunch Qt Creator!
Xeo
Xeo
> lunch
11:17
well, yeah
Also it has FakeVim
what ABI should I choose
WOW
Hello world worked!
omg
I am genuinely amazed
I just wrote a "hello, world" in C++ and I am happy as fuck, oho.
@BartekBanachewicz show the code
11:33
@BartekBanachewicz Is FakeVim good? I never tried it.
@BartekBanachewicz First time C++?
@Cheiron yeah
@BartekBanachewicz Avoid pointers at all cost xD
@Cheiron it should.
at least the MinGW version.
@rubenvb Really? I thought Qt 4.8.4 for Windows only came with QMake and the qt libs and headers
11:42
@Cheiron
that would be very impossible to use.
Well, no.. Install MinGW, put in in your Path, install qt creator, make sure the QT 4.8.4 folder is in your PATH and Qt Creator will create the correct kit for your
In theory
@Cheiron Why? I've heard pointers are cool
Xeo
Xeo
Stop trolling the poor guy
bartek stop trolling the poor sod
Oh ok ok...
Xeo
Xeo
11:44
ahaha, see, even the Puppy pities him.
excuse me
my correct title is Lord Puppy the Binmaster
Hey, cheer up!
@Cheiron that only works if your MinGW GCC was built in exactly the same way as the one used for Qt.
After I finally understand the point of virtual destructors maybe.
@rubenvb then thats why I did not get it to work. On Windows I just installed MSVC2010 and used that version of QT 4.8.4. Works Okay.
11:50
@Cheiron Until you decide to install VS2010 SP1. Then the fun starts
ABI compatibility is a joke on Windows.
@DeadMG lol
@rubenvb I only use the compilers, not the IDE itself (not for c++ anyway), I use Qt Creator for the code development. The Vs2010 compilers work just fine, and I dhould have SP1 installed
@Cheiron hmm, well, then I guess you're in luck.
I always build everything myself
How many hours of compiling is that?
but Qt 5 is a bitch to build. Friggin' ICU.
@Cheiron depends. I don't use Qt myself, so have little reason to rebuild it anymore.
11:53
Anyway @Cheiron your pregenerated avatar was really cool
I mostly just do bare-metal C++ and sometimes a bit of Boost.
I have seen 1.5 hours as a bare minimum. SSD + extremely expensive i7
@Cheiron you can do one of debug or release builds too you know. And disable WebKit.
I have never used boost. I started of with pure C++ and MFC for GUI. Still haven't found some of the memoryleaks in that code.
@rubenvb yes, webkit compiles too long
11:54
til: Qt comes with a webkit.
@Cheiron I have that sort of config
@BartekBanachewicz I selected a new one, but I still see the pregenerated one.
@Cheiron embeddable? I installed QtCreator without Qt at all
@Cheiron don't worry, it loaded on my iPad already, so just give it a while, till cache clears
@Cheiron ah, I also know how to handle ownership, so I never have to delete pointers.
You must be pretty hardcore.
11:56
not really. I get laughed at a lot here.
Because I write stupid code.
But I'm learning.
std::unique_ptr isn't hardcore
it's a must-learn.
I always use a delete keyword after using new. Even on my own objects that do not even have a destructor sometimes, just for the sake of making sure.
@Cheiron do you heard about exceptions?
@Cheiron I only use new in the unique_ptr constructor.
Oh, yes, and exceptions.
@Cheiron have you ever heard about smart pointers?
@rubenvb just use make_unique
11:58
+1 ^
too bad they forgot about it and you have too add one every time :/
yeah, but it is straightforward to implement
Well I work as a Linux system manager, so all C++ I do is in my spare time. So I am slowly learning.
I heard about smart pointers, but I do not really know anything about it
the ref I linked should give you at least a decent overview
11:59
@EvgenyPanasyuk yeah, true enough. Never got around to that.
Is it in C++14?
@rubenvb should be
@rubenvb most likely (though, not yet in n3485)
lol. Those are both not "yes".
because that's all we can really say
authorities said "most likely"
I think Herb Sutter will care about it.
12:02
Isn't there a stack of proposals and discussions about C++14?
@EvgenyPanasyuk no, STL proposed it.
