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10:00
I am facing an interesting dilemma now.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what was it?
I'm stupid
no, just C++. Everyone has it.
Also, bastard.
@R.MartinhoFernandes your gift?
oh god, I think I sent the robot into a paradoxical coma
@TonyTheLion well... they sort of return an adre... I'm not even going there :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes would you respond already, I want to give everyone a link to see what I got you :P
10:09
@thecoshman what is an adre?
@thecoshman your broke the Robot
ITT The Robot BSOD'd
@TonyTheLion (address, shh don't tell people I was thinking of it in that way)
I was going to say that you can sort of think of new as returning the address of the object it creates, as you can only 'assign' new to a pointer (or pass it to something that expects an address).
@thecoshman new is not constructors.
all constructors return void.
@DeadMG erm, so why don't they have a return type then?
10:21
@TonyTheLion Well, the compiler already knows the constructor returns void, so why bother having a syntax for it and making the user state it?
did ppl here discuss dlang ? I want to have some nonNPOW opinions so I cant ask on SO...? Basically any like/dislike/conclusion would be nice
besides, when it comes to things like "constructor return type", you're really into implementation-defined territory here.
@DeadMG In that case void should be optional
@Jeffrey No, it shouldn't. There's no benefit to permitting the user to state void. Not having the return type permits grammatical disambiguation that would not be possible if the return type was there.
@DeadMG true, but I was thinking of it in that way :P
10:23
@DeadMG like what?
> No return type (not even void) shall be specified for a constructor
@Jeffrey The grammar for a regular function is expression identifier(args) { body }. The grammar for a constructor is identifier(args) initializer_list_opt { body }.
the standard doesn't state anything about ctor return types
besides that it shouldn't have one
user142019
if you have expression identifier(args) for introducing a constructor, then how can you know if initializer_list_opt is valid?
user142019
10:24
Flickr fail.
> shall be specified
you would have to permit initializer_list_opt on all functions and then semantically error later, which is bad.
@DeadMG by its identifier?
@rightfold lol, what do you mean header data?
@Jeffrey That's context-sensitive and very bad.
far more context-sensitive than the grammar already is.
10:25
My context is sensitive.
Oh gawd, you are going into automata-dictionary... I'm out
IOW, you don't know shit about parsing and grammars.
heh automata
they aren't that scary
just a tad scary at first
user142019
> <meta name="keywords" content="lookatthestarslookhowtheyshineforyouandeverythingyoudoyeahtheywereallye‌​llow">
I know, I passed that exam
Don't remember a thing though. Never understood the point of it.
10:26
lol, passed the exam
that doesn't mean anything
@Jeffrey the point is that you can understand compilers and how grammars are parsed etc
man
but you obviously missed that
@DeadMG woman
the Wide compiler produces buggy output, and LLVM has basically no useful tools for dealing with this except implement your own debugger
looks like you'll have to write a Wide debugger then
so, get to it
10:28
have phun
@thecoshman I was on mobile.
chop chop
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh
Bastard sent me this.
10:28
@TonyTheLion But I have a billion other things I need to fix :(
Everyone, suspense is over (and slightly spoiled) this was the fine 'gift' I got for our robot pal :D
@DeadMG work faster then :P
@R.MartinhoFernandes ahahahaha
what a great and appropriate gift for the Robot
Third or fourth page says "Crack the spine". Nothing else.
:'(
@R.MartinhoFernandes so what do you think?
@thecoshman It's awesome.
10:30
o btw @R.MartinhoFernandes I found a couple of not really errors, but could-be-fixed things with your Optional that I stole from you
particularly, it would be really nice if T is trivial to have optional<T> be trivial
@R.MartinhoFernandes going to play along with it?
I just don't know if I should do all the tasks or keep an immaculate copy of "Wreck This Journal", which is weird.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Awesome
@Xeo You can look inside and see the first few pages. They are horrible.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you currently hold an unfinished version of the book... or perhaps it's sitting in the corner looking at you o_o
10:32
One the last pages reads "Find a way to freeze this page".
put it in the freezer
It's a challenge... How can I resist.
