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17:00
woot
int (**b)[30] = new int(*)[30][10]; //expected primary-expression before β€˜)’ token
int (**b)[30] = new (int(*)[30])[10]; //array bound forbidden after parenthesized type-id
int (**b)[30] = new int(*[10])[30]; //expected identifier before numeric constant
@MooingDuck int** a = new int*[30]?
@Jeffrey that's a dynamic array of 30 pointers to int. I want 10 pointers to int[30].
(for no real reason, this is purely an intellectual exercise)
I give up then
hmm.
break it down
what is 1 pointer to int[30]?
17:05
int* x[30]
I think that's an array of 30 int*
int** then...
@Magtheridon96 int(*)[30] is the type
int(*ptr)[30]; //declares the variable ptr with type int(*)[30]
17:07
I can't believe your second attempt didn't work
bleh
@Magtheridon96 I think it would have, except the C++ spec disallows array bounds after a parenthsized type-id
I think I'd consider this an error in the C++ spec
Let's be assholes and tell him to use std::array/std::vector/std::valarray or whatever container would suffice for his problem
@Magtheridon96 a typedef?
oh. std::vector<std::array<int, 30>*>
Your typedef solution seems viable
@MooingDuck I was told (right here in this room) never to use C-style arrays in C++...
17:09
@Jeffrey wise words
(Assuming he can just write that code and scroll up 1000s of lines of code never to look at it again :D)
template <typename T> T *create(T *){return new T;}
int (**a)[30] = create(a);
That's hot
Wait, that's not a demangler.
Ell
Ell
Oh wait. Nevermind if it's an intellectual exercise xD
17:14
@Ell well I got that part. The hard part is putting that type in a new expression, for which there is no name x.
@Ell thats... weird...
unless... new doesn't go there does it?
int (**b)[30] = int(new *[10])[30]; //expected primary-expression before β€˜int’
Ell
Ell
Ohh right
that was my first guess too
17:20
@Jeffrey Very wise words.
@StackedCrooked nice
@Magtheridon96 assholes?
@MooingDuck I wish I could make it portable though.
Ok lads, time to study a little bit of probability, cya in 1-2 hours
17:23
@StackedCrooked and re-entrant?
@StackedCrooked wait, re-entrant is the wrong word. I just don't like that the result is a reference to a static
Why don't you like it?
no wait.... I see how it works
That's quite clever....
nevermind me
Is there an online visual studio compiler?
@EtiennedeMartel yes, because we'd be missing the point of the question, which is about a syntax to initialize int (**a)[30] :D (a short and sweet one)
int (**a)[30] = new (int (*)[30]); //compiles
int (**a)[30] = new (int (*)[30])[10]; //array bound forbidden after parenthesized type-id
@Magtheridon96 Mooing really likes pointers, IIRC.
It is our duty to shove our balls in his face and annoy him to no end.
But I don't have balls.
A scrotum yes, but no balls ;_;
@Magtheridon96 He's infertile! Rejoice and copulate!
17:33
My replies to posts that use hashtags on Twitter are "Error: invalid preprocessor directive"
@StackedCrooked coliru.stacked-crooked.com/… While trying to break it, I found a quirk. I can name_of(name_of<int>), but I cannot name_of(name_of<name_of<int>>).
WELL THEY AREN'T ;-;
@MooingDuck I guess I'll just document that as not allowed :P
user142019
I wish C++ had finally.
user142019
Scope guards are a fugly hack.
4
17:34
Ooh. Moede een dikke lip en?
Then someone would be a dick and add however
@rightfold Urgh.
That's it, you lost all your credibility right there.
All of it.
Which means you did not lose a lot.
#define finally for (std::abort();;)
try/finally constructs are a pain to use. They are bearable only through syntactic sugar like C#'s using.
I'm syntactically diabetic
17:39
@EtiennedeMartel I'd find finally nice.
more shiny words I can type
In practice, you don't usually need scope guards.
Your objects should manage their resources themselves.
user142019
This isn't a resource.
user142019
Anyway.
17:41
I can't say I ever miss it much in C++. I guess it's a minor convenience when working with third-party code which isn't RAII-fied, but in general, I'm with @EtiennedeMartel. I don't need finally, and I virtually never use scope guards
user142019
Can I capture a member by-value instead of capturing this?
