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10:00
I can't really envision it so..
If you didn't have to worry about space, then you'd just expand your Trie into a HashMap and call it a day.
Just think of strings as strings!
@Rapptz Well, imagine the words Root, Roots, and Rooted.
Those are strings/characters
Yes. All three of them share the same prefix: Root
In a HashMap, to store those words, you'd need 3 separate entries.
10:01
quick question for the C programmers.
No shit I'm talking about something other than string/characters
Ooooh.
Yeah I dunno why anyone would use different sequences.
You'd have to have something dictionary-sized and complicated like the English Language to justify a Trie.
@thecoshman You really are an asshole. Not one other person in this room is ever remotely tempted to troll me with the fact that my feet hurt just about 24hrs a day and there isn't much that can be done to take this pain away. I don't know, but that really is just being an asshole. I don't know why you find it so tempting to use that, but you should just consider the person on the other side of the conversation at times.
3
@TonyTheLion I know, I really am sorry :(
@ThePhD Soooooooooooooooooo.
10:04
How did people manage data stuctures without generics in C? Lets take a list for example, would you have to write a list data structure for ints, then chars then floats? Or was there a better way of handling this?
@Rapptz Hencewhy @R.MartinhoFernandes 's s/lmost a// is pertinent: nothing comes close to the size of a dictionary in terms of little variations and densities.
template <typename TKey, <-- Why?
@Rapptz I don't know. =[ I just put it there.
that's the part I don't get
10:04
If it works for a charcodepoint, why not template it?
I'm not really gaining or losing anything if I template it.
ic
I would probably use character keys
@thecoshman I hope you can just try to change your behavior, by controlling your temptations to do this, because being sorry never really changed much. That would be much more helpful. :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wha? :c
I'm just going to take my self away for a while.
My s/lmost a// is because tries use strings as keys by definition. (strings are strings; they don't have to involve "characters")
10:06
I'm out of speeches for today. You've used up all your credits.
drama drama drama
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ooh. I see. :O
> Though it is most common, tries need not be keyed by character strings. The same algorithms can easily be adapted to serve similar functions of ordered lists of any construct, e.g., permutations on a list of digits or shapes. In particular, a bitwise trie is keyed on the individual bits making up a short, fixed size of bits such as an integer number or pointer to memory.
Ugggh.
I don't want to implement a bitwise trie. =[
q_q sounds too hard
10:07
sounds fun
Just abstract away the string concept.
you could learn something
@TonyTheLion To use my ::newfound knowledge everywhere? :D
oh also, lol at not knowing about placement new
Hey, I heard of it. I just never used it. :c
10:08
@ThePhD ahaha
@ThePhD I've never used it
I found a use-case for it the other day, accidentally
@ThePhD One time when you'll write some allocators and stuff.
I've used it like once.
::new(legs) feet()
@gideon Macros or void*. Use C++.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I wasn't trying to be dramatic, I was merely attempting to get a point across. :)
@LightnessRacesinOrbit really?
10:10
@TonyTheLion Take it in good humour.
Yes it was funnily inappropriate
What do C generics look like?
Not really.
Assuming hate in everything you read is counterproductive to a happy life
@ThePhD Never heard of it.
I was indicating my wish that it could be that simple for you
10:10
They have _Generic that dispatches over closed set of types
The correct response is "oh that would be nice :)" and to move on
@CatPlusPlus Oh.
Sounds.... like a really stinky version of templates. ;c
@LightnessRacesinOrbit oh, well, interesting way to express that. But yea, thanks :)
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah I see. So you could just put anything in so the programmer would have to be diligent about that.
TBH I don't think I could write a large project in C.
10:11
It's not really related to templates, since you have to write all overloads yourself
@CatPlusPlus on that sounds interesting.
@ThePhD C has generics?
The amount of macro hell I'd have to involve myself in would be... crazy. D:
@TonyTheLion Apparently it's supa dupa recent.
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@gideon Macros or void*. Use C++.
@ThePhD No, it's just ad hoc overloading.
Which in turn is just ad hoc polymorphism.
oh macros :|
10:12
So _Generic is ad hoc ad hoc polymorphism.
metamorphisms.
So I've begun to fix up my Loader systems.
It's a lot of hard work. =[
^ "CICADA Song - SICKA CICADAS"
I really need to write a good stream api...
So much to do. So little time. =[
@ThePhD Deadline?
> So _Generic is Haddock Haddock polymorphism.
10:21
@ThePhD You still have Loaders?
let's hope it actually becomes weekly
hopefully :)
Is there any less bloated string class for constant string?
10:25
> Yes, ‘operator auto’ is being discussed this summer and there might be a paper. I might care about it enough to write it. :)
Kewl.
What's operator auto
@DavidKron You need to state your requirements.
@CatPlusPlus To solve the problem with auto + proxies/expression templates.
@CatPlusPlus its so you can have cars in C++ :P
Well, mostly just a wchar_* + length, so one wouldn't have to pass both around.
10:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes link?
@DeadMG Comments where you linked to.
