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00:05
@JerryCoffin Yep, you're right.
00:31
@sehe Yeah, it's io_service, sorry (io_context is the wording for the proposed network TS).
@sehe I understand a single io_service means a single, implicit strand. But since a async_send(..., yield) is composed of multiple async_write_some(..., yield), do I still have the guarantee that multiple async_send won't step on each other's toes, by interleaving of the async_write_some? :/
01:23
@nobism thx for clarification
@ArkadiuszKoćma not on a single (implicit) strand, so: no
@ArkadiuszKoćma I'm a bit confused but the "multiple async_send". If your work is single-threaded, how will you get multiple async_sends in on the same object?
Are you saying that outside of your coroutine, other threads are posting async_send operations on the same stream? In that case, yes of course you can get them interleaved.
Strands are your best option here. Or simply queueing messages that are to be sent
 
3 hours later…
04:03
@sehe Multiple coroutines on the same thread
 
3 hours later…
06:39
c++ runs on many applications, when compare to other languages
g++ compiler comes with mac os x
Why don't we have versions in c++ similar to other languages?
3 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
what
 
7 hours later…
13:46
@Kuhan we do. Next question
 
3 hours later…
16:35
Hey guys, I have a very simple question C++ related for you. This macro won't compile: "#define ADD_LIGHT_GUI(RENDERER, I, BUFFER, FIRST_LIGHT_IDX) (cout << "he" << endl/;)". Any idea why?
If I remove the semicolon, it will compile
The issue is I want to put multiple instructions in this macro, each ending with a semicolon obviously
#define ADD_LIGHT_GUI(RENDERER, I, BUFFER, FIRST_LIGHT_IDX) do{ \
 cout << "he" << endl;\
 cout << "she" << endl;\
}while(0)
though you shouldn't use endl, it's usually not what you want to do
the `\` at the end of the line tells the preprocessor that the macro definition continues
then I used the do{}while(0) trick to embed multiple statements into a macro
16:59
@ratchetfreak Though of course in this case it's much simpler to just combine the statements: std::cout < "he\nshe\n";
Wow that actually works, thanks. I've seen everywhere on the web people doing just this:
#define ADD_LIGHT_GUI(RENDERER, I, BUFFER, FIRST_LIGHT_IDX) ( \
cout << "he" << endl;\
cout << "she" << endl;)
I thought the do while was just a security not prevent the code from the macro to have unwanted consequences on the rest of the code
78
A: Multi line preprocessor macros

Ed S.You use \ as a line continuation escape character. #define swap(a, b) { \ (a) ^= (b); \ (b) ^= (a); \ (a) ^= (b); \ } EDIT: As @abelenky pointed out in the comments, the \ character must be th...

it lets you treat the macro as a single statement so if(cond)ADD_LIGHT_GUI(RENDERER, I, BUFFER, FIRST_LIGHT_IDX); does what you expect;
Yes, I understand. Thank you very much. I just don't understand why it wouldn't work before. Usually a macro is like #define min(a,b) (a<b ? a : b)
Multi-lining won't work apparently with only parenthesis and not brackets. It must be one of the combinaisons I didn't try, sorry :p.
Ah, it doesn't even solve my bigger problem. Oh well, at least I learned something.
17:21
:40064475 The typical problem with a multi-line macro is using it (for one example) inside an `if` statement. Consider what happens if we use your macro (as originally defined) inside an `if` statement:

if (foo)
ADD_LIGHT_GUI(...);
else
ADD_LIGHT_GUI(...);

Then expand it out and see what the code looks like:

if (foo)
cout ...;
cout ... ;
else
cout ...;
cout ...;
The if controls the first cout. The second cout is outside the control of the if, so the else either matches up with some previous if or else is a syntax error.
In any case, the code is clearly not at all what you'd want or expect.
18:03
@FrançoisGuthmann Parentheses group expressions. cout << whatever is an expression, but adding a semicolon at the end makes it a statement, and statements aren't expressions.
18:19
@JerryCoffin: yes yes of course. I'm just trying to figure out why it won't compile and not why it's a bad idea ^^.
@milleniumbug Ah thank you, that's the explanation I was looking for!
While you guys are here, I was looking into this because of a bigger problem. I'm using Nuklear GUI in a project and something weird happens. I want to instanciate "tabs" in the GUI. If I do something like:
for(i=0; i<2; i++){
// code to create a tab
}
Both tabs will open and close when I click on any of them. They are linked, I cannot open one without opening the other.

If I copy and paste that code, then both tabs are independent. That is the reason why I wanted a macro.

