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07:13
Probably it will take me days to figure this out, but it's worth a try!
I want to implement a type transformation facility
For example, if the type is primitive, I want to keep it as is
However if I have a sequential container of some type T (such as std::vector<T>), I want to transform it into std::tuple<T*, unsigned>
The process will be recursive, so that if T itself is a sequential container, I should get: std::tuple<T**, unsigned*, unsigned>
Identifying the types isn't my problem
is unsigned the container size?
Yes that's the idea
Ideally I would want to have a class template to do that, and access the the transformed type through a transform<T>::type
std::tuple<T**, unsigned*, unsigned> Whats ** here for?
If you have a vector of vector, you have to carry the size of each vector
07:28
alright
07:39
Please. De-XY-problem-code your goal. This sounds like a horrible code smell
3
how to compile code and include dynamic libs with g++ ?
I tried and I'm still failing
@sehe We want to have a generic implementation for all our possible interfaces
That means ~0
Give me the time to type
"all possible"?
"our interfaces"?
"generic implementation" (of what?)
@SzymonMarczak Move it to the end.
07:43
Say you have some function f you want to export to your users
@sehe My fault. Forgot about this :P
We have users on multiple environments: some integrate directly the library and use a DLL interface
Other will work on excel and thus should access f through that
@SzymonMarczak I'm just happy you understand it. Finding the relevant Stack Overflow post is time consuming
@Rerito Which users. "export", how?
And finally the team wishes to have python bindings
@Rerito Oh god. Now I remember
07:46
And basically, we have the same thing all over again
Use Swig++, py++ or Boost Python. I'd even suggest not using C++. Use C++/CLI for a .NET/COM interop wrapper. And use that everywhere. It'll be a breeze from VBA
The data is not transmitted in the same format depending on the interface that is used
Do. Not. Reinvent. Marshaling.
C++ lacks the reflection. There is no joy down that path. And lots of bugs.
Just. Even use protobuf if you must.
I don't see how you can afford to waste spend so much time even contemplating it. Is your project not commercial?
It's not commercial
We would like to avoid code generation if that's possible
And it's always the same thing, for a target type T, we get the input from another source types Ss... and just rebuild the desired target type to route the data into the internals of the library
@Rerito no its doable
I was thinking something else
Let me try again
08:21
@Rerito At your own peril. If the task is partial to it, why avoid it
@Horttanainen Everything is doable. Not everything should be done.
2
@sehe If I could do what I think would be the best thing, I'ld change the way we ship our library (dll users calls exported functions using only dynamic loading through getprocaddress, so we have no exported object of any kind)
I'ld use Boost.Python or Swig for interop with Python
And I'ld delegate the excel thingy to someone else :D
Assuming I have a C++ client using my code, what's the best course of action to export things using the STL in a portable way
such as void foo(std::string const& str)
08:44
@Rerito It was fun, but my skills were not enough for this task. Maybe this gives you some new ideas? coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/42acf21b33d2c034
I know you wanted tuple but i cannot parameter pack
@Rerito Boost.Python is tameable, but it needs a lot of effort to do it properly, I've seen what we did in our project and it's not an easy problem
@Horttanainen That's quite nice indeed :)
However @sehe is right, that's an XY problem and I shouldn't resort to complex logic like this
09:05
How to pass a pointer to functions of class to a function of another class. E.g. like this: foo.barfoo(&(bar.foobar));
When i compile the code i just give as an example. It wont compile.
nwp
nwp
@Siliproksi You can look up the syntax here
@Siliproksi well, that depends a lot on on the parameter declaration of foo.barfoo
anyone got any idea on how I have to take this on
Any guides? It's not C++ btw, im learning C
Think of: typedef void (*vfp)(). And then decleration of foo.barfoo is: void barfoo(vfp p);
09:20
Still not understanding, but I will google that
@nwp Thanks for that one, but (if possible) I am trying to have vfp (the typdef i wrote above) in parameters, rather than having that particular class function pointer. I really have no idea if this is possible. That is why i am asking.
Thanks!
@Gigitex I was not saying to you. But let me take a look at that one.
ahh, sure :P
I need to leave home. I will take a look of that one at my phone :)
It is not hard to do. I saw the problem.
09:39
@nwp By the way, did you read my question?
nwp
nwp
@Siliproksi only that part. If you linked an SO question or code example I missed it.
@nwp "Thanks for that one, but (if possible) I am trying to have vfp (the typdef i wrote above) in parameters, rather than having that particular class function pointer. I really have no idea if this is possible. That is why i am asking."
@nwp That was the last one i wrote. Did you miss it?
nwp
nwp
@Siliproksi vpf is a function pointer, not a member function pointer. Not the same thing, because the member function pointer requires an object to call the function on.
I think the syntax was typedef void (*Bar::vfp)();
no, of course not
typedef void (Bar::*vfp)()
@nwp Oh... So can i pass a pointer to a function and the object as well. Like this: foo.barfoo(bar, &(bar.foobar)).
hi guys
09:47
@nwp And then, do bar.p()
nwp
nwp
@Siliproksi the syntax is more weird than that, but basically yes
is it correct to say that an array lik int v[] is like int * const v?
@nwp Ok, thank you.
in the sense of type
@Gigitex Here is the version in C: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/d0d9ead18c1afc60 (the solution of the problem you were asking).
nwp
nwp
09:49
@user8469759 one is const the other isn't
which one?
nwp
nwp
the one that has const in the type declaration
I remember there's a difference between int * and int []
wasn't that the const?
nwp
nwp
as far as I know they are the same for function parameters and int[] is illegal otherwise
@nwp Could my problem be solved with "Function Object" as well?
nwp
nwp
09:54
@Siliproksi you could do things like void barfoo(std::function<void()> f); Bar bar; barfoo([&bar]{ bar.foo(); };
you could also take a template argument to capture the lambda directly and save yourself a bit of overhead that std::function brings with it
I do not understand why using "[]"? What does that mean there.
inb4 faq
nwp
nwp
@Siliproksi lambda? not come across that yet?
@nwp Nope. I do not know C++, only C. I will start learning it as i finished C.
nwp
nwp
probably doesn't help that I forgot a ) at the end
09:58
934
Q: What is a lambda expression in C++11?