@R.MartinhoFernandes tell you what, complete it, and I might send you on a new copy to keep minty
apply LN2
@DeadMG boring
10:33
Why didn't they made it so that you can extend the standard library?
@thecoshman haha
@DeadMG there we go :D
@Jeffrey Er, they did.
> might
user142019
10:33
but don't just do it in one burst, I want to here you suffer through this book slowly :P
@thecoshman I will document each task.
@Jeffrey "inheriting from" is ten billion miles from "extending"
@Jeffrey you mean "why didn't they make it so you can extend the standard library in all the bad ways?"
Yeah...
"Why didn't they encourage us to write bad code?"
10:34
In other news, I am now also the proud owner of a bad book written by experts.
@Jeffrey you can extend in ways other then inheriting
Xeo
Xeo
@Jeffrey Psst: Free functions.
@Xeo BUT OOP
Xeo
Xeo
OOP can take a double-penetration for all I care.
10:35
@thecoshman like...?
@rightfold You know, I'm really not sure whether the first guy is an idiot or not.
1 min ago, by Xeo
@Jeffrey Psst: Free functions.
@DeadMG Both are both.
@R.MartinhoFernandes both are both idiots and not-idiots?
@Jeffrey funny, I am sure some one would mention free-functions
10:37
@jalf Yes.
Quantum idiocy
FUCK
(It's a scene from Kiss Kiss Bang Bang)
@jalf it's not like you can replace an inheritance with free functions...
Though Robert Downey Jr.'s character is more often idiot than non-idiot.
Stupid chat reset pling sounds again
10:37
They have different purposes
@Jeffrey You can't, because inheriting is idiotic and non-inheriting isn't
@Jeffrey but we were talking about extending the standard library. And free functions work pretty well for that
What kind of extension would you like to create, which cannot be added without inheritance?
Free functions are so.... free
@Jeffrey What is there to gain by inheriting from a class without virtual functions?
(Lots of things)
@TonyTheLion lol
@DeadMG why?
10:39
Why not?
There are classes designed to be inherited from in the standard library. They all have virtual functions, because that's what makes inheriting from them somewhat useful.
@jalf as far as I know you shouldn't inherit from the standard library...
@Jeffrey And that's a problem why?
@Jeffrey But you want to. What problem would you like to solve by inheriting from std::string if it were allowed?
@Jeffrey Because, for one thing, there are no virtual functions in std::string, so how the fuck do you intend to take advantage of the very limited benefits of inheritance?
Ell
Ell
10:40
And inheriting can be for code de-duplication too :3
@DeadMG woah. easy boy...
@jalf I fucking hate it when it does that
@Jeffrey well, are you going to give us an example of how allowing inheritance from std::string would actually achieve anything?
We've only asked three times, and it is kind of difficult to discuss this when you're not telling us what use case you have for it
@jalf I was just wondering why. Let's imagine I want to add a trim() function to std::string (which cuts out spaces from the beginning and the end of a string)... how would you do that?
FWIW, inheriting from std::string is allowed. It's just not a particularly useful thing.
10:43
inheriting is a bad name, think instead of 'specialising'. If you have say std::unique_ptr how are you going to specialise that? If you want to ADD features, us something like composition, where you have a separate class that has an instance of std::unique_ptr
http://code.blender.org/index.php/2013/05/google-summer-of-code-2013/
Google has given Blender 15 spots in the Google Summer of Code. Hot damn :D
@Jeffrey nonstd::trim(std::string&)
@jalf I only have one hand to type with and 6 people to talk to...
@Jeffrey free-function
@jalf let's say I actually care about OOP...
10:43
@jalf Was about to say, I don't think that std::trim is the wise.
@Jeffrey How is this not OOP?
@Jeffrey Calling syntax has nothing to do with OOP.
OOP does not mean "everything must be a member"
@Jeffrey let's say we actually care about good code
@Jeffrey Making it a member would violate OOP more than a free function.
10:44
There is no conceptual difference between trim(s) and s.trim().
@R.MartinhoFernandes but OOP SCNR
@jalf no, but it means that functions that operate on the object data should be a member
If you think otherwise you need to go and actually learn some OOP first.