@bamboon ah, ok
@rubenvb you mean SE?
'unique_ptr'in namespace std does not name a type.
And I even did the correct include
@BartekBanachewicz lolwut?
@Cheiron add std=c++0x or -std=c++11
12:06
@rubenvb "stack of proposal" :)
@Cheiron which compiler do you use?
g++
I use ubuntu
g++ --version
?
@rubenvb oho, just got the same
g++ (Ubuntu/Linaro 4.7.2-2ubuntu1) 4.7.2
So the correct one
I guess I have to change the pro file somehow
12:07
@Cheiron so yes, add -std=c++11 as @rubenvb suggests
Well this is fun.
-std=c++11 is where all the magic is.
it now knows everything about unique_pointer, but gives me 30 errors
unique_ptr.
yeah
I've added it to CMakeLists and it worked
too bad autocompletion doesn't
12:10
@rubenvb thats what I meant.
@BartekBanachewicz there was some workaround for that. What Qt Creator version are you using?
@rubenvb the one supplied with Qt5.0.2
@BartekBanachewicz that tells me absolutely nothing. Go to help->About Qt Creator.
@rubenvb 2.7.0
Now I have a set of uniqe pointers of type <superclass>, I want to assign derived class to it and I get a now match call.
12:13
@Xeo Do you think this testcase is clear enough?
@Cheiron you can't "assign" to it, me think. op= accepts only other unique_ptrs and nullptr_t
Eh, I'll rename that macro to BY_HAND.
@BartekBanachewicz huh, I thought that worked for my autocompletion.
ahaha lol
0
A: QT Creator, syntax checking for c++11

user1131467If you're writing in C++11 you should change from using QT Creator as the IDE to using Eclipse CDT. At least this is how I solved this problem. QT Creator doesn't seem to have any way to customize this real-time syntax checking. Eclipse on the other hand is extensively customizable in this reg...

Xeo
Xeo
> completed_later is not a template
12:14
wat
@BartekBanachewicz 2.7.0 has decent C++11 support.
Xeo
Xeo
> : base(static_cast<completed_later<int>&&>(c))
> struct completed_later;
@rubenvb maybe it's just turned off. Autocomplete shows me auto_ptr :/
Let's force some instantiations.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton When I remove the define
12:16
Xeo
Xeo
Xeo
Puppy
I got about 30 minutes to check out any changes you've made to your paper
Xeo
Xeo
k, sec
@BartekBanachewicz it's some define like _GLIBCXX_EXPERIMENTAL_0X or whatever you need to enable for the editor component.
@rubenvb I just can't figure out where
Xeo
Xeo
12:18
The changes are listed at the bottom
I hope I got them all
@Xeo How does that look?
Xeo
Xeo
I also reworded some parts
@LucDanton Looking good
4
A: How to add pre processing defs (macros) to qt creator?

Gus EFrom the QT Documentation: The defines are specified in the .config file. The .config file is a regular C++ file, prepended to all your source files when they are parsed. Only use the .config file to add lines as in the example below: #define NAME value For my projects it causes the...

k, I'll submit it as a GCC bug. I don't understand the rules of instantiations that well but it's worth a shot.
Xeo
Xeo
Which reminds me, I should shoot a bug report to both Clang and GCC I think, about the expansion thing
@LucDanton You could also post a question and hope for Jonathan to answer :P
12:21
@Xeo Submitting the bug achieves largely the same except that it's its exact purpose. Plus it can be someone else.
Xeo
Xeo
I was joking. :(
Alright, I have superclass *s = new derivedClass
What is the unique_ptr's version of that?
Xeo
Xeo
@Cheiron Error: should be std::unique_ptr<superclass> s(new derivedClass);
lol
@Xeo haha, that's so true. Having Jonathan on SO is really cool.
unique_ptr<superclass> s = make_unique<derivedClass>();
or just unique_ptr<superclass> s{new derivedClass{}};
Xeo
Xeo
12:23
@bamboon Yep. Having the authors / contributors of both open stdlibs on SO is awesome
@EvgenyPanasyuk Now he'll ask what make_unique is :P
Also, std::unique_ptr
@Xeo I know.
