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Xeo
Xeo
07:08
This is slowly turning to Lounge<Haskell>, I feel it.
@StackedCrooked Cool. Does it use libc++?
I read "Yet another Haskell tutorial" back in 2006-2007.
@Xeo I maketh that and installed it, so I assume that it will.
Xeo
Xeo
Nope, uses libstdc++ :(
-stdlib=libc++ yields include errors
@Xeo However, the headers do exist in /usr/local/include/c++/v1.
Xeo
Xeo
hm
> ignoring nonexistent directory "/usr/include/c++/v1"
Needs to be there
/root/stacked-crooked/LLVM/Clang/build was my build dir
Xeo
Xeo
07:21
Hm, okay clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -L/usr/local/lib -lc++ works until linking
where it can't find __cxa_end_catch and the other low-level runtime support stuff
i.e., you need libsupc++ or libcxxrt
3
Q: Why does the size of a class depends on the order of the member declaration? and How?

MrgnSomeone explain me how does the order of the member declaration inside a class determines the size of that class. For Example : class temp { public: int i; short s; char c; }; The size of above class is 8 bytes. But when the order of the member declaration is changed as below cl...

Xeo
Xeo
Btw, is Coliru switching randomly between colors for compilation now?
removed tag
Xeo
Xeo
Aw, too slow for the tag edit
Xeo
Xeo
07:26
A bit confusing, I first thought the color represented the status of the compilation or something - "green", all okay, "red" - error, etc
(I've been nitpicking for a while now, haven't I?)
It's not a serious feature. I like to try weird stuff if I'm sleep deprived.
I seem to like flashy colors then.
You should make the background colour #fafafa
This fails at runtime. Maybe the wrong combination of header and lib.
@Rapptz I see.
Xeo
Xeo
> -stdlib=libc++
> /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libstdc++.so.6
07:28
lol
Xeo
Xeo
As I said, needs libsupc++ or libc++rt or libcxxabi
For the lowlevel stuff
like exception handling
@sbi (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
07:33
t
@sehe what is this ¬_¬
and morning folks
Mawning Fellas
@Xeo It only needs one of those?
Xeo
Xeo
ya
From what I heard, libsupc++ seems to be the easiest to deal with
I have libcxxabi and it was kind of a pain to get it up and working on my VM
lion, strange little smiling man in straw hat, slightly creepy black an white maniac
07:35
I just installed 'libc++rt' now.
3 hours ago, by Scott W
confession: never plonked anyone
awww <3
I'm not a Plonk virgin anymore. =[
At one point I plonked Bartek for like, half a day
2 hours ago, by Mysticial
@Xeo According to my Dad, Telkitty's profile pic says something like, "even shit and urine cannot enter C++".
I didn't know his dad was on SO.
:|
Then I unplonked him.
It was only for half a day ;~;
I've plonked several people for sometimes even a few hours
Sometimes you just need that
07:38
I'M STILL TECHNICALLY A FULL-DAY PLONK VIRGIN ;~;
I have built up quite a plonk list over time
I've also been here like 3 years
I don't care. Without code that accurately reproduces the error, we are left with guessing. Many people prefer to not waste time with that. No one is asking you to post code you cannot post. You can produce some isolated code that causes the same error, and then you can post it verbatim and we can properly understand what is going on. — R. Martinho Fernandes 15 hours ago
woah, someone pissed on the Robot's shoes
@TonyTheLion erm... how do make the jump of logic?
:(
@thecoshman It's an assumption, based on the fact this person must have seen Telkitty's picture, therefore he may be on SO.
that illogical?
@TonyTheLion where do you think he gets all the upvotes from?
07:42
@TonyTheLion 'hey dad, what does this say?' <shows image> 'well son' <slap> 'learn your self your god damn native language' <slap> 'it says...'
well it could have been like that
that spreadsheet @sehe put up is rather interesting
its perhaps hard for me to imagine such a conversation, because that's not the kind of conversation I would have with my dad
seeing he doesn't understand much of what I do :(
@thecoshman very interesting. It's been around for a while now
@TonyTheLion it has? I guess not wasting my time here at night leave me out of the loop somehwat
@thecoshman possibly.
07:46
@TonyTheLion ¬_¬ why does you dad have to understand what you do to translate stuff?
I'm not always here at night either.
@thecoshman I'm saying he wouldn't even look at it to give an opinion.
am I really that cryptic these days, or are you just not getting what I'm saying?
"I've never killed a man, but I've read many an obituary with a great deal of satisfaction." - Mark Twain
@TonyTheLion that is not how I took it in the first place... doesn't really matter though
@thecoshman apparently you looked at just the narrow picture of my dad looking and judging Telkitty's gravatar, I was speaking in a much broader sense.
Perhaps I should have made that more clear ¬-¬
@TonyTheLion ooooh, your talking in a more 'my dad don't give a fuck about me' sort of sense?
@thecoshman No. He does, he just doesn't have interest in the things I do with computers, perhaps mainly because he doesn't understand much of anything related to computers beyond the very basics.
07:54
also, with regards to that spreadsheet, I like how 'zoidlang' doesn't even get a look in :P
lol
0
Q: Caching value to variable or calling function to return value, which is cheaper in C++?