NawazWhat is a lambda expression in C++11? When would I use one? What class of problem do they solve that wasn't possible prior to their introduction? A few examples, and use cases would be useful.

@sehe Thanks for that. @nwp I will have a read. Then come back.
@nwp I will stick to the first solution you gave me. When i dive in C++ and learn vectors etc. I will try this one. Thank you for both solutions.
10:17
@user8469759 arrays decay to pointers, but they are not the same
and const-ness doesn't matter here
nwp
nwp
@login_not_failed except in function parameters where void f(int *) and void f(int [42]) are exactly the same type
@nwp yea, in the latter case compiler doesn't check the bounds; but if you try to write your own compiler or try to reason about types in general, it is pretty noticeable distinction
10:42
Out of curiosity
I need an advice
although I know how to program in C/C++
I've implemented many "complicated" algorithms
I still have problem with the basics
I mean like
I've seen simple programs snippets sometimes that really drive me crazy
really simple
is there any resource I could use where a lot of short codes with these corner cases are analyzed?
I can read through a book, which is what I did
and I still do that
but again I wouldn't say I'm perfect
any reference you could point me out?
Pms
Pms
@user8469759 What sort of basics? Do you have any examples? Not sure what exactly you mean.
just an example...
Pms
Pms
Also, cppreference have a lot of suggested implementation of different algorithms, that might be worth taking a look at
I know how constructors, destructors for example work
I have the following class (I'm making a bit up because I don't remember the exact snippet)
class A {
sorry
nwp
nwp
10:49
@user8469759 put the code snippet here or here or here
can you see the code?
anyway
I worked out at last how that code works
what's puzzling you in this snippet?
like, what are the most arcane parts?
for THAT SPECIFIC CASE (but it's not the analysis of THAT SPECIFIC case the problem)
I had some problem working out the several calls of constructor and destructor
the question was in that case what number would have been printed
but I mean
it's a very simple snippet and I'd like to find a collection of them (namely very simple, but with many subtle concepts involved)
10:57
well, tbh, these cases are those where you learn stuff from, bit by bit
where I can actually practice my C++understanding
Pms
Pms
Well, it might be pretty hardcore, but: cppquiz.org/quiz/question/8
thanks pms
that's a good start
Pms
Pms
Would not suggest doing the cppquiz other than for fun really, but at least there you will find interesting puzzlles.
@Pms what do you mean?
Pms
Pms
10:59
Like, I don't know if it is what you are really after, because the way I understand cppquiz, it is more like: What does the standard guarantee happens in this case, and some of them are really really tricky, and not necessarily relevant for the real world.
one of the key points of writing good manageable code is to write it for humans, to not puzzle your coworkers or future self with some weird stuff
Pms
Pms
What I meant with the cppquiz was more, is it that type of stuff you are looking for? Perhaps just, not that "hardcore" and puzzle like.
@user8469759 This book has some insanely hard puzzles to ponder on: amazon.com/Advanced-FAQs-Chandra-Shekhar-Kumar/dp/1500228125/…
@Horttanainen thank you, sir :3 should be interesting
Pms
Pms
@Horttanainen Oh yeah, that is going in my bookshelf :P
nwp
nwp
11:03
gotw might be interesting too.
@Pms your cppquiz link is very amuzing as well! found many good questions from the get-go
@nwp Yes these are really good. Currently going through these
Pms
Pms
11:41
So, I got a question, Currently, I am reading this article: http://preshing.com/20121019/this-is-why-they-call-it-a-weakly-ordered-cpu/, and it has an example that I am not really getting: https://hastebin.com/izawahagab.cpp
What I dont really understand here is, why can we only do a flag.compare_exchange_strong(expected, 1, memory_order_acquire).
Wouldn't we need to do a memory_order_aqc_rel, to ensure that other threads syncronizes with our write of the value 1 to the flag?
@Pms It's worth to mention that my goal is to get prepared for interviews properly
worth also to mention the question I showed you has been extrapolated from one of those
Pms
Pms
@user8469759 quiz.geeksforgeeks.org/quiz-corner/… looked at those?
these are also good
I think
I'll have a proper look later
the issue is that I believe I have good design skills, but sometimes I fail in something which a posteriori I believe can be considered trivial
like, again, the question I showed you. There's really no need to struggle
nwp
nwp
11:59
@Pms don't like. The first question I saw is this and I'm fairly sure that they will count C as correct whereas arguably it should be D.
Pms
Pms
@nwp Yeah, I saw that one as well, there are several questions and answers I don't agree with. Was a bit quick on the trigger to send a link.
@Horttanainen sounds good. Although I'd prefer free resources
anyway
changing subject
I have a statement like this
in double
x_new = (x_old - d * ldexp(1.0, -i) * y_old)
            * (1.0 + ldexp(alpha[i], -i));
And I converted this in fixed point (i.e. using integers variables) like this
x_new = ((x_old - (((y_old >> i) ^ d) - d))) * (msb + alpha[i]);
//other code
x_old = x_new >> n_digits;
msb = 1<<n_digits
except numerical error issues
shouldn't they represent the same thing?
in the case of the double computation
d can be -1 or 1
while in the fixed point d can be -1 or 0
nwp
nwp
12:18
it looks like you are using ^ to mean "to the power of" and not bitwise xor
that's C++ syntax
it doesn't look like power, that's what it is
I'm getting different results running the algorithm, and I shouldn't
nwp
nwp
@user8469759 it isn't
what "it isn't"?
nwp
nwp
it isn't power
I haven't said it is a power...
nwp
nwp
12:29
ok, ignore me
just to clarify
 (x_old - d * ldexp(1.0, -i) * y_old)
should be equivalent to
   ((x_old - (((y_old >> i) ^ d) - d)))
in the first case if d = 1 then I have
(x_old - ldexp(1.0,-i)*y_old)
in the second case if d = 0 I have
((x_old - (y_old >> i))
if d = -1, in the first, I have
x_old + ldexp(1.0,-i)*y_old
in the second one d = -1 implies
x_old + (y_old >> i)
I'm missing something however...
 