@Xeo Yeah, I'm not comfortable with that []foo(x) example either.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG "not comfortable" in what way?
after all, the purpose of []name is to give a function object which has the same effect as name, but if you used foo in the scope of main, it could not refer to the data member of x.
Xeo
Xeo
That it may yield an unexpected result?
12:24
@Xeo That it's inconsistent (see above).
Xeo
Xeo
Ah
@Xeo there libc++ guys also on SO? Who is it?
Xeo
Xeo
@bamboon Howard Hinnant
@bamboon Howard Hinnant
lol
that was fast
Xeo
Xeo
12:25
@DeadMG Right
cool, didn't know he was a libc++ guy.
std::unique_ptr<GLObject> world in header file,
world(new GLOWorld(40,2,40,0.0,-1.0,0.0)); in cpp file. Wahts wrong with that?
Xeo
Xeo
So the idea was to remove data members and introduce [].foo for those and also for member functions
yep, I think I fully agree with that.
unless you're in member scope.
in which case []foo could unsurprisingly and fairly/consistently resolve to a member.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm... that'll need extra specification, I think
12:26
But now it makes sense why the std::condition_variable_any implementation is exactly the same in libc++ as in the proposal ^^
Xeo
Xeo
@bamboon The libc++ guy.
@Cheiron what exactly?
@Xeo Your existing spec states that "The intent is that the lifting-lambda acts as much as the substituted expression would".
@rubenvb where the hell is .config
a simple guideline, IYAM, to what is or is not valid is simply to follow that rule.
12:27
@Cheiron in cpp use world.reset(new GLOWorld{40,2,40,0.0,-1.0,0.0});
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Yeah, but it will need extra wording in the technical specification.
@BartekBanachewicz That construction gives me openglwidget.cpp:145: error: no match for call to '(std::unique_ptr<GLObject>) (GLOWorld*)'
yeah
@Xeo okok
you would have to differentiate the contexts based on what names are available in that scope.
12:28
@Cheiron you can't create an object like that. I thought that's initializer list. Use .reset()
and you would also have to differentiate between something like f(T* obj) { return obj->name; } and f() { return this->name;}
Ah, yes, .reset works
user142019
Hello.
@Xeo Wow, it's super subtle. If I make requires_complete itself incomplete then it works.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Woah
12:30
And now world is an object which contains a pointer, which deletes the pointer the moment the object goes out of scope. Does that make any sense?
@BartekBanachewicz I'd guess it's just a file in your build dir?
or source dir?
there was a link to the docs
@Cheiron Wait, why the fuck would you declare a global unique_ptr?
hell, why the fuck would you declare any global, at all?
@rubenvb The only file in my src dir is CMakeLists.txt
@Cheiron actually, no, global one doesn't make sense
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Who said it's global?
@BartekBanachewicz you can create file, can't you?
Xeo
Xeo
12:32
@DeadMG Member function wins there
@rubenvb and it will automagically recognise it?
@DeadMG because I need that object on multiple times throughout my class, so I create it globally, initialize it in the constructor and then use it.
@Cheiron Class-local is not global.
@BartekBanachewicz no idea. Never tried. I see you as my guinea pig
but you should not be implicitly sharing data between class instances
@Xeo I think it's the bad.
12:33
btw guys, have you heard about `scope(failure)`/`scope(success)`?
scope(success)
{
cout << "success" << endl;
};
scope(failure)
{
cout << "failure" << endl;
};
throw 1;
you should have to use [].foo to get member/member function.
@EvgenyPanasyuk Yes, it's disgusting.
@DeadMG Wait, I need this object in multiple different methods, but I should not make it global?
@rubenvb That's fine with me. I want to set it up with scons too
@Cheiron You should pass it in to them as an argument.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Well, I only took the cases of INVOKE as a first step and will see what EWG says, if it's considered.
virtually everything which is a reasonable global variable, like the heap and stdio and friends, are already provided as implementation.
you should basically never, ever, write any globals.
@EvgenyPanasyuk D is an awful language to begin with, so why am I not surprised?
@rubenvb I see there's a way to create own project templates, so that might be a way to go
@DeadMG I do not think that is possible. I am working with OpenGL and this is one of the objects that get drawn to the screen. So I create it globally, initialize it once in the initializeGL method and after that the object gets moved around and redrawn all the time. I cannot pass it from one object from another.