Even trickier:
for(i=0; i<2; i++){
Now, I don't have the motivation to look into the code of the library to figure out how this is done and why this behavior exists but I imagine it is linked to some kind of shared memory space. (The scope of the for?)
nwp
nwp
C++ doesn't work that way. There is no "same scope linking".
No, but the lib might do some shady tricks
nwp
nwp
Unless they provide a C++ parser they can't.
If you declare a variable inside a for statement, it doesn't exist outside. That's what I mean. Maybe there is a bug in the "new_tab" function that like collects always the same address because there is a for loop around it, I don't know.
It could be the same onClick callback function assigned to all the tabs when it should be 2 different functions.
Also:
CREATE_TAB_MACRO(...);
CREATE_TAB_MACRO(...);
=> creates two independent tabs

createTabFunction(...);
createTabFunction(...);
=> creates 2 linked tabs!
nwp
nwp
You are not showing any code. Maybe you set the same callback to both tabs. Maybe the callback just opens both tabs. Maybe your createTabFunction is just incorrect. Impossible to know for us.
18:32
createTabFunction and CREATE_TAB_MACRO are identical
I don't set callbacks, they're done by the library
nwp
nwp
@FrançoisGuthmann How can they be identical? They are different things with different syntax and meaning.
Presuming there's some type of object that represents a tab, you probably want a vector (or similar) of those objects:

std::vector<tab_type> tabs;
for (int i=0; i<10; i++)
tabs.push_back(create_tab());
@nwp I copied and pasted the code from one to the other...
nwp
nwp
@FrançoisGuthmann Including the brackets? What did you do with the parameters?
Alternatively, you might want to use something like std::generate_n: std::generate_n(std::back_inserter(tabs), create_tab);
18:35
@JerryCoffin It doesn't work that way, it's a weird "immediate mode graphical user interface". I have literally no idea what's going on in the background.
@nwp can I spam this chat with all the code?
@FrançoisGuthmann I think you're going to have to get an idea before you can do much successfully with it.
@JerryCoffin Appart from that weird thing that looks like a bug everything is fine
nwp
nwp
@FrançoisGuthmann It might make sense to put it on coliru.stacked-crooked.com instead. While it doesn't have your library you might be able to fake it with some empty structs or something.
@FrançoisGuthmann If it's more than a few lines of code, you typically want to put the code some place that deals with code better (e.g., C++ works well on coliru.stacked-crooked.com), and post links to it here.
@FrançoisGuthmann "Other than not working, it works!"
@JerryCoffin Come on! It only does that with the tabs, not any of the other things I instantiate in loops!
@nwp It seems complicated to send you the code, there are so many things that are going to be missing x)
The current solution that works is:
ADD_LIGHT_GUI(ctx, renderer, 0, buffer, firstLightIdx);
ADD_LIGHT_GUI(ctx, renderer, 1, buffer, firstLightIdx);
ADD_LIGHT_GUI(ctx, renderer, 2, buffer, firstLightIdx);
I just wish I could do a for instead, so that I can instantiate as many as I want dynamically
It really baffles me why that is not the same as my working solution:
for(i=0; i<3; i++)
ADD_LIGHT_GUI(ctx, renderer, i, buffer, firstLightIdx);
nwp
nwp
18:43
That's why macros are so much fun. You get exciting new behavior every time you use them!
Haha well this time I can't blame it on them
They just help me copy and paste code
nwp
nwp
Looking at the ADD_LIGHT_GUI macro would probably help.
It's the lib that does something weird when there are for involved. And of course I can't find any similar situations in the examples provided. Many things are instantiated inside loops, but not tabs ^^.
nwp
nwp
Maybe they create some ID based on __LINE__ which fails in the loop.
@nwp not sure what you mean by __LINE__
So basically, the "nk_tree_push" does something on "ctx" which is like the main context of the library.
It adds a tab to the tree but fails when inside a loop.
@nwp that is absolutely possible!
nwp
nwp
NK_TREE_NODE might be based on __LINE__. Although I don't really think they are that incompetent.
it would explain exactly the problem
let ctrl-f that
(it's a single header library)
damn
you're good
"#define nk_tree_push(ctx, type, title, state) nk_tree_push_hashed(ctx, type, title, state, NK_FILE_LINE,nk_strlen(NK_FILE_LINE),__LINE__)"
Hats off to you my good sir
Pff, that sucks. I don't know beforehand how many times I want to call my macro. It's basically dependent on the size of a vector. Poor preprocessor can't predict the future though :/.
nwp
nwp
Any chance to use a different GUI library?
Well, since you asked, you can try and solve that one haha:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47274805/linking-nanogui-into-an-opengl-project-with-visual-studio
I switched libs already
Honestly it's no big deal, it's not a production project or anything. It's just a demonstrator for a research paper I'm implementing. I just like when things are done the right way. (As much as I can at least)
nwp
nwp
19:01
Imgui is intended for OpenGL guis. Might be a better fit.
It was one of my possible choices too. There was a great tutorial on how to make nanogui work with glfw that's why I chose it in the first place. Imgui seemed overkill when I looked into it but I might change once again in the end.
Thank you very much for your help! I'm happy to know why that wouldn't work :)
20:00
@sehe Can you give me some minimal advice for Boost.Spirit
The thing is, I don't even think I need Boost.Spirit, what I'm parsing is already in tree form
with parentheses containing children
I could probably write something up myself, but Qi seems like a safer choice, I don't want any bugs to haunt ne
*me
20:24
@FrançoisGuthmann lol that's absolutely terrible
I suppose one option would be to skip the macro and call the function it's calling directly
Also lol using lowercase names for macros
20:46
@milleniumbug yeah it is :/
21:19
So __LINE__ is the seed to a hash function. I might try to find a better seed but depending on how many places he uses that trick it might get complicated to change it everywhere x)
22:15
@Columbo Fire away! Just home
@nwp wow
indeed, these were some excellent psychic debugging skills, I'm impressed
22:44
6 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@Columbo starters
2
A: Parsing nested key value pairs in Boost Spirit