@Jeffrey wat no.
@Jeffrey No. it does not
10:45
you obviously have no idea what the hell OOP actually is.
Making the function a member would give it access to the class' private members, which would reduce encapsulation. Last I checked, encapsulation was kind of a big deal in OOP
@DeadMG please tell me.
what @jalf said, tbh
yiz
yiz
if(trim(fattie) != bSuccess) // less correct than if(fattie.trim() != bSuccess)
@jalf It wouldn't if you inherit :S
10:45
making it a member reduces encapsulation... always prefer free functions for increased encapsulation when possible.
@Jeffrey You are conflating "what Java designers chose to do" with "what OOP is actually intended to be"
@R.MartinhoFernandes it would have access to protected members
There isn't any!
But there could be!
(Your point still stands)
:D
10:46
lol
plus, of course, if you inherit, you can only do s.trim() on your own string objects, whereas if you have trim(s), you can trim a std::string& that someone else gave you.
@Jeffrey look it up. Alan Kay invented OOP. And he didn't say anything about member functions. In fact, the language he created to exemplify OOP did not have member functions. (It had message passing which is a different concept)
FWIW, in D if you have a trim(string) free function you can call it like s.trim() and if you have a trim() member function you can call it like trim(s).
Does that make it any "less OOP"?
@DeadMG if you inherit from std::string, you can still use polymorphism
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 that is is made... how would you call trim(string, bool)?
But even this is missing a central point: OOP is supposed to be good because it leads to better code. So, the moment an OOP rule results in objectively worse code, it fails to live up to its purpose, and should be abandoned. Making the function a member when it didn't need to be has disadvantages (reduced encapsulation, preventing reuse), and no advantages. It results in inferior code. Therefore, it does not help you achieve the goals that OOP is for
TL;DR: Good code > OOP code
@thecoshman Both trim(s, b) or s.trim(b) would be valid.
10:49
OOP is a means for achieving good code. But never lose sight of the fact that good code, and not OOP code, is the goal
@jalf define good code
@R.MartinhoFernandes I have been thinking about implementing a similar feature in Wide.
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 what madness is that!
@thecoshman Like I said, there is no conceptual difference between the two. D happens to get rid of the artificial syntactic distinction that exists in other languages.
@Jeffrey Well, I just gave you a couple of examples. Defining trim as a free function allows it to be reused between different string classes. That is a good thing. And thus, a trim function which can be reused is better than one which can not
10:50
If a prevents you from improving or maintaining Wikipedia, ignore it. See also *The fifth of : "Wikipedia does not have firm rules." * * * Essays * * * *
:)
@jalf you can reuse it just as much as if it was a member function... I can't see the difference
@Jeffrey Encapsulation is also a good thing: if we know that a piece of code has no way to mess with certain program state, then that makes it easier to reason about the code, and the state, in question. And making trim a free function guarantees that it won't mess around with the class' private members
@Jeffrey No, you can't.
@Jeffrey encapsulation. By adding a member function, by inheriting, you are taking more access (less encapsulation) to the object. Encapsulation is very good thing as it helps you ensure your objects are valid, as you reduce the tampering
@Jeffrey You cannot. std::string s = " foo"; <- trim this with your member function.
trim(s) works just fine.
10:51
@Jeffrey Look at std::find. The same function can be used on a lot of different containers. But string::find can only ever be used on std::string
s.trim() will never work.
not to mention, what happens if both you and someone else use the same approach, and he wants to introduce, I dunno, to_upper_case. How are you going to trim and to_upper_case the same string if they're members of derived classes?
You don't inherit to add functionality to a base class.
you're going to be fucked if you want to dick around with virtually inheriting from std::string, etc.
That is a completely wrong idea of OOP even in fucking Java.
10:52
@Jeffrey except if you already have trim(std::string) it is easier to add a common patter trim(Foo) and trim(Bar)` or you could even go template it
IOW, inheritance is one of the worst things you can do in this situation
@R.MartinhoFernandes what's wrong with s.trim() in that case?
@Jeffrey std::string doesn't have a trim() method.
> error: std::string has no trim() member function
right...