3 hours later…
15:22
Hello Guys. If I have multiple linker in the system (some from gcc, some from clang), when using make scripts - how could I specify which exact linker to use?
nwp
nwp
@silent_coder I would avoid the problem by making gcc/g++/clang/clang++ choose the linker
if you wanted to do busywork figure out which one uses which linker and how to manually call it with the right flags and do that for all the compilers in all versions
I think it should do this, but seems like it's select incorrect linker.
and because of that I get error: configure: error: C compiler cannot create executables
nwp
nwp
then you should fix the toolchain, possibly by just reinstalling, instead of hiding the bug with a custom makefile
 
1 hour later…
Pms
Pms
16:39
Any one got any answer to the question I asked previously?
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/36901441#36901441
 
2 hours later…
nwp
nwp
18:24
@Pms you probably don't want to hear this, but anything weaker than sequential consistency is ridiculously difficult to reason about
supposedly there are "experts" that can manage and years later figure out that it was actually incorrect all along
I'd recommend you stick to higher level abstractions
Pms
Pms
19:04
@nwp Oh yeah, I totally know :P, but you know, no one becomes experts by not trying it.
 
4 hours later…
user406009
23:04
@Pms IIRC, the way to think about these acquire vs release vs whatever semantics is that they aren't about the synchronization for that particular value. They are about synchronization for values surrounding that value.
user406009
You don't need release semantics for that particular write (the compare and exchange writing of 1), because nothing depends on when that value is 1.
user406009
The important one, and the one where need need the release semantics is for the write of 0, because that 0 implies that the writes inside the mutex are in a proper state.
user406009
At least that's an "intuition" way to look at it.
user406009
To be much more in depth, I guess you should probably look at how release and acquire semantics are defined. preshing.com/20120913/acquire-and-release-semantics is a good resource.
user406009
user406009
23:09
That's the memory barrier which shows how a release works.
user406009
Not for that compare and exchange, there are no memory operations which need to stay above the compare and exchange.
user406009
One final clarification point for your example is that the specific line being synchronized is "sharedValue++"

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