RaduWhich is cheaper(ram and cpu wise)? /* caching */ vector<T> vt; // ... populate the vector typedef vector<T>::size_type v_t_type ; vt_type size = vt.size(); for(vt_type i = 0; i < size; ++i) // ... do stuff with the vector OR /* pulling */ for(vt_type i = 0; i < vt.size(); ++i) // ... do...

urgh
@TonyTheLion that title hurts my head :(
the content is even more head hurting
This question gave me cancer. — Tony The Lion 7 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
Some C++ coders seem to have a mental codition that makes them think "I use C++, therefore I must question performance all the time."
@Xeo s/coder/coders/
07:58
performance is possibly the most misunderstood part of programming
Xeo
Xeo
My thinking is "it's fast enough until it turns out not to be".
> typedef int INT;
really?
Everytime I want to use Clang I always run into weird dependency problems.
That sucks.
GCC never has this.
@thecoshman cool toys
Xeo
Xeo
08:01
Well, libc++ is usually the problem, I found
I've never tried Clang. I must be a noob :/
Xeo
Xeo
Clang itself built just fine following the instructions on the webpage
@TonyTheLion very cool
Some people have crazy ideas
I built clang without problems.
08:04
2
Q: Is it allowed to cast unordered_map to map?

RichardAs title says, is it allowed? If not, are they sharing the same interface or abstract class anyway? I did not find any reference from online documents. but looks unordered_map and map are using the same functions.

