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user142019
21:00
Not helpful, sorry.
I need optional to make ranges, and ranges to make anything useful, like I/O.
@rightfold Erm, WTF, that answer is silly.
Yeah even the android thing I had is silly.
Why would you download from your phone?
Instead of copying the URL to the phone, I can just scan the code from the screen directly.
I don't really get it.
21:01
Maybe if you don't want to navigate to that page from your phone...
I really can't think of another reason.
user142019
@DeadMG can I instantiate C++ templates with Wide types?
@rightfold Of course. I showed a sample a week ago (or more) doing that.
user142019
Neat.
probably.
at least, I believe the mapping that I have created should permit that, yes.
@DeadMG Not sure what you mean with that. I thought your plan involved making them look as equal as possible.
(And I fail to recall what my reasons were :S)
21:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes It does. But right now, there are still lots of things you can do from Wide only by invoking C++.
for example, there's no way to create a "template" UDT.
@Rapptz Hmmm. Maybe for you, as one of the devs, to post the QR code somewhere else!
That does sounds like something marginally useful.
but that still has the same issue.
What would you download from a phone?
so if I want to work on the library and introduce some ranges, then I need optional.
@Rapptz Phone stuff :S
@R.MartinhoFernandes Something about how unexciting it was to spend all your Wide code calling C++? :P
21:05
TIL google hosts phone stuff :P
user142019
Dammit OS X download more quickly you piece of shit.
user142019
I also want to install Gentoo.
user142019
I should have downloaded it from TPB. I paid for it already so whatever.
Ell
Ell
I dl'ed arch
user142019
Good.
Ell
Ell
21:08
I want to try and learn about xen
And ill be using arch as the host for the hypervisor
@Ell You do realize Xen is a bare-metal hypervisor, so it doesn't need a host, right?
oh fuck
my expression parsing is completely broken.
user142019
@DeadMG And now?
@R.MartinhoFernandes got himself on isocpp
and now I try to figure out how to fix it.
Ell
Ell
21:11
@jerrycoffin I do now xD I was on the website earlier, all I could see was downloads bundled with other os. But thank you for telling me :P looks like I missed something obvious :)
user142019
Use monadic parser combinators.
@DeadMG I wonder how many times I've said that!
@Collin Ooh, neat. Upvotes.
user142019
Easier to maintain.
user142019
21:12
Is the std::swap thing still an issue with ADL?
@JerryCoffin You know, I guess that actually, it's not broken at all, I just didn't pay sufficient attention to my grammar.
@DeadMG
warning: 'Wide::Codegen::IfStatement::condition' will be initialized after [-Wreorder] Expression* condition;
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do I still have to do using std::swap; swap(x,y)
you suck :P
21:13
@StackedCrooked A whole bunch of those. MSVC doesn't issue a warning on them.
AFAIK there are no actual initialization order bugs in Wide, since almost all variables don't have initialization order dependencies
@Rapptz Yes. You can, however, stick that pattern in a function and always use that function fully qualified.
I.e., ADL-in-a-package.
@R.MartinhoFernandes adl::swap.
user142019
I would suggest using call_once rather than std::call_once. It doesn't make a difference here, but one should generally prefer to call functions unqualified to allow ADL to take effect. Since flag is of type std::once_flag, namespace std will be an associated namespace, making the std:: unnecessary. — Adam H. Peterson 2 days ago
user142019
Does it even make sense to provide another call_once, ever?
I figured it'd be fixed for some reason
I don't know why, maybe it's the move from <algorithm> to <utility> that made me think so.
21:14
@rightfold No. That's what I said in my reply. I want that one, and not that one and maybe another.
user142019
OIC, thanks.
but meh, lame adl.
@Rapptz FWIW, you will want to do the adl::swap thing anyway if you also want to use trailing return types or noexcept with it.
20
Q: How do I write an ADL-enabled noexcept specification?

R. Martinho FernandesImagine I'm writing some container template or something. And the time comes to specialize std::swap for it. As a good citizen, I'll enable ADL by doing something like this: template <typename T> void swap(my_template<T>& x, my_template<T>& y) { using std::swap; swap(x.something_that_is_...