10:53
Only my::derived_string has it.
I finally see... (I think)
¬_¬ let me just find my sceptical hat
You want to add functionality to the base class by deriving from it. That's just silly.
Terribly silly.
Almost as silly as I am.
Plain stupid?
10:54
Do you want to be as silly as me?
yeah
@R.MartinhoFernandes My uncle is also a software engineer, and you should have seen his face when I told him we use Java where I work. heh
@R.MartinhoFernandes o.O
if you did this, you'd be nearly as bad as ThePhD. You don't wanna be that.
10:55
@DeadMG that's not a complement I'm sure
@Jeffrey what if I want to trim some string data stored in a std::vector? Or in a C-style string?
don't forget, adding member functions like that, even if it is your own class, makes the class more complex. Member functions should be kept to a minimum. Something like 'trim' is not really part of a string it self, sure you will often want to use it on a string, but it is not part of the string.
@jalf v[i].trim() for the first?
that is what "reusable" means: the ability to re-use code. You wrote a trim function because you wanted to trim std::string, and because you wrote it as a free function, you can now re-use it on any iterator sequence storing string data
@jalf inherit from std::vector and C-style string too
10:57
@Jeffrey A std::vector<char>, not a std::vector<std::string>
Xeo
Xeo
@jalf Ew, iterators.
@jalf You cannot write trim with an iterator interface.
@jalf Since trimming involves removing data, I expect that you probably can't write it as an iterator based function.
Iterators cannot change container size. (unless you write some fucking weird iterators that make you deserve being shot)
10:57
Iterators suck. =l
"If you write weird iterators, you deserve to be shot." - The Robot.
3
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fair point. It could return the trimmed range though
yiz
yiz
iterators are just range checked pointers
kind of like erase/remove
10:58
@ThePhD no, rephrase that, you suck
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes server not found :|
@TonyTheLion No, iterators do most definitely suck.
@yiz except there's no requirement for them to be range checked
ok, let me rephrase that
@Xeo It was a joke. I supposed you plonked yiz so you don't get it.
Xeo
Xeo
10:59
Yes
@jalf Or to behave like pointers.
whether or not ThePhD sucks is orthogonal to the fact that iterators suck.
That was the most useful talk I've made in this entire month...
I thought iterators were supposed to be a good way to do stuff, better than raw pointers
11:01
Hm.
Someone already submitted array_view, right?
To std::proposals?
And it was accepted, right?
yiz
yiz
Feb 11 at 14:17, by Cat Plus Plus
Old here? Do us a favour, and don't announce your plonks. Seriously.
@Borgleader Class writers don't design for inheritance, and class users don't know how to use inheritance. To prevent these two problems from resulting in lots of terrible code, some popular languages made classes non-final and functions virtual by default. Wait...
Then again, I probably don't want it standardized.
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD No
My buffer_view is the best. <3
@Xeo Lol, so they'll take dynarray, which requires extra compiler magic to implement,
but they won't take an ezpz one-two class like array_view.
11:04
@ThePhD It requires naught AFAIK.
LEWG/LWG/EWG/WhateverTheFuck is on some serious smoke.
(which is another silliness)
"naught" ?
user142019
Nick Naughty
@ThePhD Yes, "nothing".
11:05
@ThePhD dynarray doesn't require compiler magic to implement. It would be completely legal to implement it strictly in terms of std::vector.
@DeadMG Two guesses what MSVC is going to do...~
@DeadMG Inherit privately and drop a bunch of usings... hehe
@ThePhD Being exactly the point I raised in LEWG when dynarray was being discussed (among several other downsides I pointed out).
unfortunately, this wasn't enough to sink the paper.
I still don't see the benefit of dynarray.
What's the point? You either know an array's size at compile-time, or you don't.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Would that even be legal? If you had f(vector<int>::iterator) and f(dynarray<int>::iterator), the Standard might require that they are distinct types.
11:07
Making it so it can choose from stack memory or heap memory smells like a landmine, waiting to happen.