I built libcxx without problems as well.
But clang++ doesn't know where to look for the libc++ headers.
I have to specify the include path.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked I does
51 mins ago, by Xeo
> ignoring nonexistent directory "/usr/include/c++/v1"
Just symlink from the other v1 directory to there
I have /usr/local/include/c++/v1
@thecoshman what you doing today?
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Yeah, clang doesn't look there with -stdlib=libc++, it looks at /usr/include/c++/v1
08:08
@TonyTheLion erm... well, I am at work... but erm...
Hey, I also have '/usr/include/c++/v1'. It's identical to the one in /usr/local/include
@TonyTheLion your fine self?
@ThePhD I'm curious, have you understood what unions are for yet? or do you still think they are some sort of magical conversion portal?
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Clang wouldn't say it doesn't exist if you did :/
Xeo
Xeo
Can't connect oO
ah, now
08:11
Fixed.
Dunno why it crashed. Just restarted it.
Xeo
Xeo
Okay
yay bananas
Xeo
Xeo
Clang actually finds that directory now
Also the answer to my question is not satisfactory :/
Xeo
Xeo
When did you create it? oO
08:12
Maybe it related with the mounting system.
The real /usr /lib etc are mounted in the chroot.
That's more efficient than copying them over.
Wow also my spreadsheet is alive. How cool :3
Xeo
Xeo
++ ls -ld /usr/include/c++/v1/
drwxr-xr-x 5 0 0 4096 May  9 07:44 /usr/include/c++/v1/
++ ls -ld /usr/local/include/c++/v1/
drwxr-xr-x 4 0 0 4096 May  9 06:11 /usr/local/include/c++/v1/
interesting
++ du -sh /usr/include/c++/v1
3.7M	/usr/include/c++/v1
++ du -sh /usr/local/include/c++/v1
3.6M	/usr/local/include/c++/v1
Small size difference.
Xeo
Xeo
hm
08:14
@StackedCrooked but what about punctuation?
What are you talking about?
:)
did you guys see this yet? github.com/boostorg
Xeo
Xeo
> ./a.out: symbol lookup error: /usr/local/lib/libc++.so.1: undefined symbol: _ZTVN10__cxxabiv120__si_class_type_infoE
aw
@bamboon lol wat
@StackedCrooked well, I wasn't seeing the sentence init list at first, but still, who puts spaces before punctuation?
08:19
@bamboon Yes
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, according to dave abrahams it's in review phase as of the fourth of may.
Huh?
Review phase for what?
Some of those repositories are 12+ years old.
@bamboon what exactly is in review phase?
git modularization
@TonyTheLion I know, real programmers daily crucify micro-optimization freaks. I's a coding style that I adopted for PHP and Javascript and when I see function calls inside iterations my hair goes white. — Radu 8 mins ago
@thecoshman I'm needing to test my code.
08:22
Also I found triforce : ⁂ (zoom in for better view)
check this svn.boost.org/trac/boost/wiki/MoveToModularizedGit or for more recent stuff the mailing list.
@TonyTheLion are you going to?
@BartekBanachewicz worst. triforce. ever. (ノಠ益ಠ)ノ彡┻━┻
@Xeo requires -lc++abi
oh, so a big open source library can organise a fuck tone of people working when and how they like to move to a new source control, but a company who has full control over these things can't.
ಠ_ಠ this shit sucks balls
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked ah
Can you rebuild libc++ with c++abi statically linked? :D
08:28
I could..
However,
# clang++ -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ -lc++abi main.cpp
# ./a.out
terminating with uncaught exception of type std::bad_cast: std::bad_cast
Aborted (core dumped)
This is not promising.
what has high precedence? pre or post increment... and I assume it's the same for decrement.
I'm an idiot.
@Xeo I thought you might be interested about Google Keep. drive.google.com/keep and corresponding android app.
I build libcxx with this script.
It specifies libsupc+++ and include paths to /usr/include
Xeo
Xeo
Hm :/
08:31
Actually those are just copied from the docs.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, interesting.
@BartekBanachewicz just note taking huh?
@thecoshman mhm. Simple as that. It has very nice android support, with widgets and stuff.
@thecoshman yes
Also I prefer using one cloud, so I happily migrated from iCloud (which I can't access from my phone reasonably).
08:33
@thecoshman Saving memory.
That's about it.
It would be nice if there was a bit-for-bit conversion portal.
@ThePhD not exactly.
What do you mean, "not exactly" ?
You store a bunch of types in the same memory. Then you can only read / write to it as one type only.
At the end of the day, it's still only 1 type.
It only serves to save memory.
Which, TBH, is useless as shit.
@ThePhD well, if you use it to store a char and a int[10], and most of the time you are only using a char, you are going to waste (typically) 39 bytes
~saving~ memory
unions are useless crap.
But on the off-chance you need that int[10], nobody's going to accuse you of wasting an extra char (or heaven's forbid, another int because of padding!) for your struct.
08:36
Do you guys forget that these languages existed in the 60s when memory was expensive?
Which, again, is now a useless construct.
The only thing interesting about unions is how current compilers use it to read/write from the same area of storage.
Which, IMHO, is an extremely useful feature.
Yes, they're shitty and useless now but they weren't really as bad back then probably.
@ThePhD That's still not a valid reason to even look at them today.
Well, it's one I'll keep using every now and then because it's useful.
useful for what?
08:37
@ThePhD no, it's not.
A number of different cases.
because, pardon me, I thought we just concluded they are useless
@ThePhD such as?
it's a a very bad way or just converting data
@BartekBanachewicz We have concluded that - as per standard C++ - it's useless, yes.
But that's Standard C++. And - this may blow your mind, now - Standard C++ isn't the only C++ on this planet.
@ThePhD any other is irrelevant
that's what standards are for
08:39
Not in production code.
@ThePhD It's useless.
no, especially in production code
what if the manufacturer of your shiny compiler goes bancrupt?
@ThePhD well, please le tme introduce you my Java, it's not standard Java at all, and if you look very closely at the the spec "C++ thecoshman's Java"
@BartekBanachewicz There are other compilers which support the same behavior.
Both Open and Closed source.
@ThePhD that's still irrelevant. Production code is not about 'there's some shit that supports it'. It's about "it must work"
and the only thing that's guaranteed, more or less, to work is standard
C++ doesn't have standarized extensions like OpenGL
08:41
I could also write code to the Standard, but if no compiler implements it how is that standard worth anything?
so using any is just UB.
@ThePhD but it is flaky behaviour that you would be stupid to rely on. if you want to go from a a series of four bytes for colour data to one int for that value, use a proper full proof conversion function.
E.g., export.
export was removed from the standard precisely for what you pointed out
That's not the point: the point was you can write compiler-based code or standards-based code.
08:42
and the first one is shitty.
In the end, what your code does is entirely dependent on how much the two agree or disagree.
if you write code that works on only one compiler screw it, you, your whole codebase and your cat.
even Wide compiled with other compilers after I fixed a few small issues
By that reasoning, you should all be writing MSVC-compatible code.
No using statements. :3c
so let's say a compiler implements a feature wrong, you are going to develop code to take advantage of that? despite the fact that eventually they will fix the bug, and break your code? Rather then just sticking to what the standard says, and if needs be not making use of a feature?
08:44
@ThePhD I am writing reasonable MSVC compatible code.
Minicraft compiles under g++ and MSVC just fine.
So does Lundi.
@thecoshman Here's the stickler: it's not a wrong feature. It's a compiler extension. One that happens to be implemented in many useful compilers.
@ThePhD it will become relevant only when the standard adopts it.
you can use it, I will say again, in toy code.
but I would never ever use compiler extension in production.
Seeing as I'm not going to be writing my code for PSoC Microcontrollers and their brand of the C++ compiler, the only two compilers I need are the following: GCC and MSVC.
If a compiler extension exists in both of the following, I will use it.
@ThePhD your code won't compile under g++ IIRC
@ThePhD that's because you are writing toy code.
@ThePhD y u no Clang
08:47
Production code is also aware of the environments it's going to be dispatched in.
@DeadMG Apple's thing, and really not my concern. GCC still works for Apple.
@ThePhD I hope I will never have to work on one codebase with you
Besides, most GCC <-> Clang code is interopable just fine.
the code I write here is deployed on x86, x64 and ARM, on Windows, Linux and Android.
every combination possible.
@BartekBanachewicz Right, you can write code for the Microcontroller it's never going to be compiled into. I'm going to write code that is reasonably standard and uses tricks when I want to learn something and when I feel like it'll be fun.
@ThePhD read two lines above. Also yes, totally it will be fun for someone that will have to fix the fuckup you introduce. Or you, for that matter.
08:49
@ThePhD Both GCC and Clang perform strict aliasing analysis, which will kill you for writing shitty union-based code.
@DeadMG Which is why if I said it compiles with GCC, it will be fine.
what the hell are you smoking
don't you understand what UB is?
he doesn't.
you can't have "fine" code that has UB in it.
that's the exact opposite of "fine".
compiling successfully does not mean your code is not hideously broken
@DeadMG Did you see my question the other day?
08:50
ITT Puppy realized @ThePhD's code is shitty
@TonyTheLion Highly unlikely. Link?
2
Q: Is there valid "use cases" for Undefined Behaviour?