> @Loghorn: :) All but (i) work on rise4fun.com/vcpp . As promised in November, more info coming in the first half of 2013 (i.e., no later than end of next month).
@DeadMG Oh, sorry! Comments in the previous post.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Uh.. what is that supposed to do? What's the difference between operator C() and operator auto()? :(
Basically auto x = materialize(whatever) materializes nothing.
Intended usage is std::vector<int> x = materialize(whatever);.
auto is undesired.
10:32
but why?
Because it leaves you with the proxy (materializer<S>)
That sounds incredibly annoying
Weee! TIL about the rationale in why the parameter in copy constructors must be a reference.
Right. The code above would cause an error on using auto instead of silently giving you a silly proxy and not actually doing what the function was supposed to, assuming said feature.
I don't like operator auto() :C
@Rapptz It's necessary.
frankly
C++ is full of proxy objects, expression template results, and similar things that need to do something different for auto.
Because now if I use it, rather than its intended effect of allowing me to be lazy because I want the compiler to do it for me, I have to hope it doesn't error on me
@Rapptz The point is that you never want the compiler to do it for you in this case.
what are you smoking
having an operator auto enables more laziness on the part of the user
and the compiler does more for you.
Nothing, it's 6:40 AM and I don't smoke.
10:37
The proxy is useless. The whole purpose of the function is to have a well-known point where the sequence gets materialized; keep the proxy and you basically have the same as auto&& x = whatever;.
hmmm
most operator overloads take the form operatorx, but operator() and operator[] are three tokens
I don't get any of it :(
ugh, looks like today is going to be a complete waste
not getting anything done
I feel your pain
> functional constructs made it into imperative languages, but lower-level systems programming is still stuck in the 70s.
10:43
you can't remove auto, it's necessary because of lambdas
:cripes:
nobody is talking about removing auto
We could talk about it now. Wanna talk about removing auto?
I think it'd be a terrible idea
> Imagine a Clippy for programming. What if your IDE went: “Looks like you’re trying to write a for loop over this array, but you have an off-by-one error. Would you like me to fix it?” Or: “Looking at the signature of this method, here are the most likely methods you will need next to get to the type of the returned value.” That’s your editor understanding the semantics of your language and code base at a deep level.
it's a very dumb idea; nuff said
10:43
@Etienne sounds like R#, dunnit?
They're talking about their functions returning a proxy object so they want to disable auto x = returnsaproxy(f)
and just use actual_type x = whatever
what, no.
you don't disable auto x = returnsaproxy(), you simply tell the compiler that auto should be a type other than Proxy.
@DeadMG He's talking about my example (with = delete).
He put operator auto() = delete
10:45
well, presumably that would do that, but it's a pretty limited situation
run_proxy(return_a_proxy()) :v:
tbh I'm not sold on this operator
I'm not either
@DeadMG It's what you want every time your proxy is a return-type-deducer.
yes, I'll accept that
but that's still a relatively limited situation, not the general case
@CatPlusPlus What would the problem with that be?
10:48
Nothing, I mean it as alternative
I'm against implicit conversions in any shape or form anyway
I like my type systems strong and spicy
Yes, the type systems of not-C++ don't really matter.
(Also, your alternative is quite sub-par because it moves the responsibility to the client)
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG operator->* is three!
@Xeo Are you sure?
Does operator -> * work?
Xeo
Xeo
10:52
Well, does operator ( ) work?
Yes.
@Xeo It's two. See 2.13
Xeo
Xeo
Oh :(
TIL
@Xeo Yeah, but I don't need that :P
I will probably just have a special thing in the analyzer
like cpp.access_mfp(obj, mfp)
hello every one
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yet Clippy was widely despised.
11:25
@TonyTheLion Ugh "America"
lol
The Antikythera mechanism ( or ) is an ancient analog computer designed to calculate astronomical positions. It was recovered in 1900–1901 from the Antikythera wreck, but its significance and complexity were not understood until a century later. Jacques Cousteau visited the wreck in 1978 but, although he found new dating evidence, he did not find any additional remains of the Antikythera mechanism. The construction has been dated to the early 1st century BCE. Technological artifacts approaching its complexity and workmanship did not appear again until the 14th century AD, when mechanic...
@DeadMG When will you get to the cool stuff?
this exists
I love C++ so much.
You're weird
11:28
Ahahahah
One food place that has some food other than sushi and pizza is constantly rejecting my orders
Well fuck you I'm not trying again then :<
I don't know, I don't care
"We don't serve cats"
It probably has this piece of code if(order.from("CatPlusPlus")) reject();
Xeo
Xeo
11:30
@DeadMG Dude - where's type deduction?
Someone was calling but fuck if I care
If I wanted to talk to people I wouldn't be using this broken-ass site
@Xeo you couldn't deduce from reading the code? :P
@CatPlusPlus lol
Oh. Cat orders food to further his hermitdom.
I only talk to preapproved people
ahahahaha
so we should be honored you want to talk to us?
11:31
@TonyTheLion No. Approval took way too long.
And a bottle of brandy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol
@Cat, when they called you should have picked up and said: "Meow", gone silent and listened to the response, and hung up.