Can't put using std::swap inside noexcept.
@Ell Yup, sounds like it. Xen (at least normally) runs directly on the hardware. The other OS bundled with it would be to act as a client, not the host.
@Rapptz They are looking into fixing it.
the problem is that if you want to know for example if noexcept(swap(x, y))
21:18
Also, note to self: don't forget to do that ADL thingy on ogonek...
Ell
Ell
@jerrycoffin well thank you for saving me probably a fair bit of time haha :)
Uh, Star Wars Kid, that was 10 years ago.
@rightfold His argument was that since in that particular call only namespace std is associated, it makes no difference, so saving five characters is worth it. My argument is that fuck your five characters, I'd rather be safe.
Turns out the guy is from Trois-Rivières.
Hmm, interesting.
I was wondering if my lazy from that answer should destroy the function after use.
Ell
Ell
21:23
When I read the acronym out it just sounds like overloading
Hmm I forgot what adl is for
argument dependent lookup
@Ell Originally for picking up operators without fully qualifying them.
It seems I started to many build jobs on my coliru vps.
It's not responding at all.
damn
I keep trying to call it Deference instead of Dereference
I can always reboot it from the vps web tool.
21:25
Hmm, I don't have gvim properly set up on this machine. Weird.
Hm.
Coliru is taking a long time again...
And neither have I python installed.
Argh, Windows is so annoying.
Uh-oh, not-available. =[
@R.MartinhoFernandes How do you share your vimrc file across multiple machines?
21:27
@ScottW There's an "exclusive" interview in a magazine here. But it's in French.
@StackedCrooked I clone that under ~/vimrc, and ~/.vimrc is nothing but source ~/vimrc/vimrc
I see.
Always looking for better ways to do that.
When setting up initially, it still takes a bunch of steps.
Currently I have my vimrc on a svn repo. And I make symbolic links to ~/.vimrc etc..
However, things vundle are kind of fragile.
Why?
$ git clone [email protected]:rmartinho/vimrc ~/vimrc
$ cd ~/vimrc
$ git submodule init && git submodule update
$ vim @BundleInstall @qall
This is "first-time setup".
21:29
Honestly, because I'm not used to it yet.
I logged in on remote server and got errors on starting vim from vundle
Should check out what exactly was going on. But I just throw vundle out for the moment.
user1182183
stacked-crooked doesn't work?
user1182183
HTTP 103 err
damn I want to buy fucking the VS CTP update
@DeadMG Buy fucking?
I had to go up to 7 parameters for my memory arena's allocate fucking.
What's up with your funky use of the word "fucking"?
@ThePet Nope, I started 50 jobs in parallel.
$ echo 'source ~/vimrc/vimrc' > ~/.vimrc
$ git clone [email protected]:rmartinho/vimrc ~/vimrc
$ cd ~/vimrc
$ git submodule init && git submodule update
$ vim @BundleInstall @qall
More complete now.
Now waiting for the hard reboot to finish from the vps control panel.
21:32
I was typing far too quickly
Ooh.
The first BundleInstall run pops up an error about a missing colorscheme, but that's because the colorscheme comes in a bundle and bundles are not installed at the time of bundle installation. I might try to fix that, or not.
user1182183
well I want to compile this code on windows in VS2012 from this question but I seem to be getting errors...
Ell
Ell
@stacked do hard reboots cost you?
Not that I know.
user1182183
@Ell I don't expect it to. It just means that the process is forcibly killed by the host os .
user1182183
and I have narrowed to the following line... ` commands["/kill"] = Cmd__Kill;`
Hmm, python in vim still borken.
user1182183
why is it always that way when I want to try out something new I just always end up in errors....
A fun thing about Mac is that they come with the say command which does text-to-speech. You can use it to get notified if a job finishes: make && say 'make has finished
21:40
hmmmm
Lol, my VPS is still rebooting.
Rackspace is kind of slow when it comes to this.
I'm a customer dammit. I give you money.
Maybe I thrashed their systems as well.
user142019
I think I will make Ø copy objects by-default and make moving explicit, but allow an implementation to optimize copies to moves if it can prove that the object will never be reused afterwards, such as when a local object is returned.
:py 1 crashes vim. :S
@rightfold In Wide, I simply say that constructors are always pure and the implementation has the right to elide them like calls to any other pure function
-1
Q: Solving Homework?

Saudi LoveProblem Statement We have a sequence of integers. We want to remove duplicate elements from it. You will be given a int[] sequence. For each element that occurs more than once leave only its rightmost occurrence. All unique elements must be copied without changes. Definition Class: Delete Duplica...