@rightfold what is it then?
@rightfold Don't change the subject.
@EtiennedeMartel I ran into a situation a while back where an object used a recursive function for inserts, which did not have the capabilities of "cleaning up" in the case of an exception. The "root" function of the insert had to do the cleanup in teh case of a failure
You brought this on yourself.
Xeo
Xeo
17:41
@rightfold local copy
user142019
OIC.
We're not gonna drop this until your ego has been turned into a mushy mess.
user142019
Meh.
Xeo
Xeo
Changes with next standard, though
@ScottW No null references.
user142019
17:41
Oeh. :3
Xeo
Xeo
Then [member]{ ... } will make a copy
@MooingDuck Oh, so you want finally to be able to compensate for crappy designs?
user142019
@jalf an iterator that I need to reassign before the scope exits.
@rightfold Just copy the iterator.
Wait.
What?
@EtiennedeMartel seperation of concerns. either (A) I simply use finally {balance();}, or (B), my insert balances and my erase balances, and everything else also balances as they go.
17:43
@MooingDuck I have to admit, that's a weird one.
user142019
Token peekToken() {
    auto old_it = it;
    ScopeGuard _([old_it, this] () -> void {
        it = old_it;
    });
    return readToken();
}
@rightfold right. I did something like that for my stm lib. I thought a scope guard was a pretty clean solution.
user142019
I'd rather do auto old_it = it; try { return readToken(); } finally { it = old_it; }.
@EtiennedeMartel I was able to redesign it all, but I remain unconvinced that there is no case for finally.
user142019
Because meh lambda and extra unused variable.
17:44
I guess you could always just make it a resource. Call it a Balancer, and have it do the balancing on destruction? :)
@MooingDuck Well, it depends. There is no case for it in the sense that you can always trivially replace it with a scope guard. There may or may not be a case for it in the sense that in certain situations, it may be more convenient than a scope guard
@jalf that's an ugly hack
@jalf there's no sense for a scope guard hack if you have finally
@MooingDuck On the other hand, if you have scope guard, there's no need for a finally hack either. ;)
@jalf *There's no case for a scope guard in the sense that you can trivially replace it with a finally.
@jalf see rightfold's code? scope guard definitely looks like a hack compared to a finally block.
@MooingDuck true. But we need the scope guard mechanism anyway in order for RAII to work. So we effectively get scope guards for free, while finally would require an additional language feature
@jalf that's true
but I stand by the statement that I think the language would be better with finally.
Ell
Ell
17:48
Can't you write a finally in c++ somehow?
(Though it should be rarely used)
@Ell sure, as a scope guard
@MooingDuck true, except if you have multiple actions you want to perform during the finally block, depending on how far you got through the scope. Finally gets messy in that case, because you have to statically specify exactly what happens at scope exit, while scope guards let you gradually build up the set of actions (create one scope guard, do some stuff, create another, do more stuff, etc)
I tended to use a scope guard for things not worth refactoring ('2-strikes before you refactor' kind of deal), but make_unique has been covering a lot of those situations lately since it maps closely to those C-ish interfaces that provide an opaque handle + a clean-up function.
@jalf also, if you have multiple scope guards, they have to be in the code in reverse order. Which is just confusing. But multiple scope guards doesn't happen as often now that we have lambdas.
then finally suddenly looks like a hack
17:50
@MooingDuck I wouldn't call 'destruction in reverse order of construction' confusing in C++. It's rather expected.
It's like you're unwinding a stack
Ell
Ell
you are aren't you?
@CatPlusPlus I'll be in Germany for the next two weeks. If my predictions are correct (and you bet they are), the 10000000th message should be posted during that time. Since I wont be able to GET it myself, I'm counting on you. Do not disappoint.
@MooingDuck In sense. It would make certain things a bit nicer, but it might also encourage sloppy (non-RAII) code, and it adds complexity to the standard and the compiler. The language is extremely big already. I'm not disputing that it'd be a minor convenience at time. Just that I'm not convinced adding it would result in a better language overall
@MooingDuck why do you have all those unnecessary braces in the scopeguard case?