That would have been hilarious
@TonyTheLion that simply means I've always had that question in my mind, then :)
@thecoshman damn I'm late
@TonyTheLion I got downvotes overnight.
Someone's exterior ego inflation troll got satisfied :/
Xeo
Xeo
11:38
@sehe Oh yeah, also, I like overload resolution.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which cool stuff?
@Xeo Unfortunately, currently you can't pass generic functions to Clang right now, and fixing that is going to be a massive pain.
@Xeo In the words of Jared Par:
Overload resolution time, my favorite! #not
Xeo
Xeo
You're all just wussies scared of a lil bit of overload resolution.
3
@DeadMG Not C++.
@Xeo It's just not simple. As such, it violates "Don't Make Me Think". You know, even programmers are users 80% of the time
Life working on a compiler: 5% semantics 20% syntax 20% saying no to feature reqs 25% saying "not a compiler bug" 30% overload resolution
11:42
@Xeo If I ever implement a language it won't have any of that overload resolution stupidity.
what would you do instead
Buy a beer
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Not implement a language.
Typeclasses
Xeo
Xeo
No, there are reasonable alternatives
11:42
@DeadMG Other kinds of polymorphism.
Xeo
Xeo
And if you remove overloading, variable arguments and default arguments, you can do cool other stuff.
Someone's sold on currying
Xeo
Xeo
:)
for any reasonable definition of cool stuff
@TonyTheLion oh noes not that embarassing answer. It's still beyond me how this can still be found so helpful. It's computer usage 101 :|
Xeo
Xeo
11:43
Currying-by-default makes partial application (from the left) so much easier.
@sehe hahah
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus I'm pretty much sold on Haskell by now. Blame the robot.
We should blacklist revolutionary elements. Any Haskell and MLP affacionados should be barred from the lounge.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Such as what?
11:46
Probably all of them. Ad hoc polymorphism is the only one I want out because it always ends an ungodly mess.
hey guys, how can i manage this? I start learning something, but in the middle of it, i realize that it got updated with new features. Then i change all the future plans. But it newer ends like a endless loop.
@sehe lolwat. No. Though I'm not in favor of Ponies (I do like Haskell, however), I don't think we should ban the people from the lounge who are Pony fans.
And it's not really a C++ thing. C#'s overload resolution is a mess too. It got even worse when generics came in.
It doesn't play nice with anything.
@FredrickGauss You learn the basics of one thing, then move on. Until you've learned the basics, you shouldn't care about new features.
Learn COBOL it only gets updated once a decade or so
11:50
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think it'll be a massive problem in Wide, since I cut a lot of that stuff.
We'll talk later.
What's ad-hoc polymorphism?
for example, in Wide it is illegal to do f!(type t)(std.vector!(t) arg) and then not explicitly pass t.
@kbok Overloading
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG huh
11:51
That's good?
This syntax is really hard to decipher
Xeo
Xeo
Are you cutting down on deduction? What?
@CatPlusPlus Just replace !( ) with <> and you'll get close enough.
@Xeo Well, in Wide, std.vector could be any Turing-Complete metafunction. What do you want me to do about it- solve the Halting Problem and prove what arguments lead to that result?
@TonyTheLion haha. Is there no emoticon for tongues? Or cheeks?
(Also, the fact that you are already making compromises to support it seems to argue my side)
11:53
> ... revolutionary elements ...
@sehe I use :P
'Nuff said
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not really, I never intended to support it. It would be impossible to compile a call to f without specifying t, regardless of whether it is an overload set or a single function.
> Now i want to be able to monitor any function in the external program without knowing it signature
ahahaha
11:55
Ugh explicit types
Oh well, that sucks?
@CatPlusPlus Pretty much this.
nah
1
Q: c++ monitoring function without signature

Natan RubinsteinI want to monitor an external program using dll injection I managed to follow this tutorial and it work http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/4118/API-Monitoring-Unleashed Now i want to be able to monitor any function in the external program without knowing it signature I want to be able to copy t...

tbh, there's nothing better about std.vector!(t) arg) as opposed to just arg.
it's not like you can't use type deduction to get t if you need it anyway
A function pointer can't be generalized, afaik, to be able to point to any function despite signature.
right?
Xeo
Xeo
11:56
@DeadMG Solve stuff lazily and let metafunctions know how they were called (yes, I totally stole this from Haskell's type constructors)
@TonyTheLion Right.
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion Any function pointer can point to any function, as long as it's properly reinterpret_casted. :P
And casted back before being called.
@Xeo I actually did consider trying to introduce some "inverse" functionality, but I have dropped that idea for now.
@Xeo oh but fuglies
Xeo
Xeo
Which is one of the reasons we have std::function
11:58
@Xeo but std::function still needs the function signature... (AFAIK) also forget ugly reinterpret_cast
You can't have std::function<void()> and have it take int foo(int bar)?
Xeo
Xeo
Well, you can also have a totally type-erased function-holder, but then the passed arguments need to be of the exact type of the parameters.

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