hmm...
user142019
21:43
@DeadMG Hmm.
Someone who fails at properly copy-pasting... :)
whereas C++ has some fairly strict limitations on where and when elision can occur, for no reason I can understand.
user142019
I have an explicit move operator, <-movedFromObject.
I have std.move(obj); :P
user142019
Otherwise an object is always copied.
user142019
21:44
Or at least, if the copy ctor/copy = cannot be found it fail to compile.
user142019
I am, however, not sure how I have to do this with function parameters.
but it's slightly broken
for example
A 32-bit program cannot load a 64-bit DLL, can it?
21:46
I convert lambdas which have caps like var := std.move(othervar) into type(decltype(othervar)&& ref) : var(ref) {}.
but of course, a named rvalue reference is an lvalue reference...
@R.MartinhoFernandes Absolutely not.
each process is x86 or x64 and that's the end of it.
K, then I need to compile vim as x64 or install x86 python.
Python it is.
however, you can do some clever IPC and marshalling to hide this if you need to load plugins from DLLs or someshit like that
user142019
@DeadMG Ø has no references nor a distinction between lvalues and rvalues, hence the explicit move operator.
@DeadMG Not under my control :)
user142019
CPython uses a GC.
21:47
Ahahaha. LOL Look what I just found in my backups:
user142019
(I think every implementation does.)
@rightfold So you can do 1 = 2;?
user142019
@DeadMG No.
user142019
1 is immutable.
@rightfold So you can do &1?
user142019
21:48
Good point.
Who says Visual Basic needed to suck ^
Given enough effort...
all I'm saying is that C++ has an rvalue/lvalue distinction for a reason.
Now my server is booted but is refusing my long requests.
@sehe I'm scared.
Next step: rescue mode.
user142019
21:49
@DeadMG I could limit & and = to variables, data members and *x.
Hmm, no, still doesn't work with Python x86.
Hmm.
What is decltype anyway?
@rightfold Now you're back to lvalues and rvalues, you're just trying to put it in the grammar instead of the type system.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you shouldn't be. It was basically an STL rip-off, but without the templates. So everything on variants/COM interfaces and performance down the drain.
user142019
@Magtheridon96 decltype(expr) is the type of expr.
21:50
Ah
BUT: convenience for the developer (i.e.: ME :))
user142019
It can be used as a type, just like int and std::vector<T> can.
user142019
@DeadMG Yes.
and here's another thing
f() = 2; legal?
user142019
No.
user142019
21:50
Definitely not.
never, ever, for any f?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I can't put a date on things right now. The backup was from January 2005. :[
user142019
No.
user142019
If f() returns a pointer to an integer, you can do *f() = 2;.
21:51
so your version of say, std::array, std::vector, std::map, will have to implement everything in terms of get and set.
user142019
Overload []= and [] operators.
@rightfold OK, great. And for de-referencing a smart pointer?
Baby I'll overload any operators you want me to~
user142019
Overload * and *= operators.
Oh. Fuck. I have Python2 x64 installed.
21:52
@rightfold What would operator* return? Without references it can't mimic the primitive semantics.
Gosh waht a fucken miss.
Ell
Ell
Does c++'s context sensitive grammar make it easier to write? E.g. how much extra effort would writing c++ be if it were restricted to context free?
@rightfold And =, +=, -=, /=, etc?
what are they to return?
@rightfold That would forbid mutable operations
user142019
@DeadMG They all return unit.
21:53
@Ell Substantially less than current, given a sensible grammar redesign.
@rightfold So you cannot do x = y = z?
user142019
No.
@DeadMG You can if unit x;.
:P
user142019
I've never really needed x = y = z beyond two or three variables.
I already have more skill with Zoidberg's own language than him.
21:54
ok
@DeadMG Examples please.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Now be scared: this was also in that lib WeakReference.cls (haven't found evidence that I used it, though; Quite likely I just thought is was a cool trick to have - eeek)
@CaptainGiraffe Both the Wide grammar and I believe the D grammar have the same power or greater than C++, and they are context-free.
Ok, "(...) than him" or "(...) than himself" or WHAT?
user142019
21:55
@DeadMG thanks for making me think of those edge-cases.
@DeadMG The non CFG in c++ all relates to templates no?
@rightfold So when I have std::array<T> in Zoidlang and then I do arr[x] = y; it must always perform two copies.
@CaptainGiraffe No.
@CaptainGiraffe No. Some of it even goes back to C.
@CaptainGiraffe a * b; is the textbook example.
Ell
Ell
@captain not all, for ex function declaration vs variable declaration
21:56
@Ell MVP was introduced in C++.
Ell
Ell
or definition
in C int x(5); was not legal.
Why is a * b; not CFG?
although, of course, it has nothing to do with templates, so I guess your example is valid.
boring
21:57
@CaptainGiraffe Is it an expression or a declaration?
@CaptainGiraffe If a and b are int variables, it is a multiply. If a is a type, it is a variable declaration.
Mother fucker! So all this time I thought my Gstreamer code to play a UDP broadcast was wrong when the real problem was the virtual machine I was doing my work in wasn't receiving the broadcast.. Such a waste of energy!
user142019
@DeadMG How come?
@CaptainGiraffe If a is a type, a * b defines be as a pointer to an a. If a is a variable, it's multiplying a by b.
user142019
Copies are allowed to be elided when possible.
21:57
True.
@rightfold Well, you need to copy y into the function argument of operator[]=, and then again to be copied into the actual element.
come to think of it, that would be true for all overloaded operators, ever.
user142019
The compiler can optimize it to one copy.
and how the fuck are you going to do copy constructors?
are you guys redoing C++
@DeadMG It's a little more subtle (enough that I can't give an example right off) but C still has roughly the same possibility, though as I recall it requires a typedef and a completely unnecessary pair of parentheses.
21:59
Fuck Ayn Rand? She wasn't really very good looking.
user142019
// something like
struct T {
    copy {
        whatever := other.whatever;
    }
}
so hang on
what even is your motivation for removing references
you're introducing a massive shitbunch of language magic to replace them and hoping that a compiler optimization will save you?

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