17:52
@jalf ah. fair
10 millionth chat message you say?
Xeo
Xeo
@Rakkun No Cat here anymore.
I think we're completely feline-free right now.
@Xeo Did he get run over by a car? :(
Ell
Ell
Here is my horrible solution! coliru.stacked-crooked.com/…
@Xeo What happened?
17:52
@jalf also, ideone.com/X28Kob note the order they execute in.
Xeo
Xeo
Guys, you can easily write a macro that allows you to have the following syntax:
finally{ stuff; };
@Ell uh, that's not what finally does
Ell
Ell
oh.
of course
Xeo
Xeo
@Rakkun Cat just left (maybe exams?) and the lion wants a break from SO
Ell
Ell
17:54
I'm so stupid. I just rewrote a try catch block
Ell
Ell
let me try again :L
Everytime you call malloc, a dog cries somewhere
Ell
Ell
I'm so terribad
I'm looking at the code I wrote and I am ashamed.
17:55
Anyway, regardless of whether the scopeguard solution seems like a hack, are you seriously trying to tell me that the three nested try blocks does not look like a hack?
I know that commit-or-rollback semantics are in the seminal ScopeGuard article but imo you have to be careful with that approach. ScopeGuards work better as 'unconditionally dispose at scope exit'. I like Dave Abrahams' approach better exceptionally-safe for commit-or-rollback.
Nested try blocks look like bad code.
I.e. work-work-work-work nothrow-commit.
@jalf in that light I see it
@LucDanton but dispose rarely needs scope guards. You typically handle that with regular RAII
17:56
@jalf See 'two-strikes' parenthetical.
huh?
8 mins ago, by Luc Danton
I tended to use a scope guard for things not worth refactoring ('2-strikes before you refactor' kind of deal), but make_unique has been covering a lot of those situations lately since it maps closely to those C-ish interfaces that provide an opaque handle + a clean-up function.
ah right
@MooingDuck You get the impression that the order of execution is reversed because you're doing commit-or-rollback.
That's not to say your point isn't valid. But it's something that I expressively avoid regardless of finally or not.
(Because the situations I've faced so far have let me get away with it. I don't have recommendations in general though.)
anyway, I think the bottom line is still that yes, at times finally would be a minor convenience. But it'd also make the language bigger still, and lend itself to some really bad practices (ie. not using RAII). Seen in isolation, sure, I'd rather have it than not have it (isn't that true for any feature though), but I'm not convinced it'd be worth it
18:02
The only time I actually ran into this I was able to rework to not throw exceptions in the first place, so I have also never yet needed finally.
@jalf hmm, true on the bad practices. Hadn't considered that.
@jalf I genuinely think that the potential for bad uses (that you've pointed out) outweighs any other concern. Exception guarantees are hard, and I'd rather leave that tool out. 'Pit of success' kind of thing, not that I'm very fond of that expression.
The places in my code where I use a smart pointer with custom deleter to ensure some cleanup at scope exit might be a candidate for finally.
Then again, I'm in a 'rather not have it' period. Ask me in some months and maybe the answer will change!
I think exception guarantees are hard only because we don't have tools to verify them.
k, took me waaayyy too much time to figure out slices.
user142019
18:17
Damn you std::stack.
user142019
Y u no bounds checking.
Ell
Ell
whaaaat tony has gone!? :(
has anyone used libftdi before?
@rightfold What, do you want the runtime to write your code for you?
Go back to C# if that's the case.
user142019
It should throw an exception instead of segfault.
user142019
18:20
Or whatever UB you can think of.
@rightfold And incur a performance cost?
Because that check isn't free.
Ell
Ell
I thought it did bounds checking in debug mode?
user142019
Yes.
user142019
Have something like pop which does bounds checking and then unsafe_pop which doesn't.
Or just add the if yourself.
18:21
I'd call unsafe_pop
You're the first person I meet who actually whines about that particular thing.
Xeo
Xeo
> We are muling it over in gcc land and seem to have come to the conclusion that about the only way to do this is by having the front end intercept constructor for dynarray and running alloca or some such. Shouldn't call alloca inside a parameter list because of stack issues. So, basically all the easy ways are out I think.
living on the edge allows you to bang chicks
Xeo
Xeo
unsafe_poop?