seheIndeed this precisely a simple grammar that Spirit excels at. Moreover there is absolutely no need to skip whitespace up front: Spirit has skippers built in for the purpose. To your explicit question, though: The Sequence rule is overcomplicated. You could just use the list operator (%): Sequ...

2
A: How to parse complex string file with Boost::Spirit

sehe Is there a way to write a grammer as big which can parse the whole file? A - Yes. Look at the following for very similar grammars: Parsing a number of named sets of other named sets To a lesser extent a JSON parser (which also shows the nested structures) Parse a substring as JSON using...

@Columbo Ahhh - perhaps the very best generic example:
3
A: How to parse mustache with Boost.Xpressive correctly?

seheBoost Spirit is built on Proto (by the same hero, Eric Niebler!), so I hope you don't mind if I uphold a personal tradition of mine and present an implementation in Boost Spirit. I found it pretty tricky to see what you wanted to achieve, from just the code shown. Therefore I just went straight ...

23:22
my program takes 2 parameters, each one can be a path or a device, is there anny easy way to know what each of the parameter is, or do i have to read the parameters and figure it out in code?
i tought about adding another parameter for the user to tell me witch is witch, but that will make the code messy and i want it to be smooth, anny solution for my problem that i can implement?
@sehe Ah, just saw this, thanks!
23:46
I have a question about the documentation of GetFinalPathNameByHandle
the parameter that takes the buffer size reads the following:
cchFilePath [in]
The size of lpszFilePath, in TCHARs. This value does not include a NULL termination character.
does this mean that the actual buffer should be one element bigger or smaller than the number that we pass to cchFilePath?
Looking at the example provided by the MSDN page, you pass it the size of the buffer
but what do they mean with "This value does not include a NULL termination character."?
@jeyejow you'll have to find out. Also, getopt/boost program options are ideas
@treintje it means that it doesn't count the NULL termination character
In computer programming, a null-terminated string is a character string stored as an array containing the characters and terminated with a null character ('\0', called NUL in ASCII). Alternative names are C string, which refers to the C programming language and ASCIIZ (note that C strings do not imply the use of ASCII). The length of a C string is found by searching for the (first) NUL byte. This can be slow as it takes O(n) (linear time) with respect to the string length. It also means that a NUL cannot be inside the string, as the only NUL is the one marking the end. == History == Null-terminated...
this is the very reason no one likes C strings
off by one errors are guaranteed
it seems to indicate that when i receive 'text' while passing 4, i'll get 'text\0' which might cause UB
23:54
@treintje Goedenavond by the way
the wording is annoyingly confusing, I agree
But it's easy to be on the safe side and ensure the NUL byte yourself
or does it mean that the when i receive 'text' while passing 4, the string wont be zero terminated? like so 'text' ?
From @milleniumbug's assessment I gather it's unclear in the docs. Just be on the safe side. Reserve +1 and put a NUL-byte in the extra space just in case the API doesn't
@treintje this interpretation makes the example code correct
23:59
'this interpretation' ?
arrows, man
if you hover over a message, you'll see the exact message I responded to

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