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00:28
Hi, I'm using iterators when accessing elements in a vector (for (auto it = ...; it != ... ++it;) etc. etc.). What are the best practices about using other ways to access/modify elements in containers? I found this: stackoverflow.com/questions/15027282/….
00:59
@nobism std::transform
01:43
@Mikhail I like it. So in general use transform for modifying containers and for_each for just accessing elements?
02:01
And std::for each for job security
 
4 hours later…
05:55
@nobism Depends on what you mean by "modify". Use transform to convert every element of a container into something else. For a lot of the other meanings of "modify", there's another algorithm in the Algorithms Library that does that
 
5 hours later…
10:53
This is a question about Visual Studio 2017. I have a text file where some implementation defined constants are written along with their value. It is filled up manually. Is there a way to automate this process?
Let ABC be defined in some standard library header. I want the value of ABC to be written in a text file as ABC = <whatever its value is>;
nwp
nwp
11:05
That is a bit tricky because variable names are not necessarily unique per object and there is no way to even get the name of a variable outside macros.
You can write a SAVE(UINT32_MAX); macro that does what you want, but you will need to call that for every single name, so no simple listing of names.
@nwp ?
nwp
nwp
A macro that essentially does #define SAVE(X) save(#X, X) so you can write void save(const char *name, const T& value); and avoid having to type the variable twice.
I am lost now.
nwp
nwp
That's as automated as it gets for getting variable names. Unless you want to use a script to generate code.
I wanted the editor to create such a file.
nwp
nwp
11:14
Which editor?
@nwp VS2017
Or if the compiler could do it, that'd be fine as well.
I need the text file to be created as the program is being built.
nwp
nwp
So you want visual studio to generate a file listing all the variable names and their values from a given header? That doesn't sound like a common feature that VS has.
@nwp Not all of them.
 
1 hour later…
12:28
hey guys, is there a reason why emplace_back doesn't use uniform initialization? My first thought is to avoid surprising std::initializer_list constructor calls, but maybe there is more?
I tried to emplace back a struct today, to find that I need to write a constructor for it, as aggregate initialization will not work
nwp
nwp
My guess is backwards compatibility and consistency. Also unicorn initialization wasn't such a great idea in hindsight.
IIRC emplace came only when uniform initialization came in. But I agree about it being not a great idea
unicorns suck
also I still tend to use .push_back
force of habit, or I guess I care about clarity more than having one less call to move constructor
@milleniumbug if I'm not mistaken, C++17 will guarantee elision
nwp
nwp
There are other places like make_unique that also use the non-aggregate version. I guess making everything non-uniform is more consistent. Which someone should have thought about.
12:35
@nwp they could do it more often :)
nwp
nwp
@Incomputable That generally doesn't apply to parameters though.
I still have vague idea of the elision requirements. Perhaps I need to sleep hugging printed C++17 standard
by the way, did user leaving this comment come back?
> This account is temporarily suspended network-wide. The suspension period ends on Apr 8 '28 at 14:45.
wow, that's quite a lot of time
I didn't know that such suspension periods even exist
 
2 hours later…
14:55
template <class T> struct A {
A(T) { std::cout << "A(T)" << std::endl; }
A(const A &) { std::cout << "A(const A &)" << std::endl; }
};
What does the second constructor mean here? I mean, there isn't such a thing as a reference to a template, is there?
@ledonter inside of A, it is assumed A<T>. IIRC this is called name injection.
and yes, it's equivalent to A(const A<T>&)
@milleniumbug the page is quite intimidating at first
@ledonter also, please try to format it nicely, and then select and hit ctrl+k to give it nice formatting in the chat itself, as you would do on SO itself.
Wow, injected class name goes much further than I thought, thanks
Let's try
template <class T> struct A {
  A(T) { std::cout << "A(T)" << std::endl; }
  A(const A &) { std::cout << "A(const A &)" << std::endl; }
};
Ah finally
Thanks for the ctrl-k as well
@ledonter yeah, that's good one
@ledonter, if you want to become language lawyer, I recommend cppquiz.com
15:08
WAT :)
I just wanna know C++ that's all :)
But I know cppquiz it's interesting sometimes
@ledonter depending on how much % you want to know, it might be impossible with the current pace of ISO committee
Well obviously it takes some tradeoffs
15:22
@ledonter, by the way, I recommend coming to codereview.stackexchange.com for working small to mid sized projects. They cover fundamentals quite well and the site is a good place to build strong fundamental skills.
15:53
@Incomputable ehh.. what projects? :D Or are you just suggesting that codereview@ is a good website? :) Well, I agree it's ok :)
16:07
Nice...imagine you have to two 3d objects. you interact with one and place it in to the other. now you have the possibility to do an boolean interaction choosed from an menu ore to make an "Back" which is an undo, to place the object to its inital position.
Seems that i have to cache this inital position from the interaction beginning so long as one the two possibilites are choosen.
@FerencRozsa you could just keep a stack of operations, and when undo is pressed, try to reverse it (if you don't need to undo some random action)
i have already an container were my interactions are placed to process them. but for example when the object is placed, the interaction is stopped and cleaned from them container. so it is the funny, that i maybe need cache besides a cache.
case WM_CREATE:
TextBox1 = CreateWindow("STATIC","TEST",WS_VISIBLE | WS_CHILD | WS_BORDER,20,20,150,25, hwnd,NULL, NULL,NULL);
TextBox2 = CreateWindow("EDIT","", WS_VISIBLE | WS_CHILD | WS_BORDER,20,50,150,25, hwnd,NULL, NULL,NULL);
button = CreateWindow("BUTTON","Scan", WS_VISIBLE | WS_CHILD | WS_BORDER,20,80,200,20, hwnd,(HMENU) 1,NULL,NULL);
break;
case WM_COMMAND:
if (LOWORD(wParam) == 1)
{
char *textentered = NULL;
textentered = (char*) malloc(sizeof (char) * 50);
int lengthcopied;
lengthcopied = GetWindowText(TextBox1, textentered,49);
@FerencRozsa why interaction owns the object?
the interaction is connected with an exact geometry node (3D object) in my scene graph.
16:44
Um so I asked this a long time ago: https://gamedev.stackexchange.com/questions/28931/most-effective-way-to-manage-a-gamestate-system-that-is-easy-to-use