That too
18:23
> I was trying to find an implementation of dynarray which does stack allocation (implementing it with just heap allocation is trivial).
Can dynarray use heap allocation as well?
Ell
Ell
popping isn't unsafe!
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Yes
@Ell It is if you're a lazy Dutch person who can't be bothered to check if the stack is empty before popping.
@Xeo I wish this could be used as ammunition to shoot that shit down.
So it's like a new[] with raii then?
Xeo
Xeo
18:25
Not really
It's "either stack or heap, but we won't tell you"
@Xeo I don't like these odds.
Hm...
Can it use small buffer optimization?
"Sore wa himitsu desu~"
dare mo shiranai
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Hm?
18:26
Wait.
There's no implementation experience for std::dynarray?
WAT
@Xeo never mind, probably a stupid question.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes :D
Who the fuck voted that in :'(
+ the time spent discussing that
18:28
@R.MartinhoFernandes Someone with a lot of friends.
Jon Skeet's evil twin brother, John Skeet
@R.MartinhoFernandes According to Puppy, everyone except him (literally)
I expected the implementation to be non-trivial, so when it got voted in I thought that someone, somewhere, had one.
haha
no
I'm not going to mull over how ridiculous this is.
18:36
Does Clang support C++14 yet?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would really like to hear about what really happened in that mess.
Ell
Ell
is stuff removed from the standard?
Oh wait yeah ofc it is
Xeo
Xeo
0
A: Is it possible to have a non recursive at_c implementation?

n.m.std::cout << back((int)(0), (int*)(0), (int**)(0), (int***)(0), (int****)(0), (int*****)(0), (int******)(0), (int*******)(0), 1) << std::endl; =========...

Hmmmm
I wish ellipsis wouldn't only accept trivial types :(
@Xeo Oh good.
Xeo
Xeo
18:41
@R.MartinhoFernandes And a round of applause for.... the C++ standards committee!
@R.MartinhoFernandes What is that? Too lazy for le gogoles.
C++ implementation of variable length arrays.
on-stack?
Xeo
Xeo
@Rakkun Something nobody here likes.
@Rakkun or heap.
Xeo
Xeo
18:46
Or maybe even on your harddrive!
@Rapptz What's the difference with vector then
Xeo
Xeo
@Rakkun Stack
@Xeo The Cat?
It's possible to be on the stack but it seems no one has done it yet
à la C VLA?
18:47
@Rakkun Everyone likes the Cat. Except Abyx.
Xeo
Xeo
1 min ago, by Rapptz
C++ implementation of variable length arrays.
@Rakkun I like the Cat.
@EtiennedeMartel Therefore noone likes Abyx.
@Xeo Oh come on it was a simple joke!
Xeo
Xeo
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: You don't want to be a std::dynarray in here. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq] [no-helpdesk]
@EtiennedeMartel Tiens comment tu dis "bonne continuation" en angliche ?
@Xeo Kinda glad I didn't jump on that bandwagon :p
18:49
@Rakkun Erm.
@EtiennedeMartel ça me semble bien court
Best of luck?
setting up DNS for custom domain is such a pain in the ass
@EtiennedeMartel Yeah ok.
@BartekBanachewicz cue "you're just terrible"
18:50
Godspeed?
@EtiennedeMartel ça fait science fiction non?
@Rakkun wanna help me? :/
@Rakkun Ça fait surtout médiéval.
@BartekBanachewicz whats your problem son
I want to have my statics on Google Drive
I can modify CNAME, A and MX records
how do I do so I can use foo.com/file.txt and it will be served from Drive
18:52
@BartekBanachewicz drive exposes an http frontend/backend/whatever?
Expose your backend.
@Rakkun it can serve from http://drive/shitload/of/uselesss/crap/file.txt
And my domain provider doesn't offer redirection to URL :/
@BartekBanachewicz Well in that case a CNAME should do
@Rakkun no
it will leave me with all the crap
oh you don't want the crap part?
@BartekBanachewicz in that case url rewriting and no dns redirection at all

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