@ThePhD It is. But more problematically, the user has no way to know if this will occur, so they have no way to know if dynarray will actually deliver any performance improvements.
inb4 StackOverflow questions "On this runthrough of this function, dynarray is fast. But on the next one it's slow. Why?"
and there's also no implementation experience implementing this optimization
so there's no guarantee any implementation will choose for it to be worth the time.
and they don't really know how difficult it is to implement.
@DeadMG So, open question: has the influx of "fresh blood" at the committee meetings resulted in more haphazard or ill-considered decision-making?
Lawrence Crowl can eat a dick. =l
11:10
@jalf In order to answer that, I'd have to know what it was like before (being a "fresh blood" myself).
but in my opinion, the answer is probably "no".
@jalf DeadMG was apparently the only one with his head on straight, voting against dynarray, so maybe some of the old guys need to be retired.
at least in the meetings I attended, there was no obvious divide between the opinions of fresh delegates and experienced delegates
and generally, I thought that the experienced delegates got their way
@DeadMG Yeah, I don't know either. It's just something that occurred to me since they (1) keep talking about how many more people are participating, and (2) get stuff like VLAs accepted
@jalf I don't recall who voted that in, but I will tell you that for dynarray, it was voted in by a bunch of relatively experienced members.
makes me wonder "would the committee as it looked 3 years ago have accepted it?"
11:12
s/participating/being told how its done FTFY
Ok :)
at least, as far as I could tell
@jalf For VLAs specifically, I thought that they mostly felt pressure from C, rather than an actual desire to have the feature.
yeah, that's possible
but
I wasn't in the room for the VLA discussions, so my opinions aren't necessarily any more valid than yours
I don't have an opinion on it. It's just a thought that occurred to me, and I figured I'd ask here. It doesn't mean "I think it's all those newcomers' fault" :)
11:14
well
I think that in order to physically turn up to a meeting, either you happen to live very close, or you have to have some kind of commitment which probably means that you've spent some time with C++ and proposals.
Yeah, probably true
but
I do think that the Evolution group has a bit of a tendency to get carried away
user142019
Man.
user142019
I want to earn money.
Ell
Ell
I want to start writing my game :3
11:23
@DeadMG I don't think it requires such a thing (consider that they could both be pointers)
Ell
Ell
I don't know how to decouple 3d stuff from the game state
but I don't think that makes sense, since the levels are 3d n stuff so would there even be a point?
@DeadMG What kind of pressure? VLAs are optional in C.
@Ell isn't that pretty much what a scene graph is for? Based on your game state, you build a scene graph, and based on the scene graph, your renderer renders the scene
Ell
Ell
I don't know really, I thought a scene graph was just for keeping the objects transformations right or something
but I'm n00b so I'm not entirely sure
@Ell yep, it can be a million different things depending no who you ask :)
But intuitively, I'd say it makes sense to draw the line there, in terms of decoupling
Ell
Ell
11:29
Yeah
But I won't claim to know the answer. My attempts at doing computer graphics from scratch have typically stalled at roughly the same question
1
Q: double pointer memory check, do we need to delete both separatly

AnandIs it ok to do like this. LPWSTR lpwStr = new LPWSTR; *lpwStr = new LPWSTR; if (lpwStr){ if (*lpwStr) delete (*lpwStr); } Do we need to delete lpwStr also ??? like: if (lpwStr){ if (*lpwStr) { delete (*lpwStr); } delete lpwStr; } Second pointer is showing me...

Suffer, minions!
LPWSTR lpwStr = new LPWSTR;
*lpwStr = new LPWSTR;
what the fuck
no way that compiles
user142019
Hence downvote and narq.
user142019
11:41
Lack of real code is no.
terribru
that code is
user142019
Man.
user142019
I'm bored to death.
contribute to Wide
user142019
I'm going to implement some data structures.
11:53
ARAEGRWHB selecting mixed arabic/latin text is torture.
user142019
Haha.
Xeo
Xeo
Sounds painful
Very painful
I'm going to send my CV to Reddit
maybe they have something I can do
Xeo
Xeo
lol
like browse their site or something :P
Expert level: browsing reddit
Xeo
Xeo
11:58
"Hello, I send this CV to apply as a 'power QA tester'"

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