@Cheiron Then stop using your shitty wrapper, because it's awful.
This place is the worst place where a person who is still learning C++ can be in ..
12:35
what's that, GLEW or someshit
@DeadMG scope(failure) is just "better scope_guard" (does not require to commit by hands).
@KhaledAKhunaifer What, they might actually learn something from us?
@DeadMG What wrapper?
@EvgenyPanasyuk Which is why it's a terrible feature, a terrible idea, and only used by terrible programmers.
@EvgenyPanasyuk the guy that commented under Andrei, mpusz, works at Intel, like 3 doors from me
12:36
@BartekBanachewicz I can confirm that with MinGW-w64 GCC 4.8svn and Qt Creator 2.7.0 using a CMakeLists file that adds -std=c++11 to the compile command gives me autocompletion of std::unique_ptr
user142019
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Also, operator overloads prefer members, AFAIR, so that might be a related point.
@Cheiron OpenGL has no requirement for any initializeGL function. That kind of crap only comes from terrible wrappers.
@DeadMG it is usefull when you need strong exception-safety guarantree
@DeadMG its Qt, and I use this method to do things like glShadeModel(GL_SMOOTH) and glEnable(GL_DEPTH_TEST)
12:37
@DeadMG No, they will get lost .. by watching how you abuse the language to its extremes in a wrong manner just because it compiles at one point
Where else should I enable/set those things?
@BartekBanachewicz cool - actually his (mpusz) implementation is wrong
Xeo
Xeo
@KhaledAKhunaifer Sorry for trying to do awesome stuff.
OK. Finally got the Arch Mingw-w64 packages updated.
@KhaledAKhunaifer meh. You just don't understand that and whine. Boost is written that way
@EvgenyPanasyuk may be.
12:38
This is an awesome place to learn cool C++ tricks.
you do need a basic understanding of how the language is supposed to work.
@KhaledAKhunaifer We don't advocate for them to write that way until they're ready. If they actually come here and ask, they will learn good things to do.
@EvgenyPanasyuk There have never been any posted examples where you can alter the exception safety guarantee with such a feature.
@BartekBanachewicz well, if you want my honest answer it'd be: No no no no no .. and No
@Cheiron I didn't realize that Qt was so disgustingly awful (also, isn't that fixed-function?)
@KhaledAKhunaifer what? Don't you use boost?
@Cheiron oh my fucking god
12:40
@DeadMG That's why I thank goodness that I can install QTcreator without Qt
@BartekBanachewicz I use Boost, for a month all of your examples using Boost are in the wrong way .. it's like your aim is to break the compiler
You need to initialize OpenGL at one point, right?
Xeo
Xeo
@KhaledAKhunaifer wat
Set the flags and whatnot
@KhaledAKhunaifer what? Have you ever read boost source code? Also define "wrong way"
12:40
@boycy wrong: a missing inline in a header will violate the ODR: two source files using the same non-inline function defined in the header will cause a multiple definition error when linking them together. It is exactly inline that fixes that. — rubenvb 8 secs ago
So what is wrong with this solution?
people...
@Cheiron pretty much everything
Tell me all about it
Xeo
Xeo
> your examples using Boost are in the wrong way
I really don't understand what you mean here
12:41
@Cheiron read up on "dependency injection"
Submitted! And with that I'll probably be rolling back today's changes. Will have to wait until I have a snapshot that can deal with that (assuming it should be accepted of course).
@EvgenyPanasyuk Those examples are terrible. Firstly, out-of-memory exceptions tend to be irrecoverable anyway, and secondly, the "brute force" approach can be trivially cleaned up without requiring a disgusting language feature.
@BartekBanachewicz what makes that better then an initializer?
@DeadMG it is possible to do with only try/catch - but it is ugly (and slow, due to catch and rethrow), and not composable - see the talk.
@DeadMG and actually, there is not need to real language feature. only small library function (unwinding_exception, or uncaught_exception_count)
@Cheiron It's fixing global variables suckiness
12:43
So global variables should always be avoided is what you are saying?
@Cheiron yeah
@BartekBanachewicz because?
@Cheiron problems of initialization, problems with threading, problems with testing
This is really the first time every I hear someone say anything bad about global vars.