Tony The LionI have found a piece of code which has UB, and was told to leave it in the code, with a comment that states it is UB. Using MSVC2012 only. The code itself has a raw array of Foo objects, then casts that array to char* with reinterpret_cast<char*> and then calls delete casted_array (like this, no...

definitely interesting perspectives in the answers
the accepted answer is exactly accurate- there are plenty of ways to achieve the same effect in that sample without resorting to UB (or hideous raw new and delete).
indeed.
jalf's answer was also interesting
just the more general case of "valid" uses of UB
@DeadMG At no point did I assert that. My point about compiling with GCC is that it would be also compilable under Clang <--- the only assumption I'm making.
08:54
@ThePhD Compiling successfully is worthless if it crashes, or doesn't produce the correct results, which is exactly what's going to happen if you fuck around with unions on both GCC and Clang.
@ThePhD can you provide a valid use case for union? One that which modern C++ can not provide a better solution too?
Thank you for letting me know. But I wasn't talking about Unions either. :3c
@TonyTheLion That's true, but, you have to separate here.
there's "UB", and then there's "UB but my compiler vendor specifically okayed it".
yea, and it's that second case I had never considered before asking that question
for example, if you did union shitties on GCC but then turned off strict aliasing, I believe that implementation guarantees that various union shitties are well-defined when the Standard does not define them.
08:56
ha, interesting
and here's another compiler tidbit I learned at Bristol
officially MSVC does not okay any kind of type-punning bullshit
but unofficially, the Windows kernel is full of it so they can never actually perform any optimizations based on it being illegal.
How lovely.
And that's bug fix scenario. If one day it starts to optimize, shit hits the fan.
indeed
08:58
@BartekBanachewicz For the entire Windows Kernel.
because you are depending the correctness of your code on Microsoft not ever getting around to fixing it
which is not a smart move, because they just might.
By the time Windows manages to fix union type punning, I'm sure the Standard will either specifically allow or disallow it.
@thecoshman Unions are used all the time for SSE structs and other processor-spceific data types:
@ThePhD It is specifically disallowed right now.
@DeadMG No, it's specifically Undefined Behavior.
@ThePhD ?
08:59
@ThePhD Which means it is disallowed.
union vec4 {
  struct {float x, y, z, w;};
  __m128 sse;
}

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