2
@BartekBanachewicz how often is line stipple used?
12:45
@Pawnguy7 never
@Cheiron lol, you must be new to coding then
31
Q: Evil samples of subtly broken C++ code

Alex BI need some samples of bad C++ code that will illustrate violation of good practices. I wanted to come up with my own examples, but I am having a hard time coming up with examples that are not contrived, and where a trap is not immediately obvious (it's harder than it seems). Examples would be s...

@Cheiron you must be new to this chat
47 mins ago, by Cheiron
Well I work as a Linux system manager, so all C++ I do is in my spare time. So I am slowly learning.
ah, righty.
@KhaledAKhunaifer what about it and will you answer mine and @Xeo 's questions?
I am still not fully getting why they are bad. I mean, I try to avoid them, but is has never occured to me that using them might be bad.
12:50
@BartekBanachewicz Ah. Also, I was going to ask you last night, what is a dumbed down explanation for why the fixed pipeline is bad?
Xeo
Xeo
@Cheiron Guarantees.
@Cheiron I have just written three reasons.
@Pawnguy7 It's fucking old and deprecated. And slow. <- dumbed down enough?
Xeo
Xeo
You have no guarantees what so ever about globally accessible variables.
@Xeo garuntees?
Yes, I see them. And I am reading up on them, but that does not mean I see the actual problem yet.
12:51
@Cheiron well fuck what's "actual" problem for you? :/
Xeo
Xeo
Also, unit-testability.
@BartekBanachewicz A clear situation in which I can see that a global var is messing shit up.
@BartekBanachewicz Well, old and depreciated I don't find a valid answer as to why they moved from the fixed pipeline to... non-fixed. Or,why it is faster. The only thing I can think of is that it is sort of like sorting a list into two lists, in that when processing them, you don't need to check again.
Xeo
Xeo
@Cheiron There's nothing "clear" about global variables, which really is the base of their problems. :)
@Cheiron you want to unit-test a component that's dependent on a global variable. Now you need to have that global variable, compared to easy testing of small part of code
@Pawnguy7 fixed was just too limited
Xeo
Xeo
12:53
Multi-threading will fuck you to the moon and back with global variables.
accidentally threading issues also aren't "clear"
Xeo
Xeo
And even single-threaded programs will, since you have no clue who access the variable when and where and sets it to what value.
I ran into global var problems with multithreading once, used a mutex to fix it. Thought I was pretty smart about that. Apperantly not.
mutexes effectively make the code single-threaded in terms of performance
anyways, I am too lame in parallel processing to really discuss it. Just don't use globals
Actually, "there is no syntax hardship in semantic questions", goto is useful sometimes, global variables are usefull sometimes. If he doesn't do unit-testing, have small code-base - global objects may be OK.
12:56
@EvgenyPanasyuk "if he doesn't do unit testing" - That's a problem already.
@BartekBanachewicz Dammit! I had made so much progress on my project and now I my have to redo some stuff. That quitte sucks.Is there also a problem with static methods that I need to know of?
@Cheiron static member functions are ok. I mean, depends on what you use them for.
@BartekBanachewicz it depends - just edge example: when I do small 50 line programs (just play with some feature), I also do not invest time into unit-testing. it all depends.
@Cheiron usually you should use namespace instead
@EvgenyPanasyuk toy examples don't count
@thecoshman depeeeeendsss
12:57
@BartekBanachewicz toy programs too
@BartekBanachewicz 'usually'
@EvgenyPanasyuk well fuck are we talking about good code or toy programs?
Xeo
Xeo
Even in toy programs I'll refrain from global variables
Wel, except std::cout.
@BartekBanachewicz I am talking in general, and in general means both toy programs and production code.
@EvgenyPanasyuk no, that's as stupid as I could imagine
12:59
@Xeo yeah, and logging..
Okay, so lets say I use a static int instead of a global int. does that really fix anything?
if you want one convention, make toy programs as good as production code, not in reverse dammit
@BartekBanachewicz I mean, in toy programs - it is OK
@EvgenyPanasyuk what's general in that sentence?
@Cheiron no
@BartekBanachewicz I didn't say to use toy convention in real programs

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