And I was wondering...
How exactly does the
// example for a state implementation
IntroState implements State
Thing work
for example if I have a class in C++ that inherits/is based off a parent class
can I use the parent class to pass in the child class to methods?
> class in C
my bad
And for my gamestate class, would I need to forward declare just the parent class? cause each unique state would be it's own class
I usually implement state machines as a big switch which invokes functions and passes in the state as argument
Eh it'd get too messy if I did it that way
17:00
@Annabelle is this what you're searching for?
No.... I'm just wondering if anyone can answer my question on how inheritance / parent child works basically
Like in the question I linked it has a unique class with something like:
IntroState implements State
and the state machine uses:
void changeState(State newState)
and when creating a new gamestate, you create the IntroState and it accepts it as a state
was wondering how/if that works in C++
the example you linked has circular dependency. You'll need to forward declare in one place, then pass references to the other. The rest should be pretty straightforward C++. Implements is best approximated by having pure abstract State class, and then IntroState which inherits from it and implements all of the functions
anyway, it looks fishy to me (I use state machines in compiler construction)
okay for the forward declare
I'd declare a "state" class right?
that's what I need to forward?
(That's basically what I was asking)
@Annabelle you can forward declare either State or StateMachine. You just need to break the circle
Oh I think you misunderstood a bit... but I think I got answer
Ok
Thanks!
17:15
If anyone has access to a compiler other than Visual Studio's, please could you try running this code: cpp.sh/6nalv. It seems to continually attempt to process the regex when compiled by VS's compiler but works as intended when compiled by GDB.
@Annabelle I recommend posting on codereview.stackexchange.com when you'll have something substantial. There are some gamedevs lurking around, which might give you more solid advices
@cybermonkey compile with warnings on, it gives unknown escape sequence \d.
@Incomputable Try compiling with warnings off.
also gets stuck and eats all CPU
@cybermonkey How about you fix the actual problem indicated by the warning
:)
huh, so what's about cpp.sh that makes the code work where it fails on every other platform?
17:19
2
Q: Is the use of unknown escape sequence invokes undefined behavior in C++?

DestructorConsider following program: #include <iostream> int main() { std::cout<<"Can this lead to undefined behavior?"<<'\s'; } g++ gives an warning: [Warning] unknown escape sequence: '\s' [enabled by default] Here '\s' in typed accidentally instead of '\n'. So, is this program well defined o...

@cybermonkey Use a raw string literal to avoid escape sequence problems, etc: R"regex(...)regex" (the regex can be whatever, but I would normally let it be the language inside of the raw string)
also, writing regex without using raw string literals...
2
admittedly I didn't know you could do that in C++, you learn something new every day
functionally identical to the @ symbol in C#?
@Incomputable Thanks!
@cybermonkey don't forget that () is part of the literal, e.g. R"(abc)" will have only abc as contents
17:24
@cybermonkey also, this is why you don't ignore warnings
@milleniumbug Regardless of that, the code still has the same issue. However it's good that you reminded me to actually bother to check the "Error List" tab.
The updated URL with the code is cpp.sh/8qnpy.
@cybermonkey try regex101.com to debug the regex
it has 22 capture groups ...
@Incomputable That's what I used to try debugging it. The code does work in that URL above, but doesn't work on any other platform.
regex101.com reports that it has 236 steps with ~0ms processing time: regex101.com/r/ACtSjf/1
so the wrong part is C++
I don't think it's the regex as per se, but how the compiler handles it.
because why does it work with cpp.sh flawlessly and has issues on other platforms?
17:31
I've looked into injected class name page a bit more and

template<class T1, class T2>
struct X {
template<class U1, class U2>
friend X;
};

Why can't I write like this? Why do I need an elobarate class specifier here?
works with onlinegdb.com too: onlinegdb.com/SJKzkvJCf
@cybermonkey Make sure you use the right syntax type: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/regex/syntax_option_type
Ahhh this ctrl-k thing doesn't always work :(
@ledonter you're declaring a friend, in which case compiler thinks you're outside of X. I guess that's the easiest explanation.
@Justin Using icase is correct.
17:33
Nevermind if anything
@Incomputable as I understand it now, it just wants a simple unqualified identifier after 'friend', and I effectively gave it a 'friend X<T1, T2>'; is this correct?
@ledonter no, you gave it a template X. During friend declaration name injection is turned off, if I'm not mistaken
>In the following cases, the injected-class-name is treated as a template-name of the class template itself:

it is followed by <
it is used as a template argument that corresponds to a template template parameter
it is the final identifier in the elaborated class specifier of a friend class template declaration.
@Incomputable well, I meant I'd given it a 'template <class U1, class U2> friend X<T1, T2>' instead of 'template <class U1, class U2> friend X' (and the latter could've worked if rules were slightly different as I understand)
If injection was turned off, what would be the reason to forbid the latter one?
Posted a new question about my issue here (under an old abandoned account since I don't know how the community will perceve the question).
I don't think it's turned off and I think injection is exactly the cause of the error
@ledonter it seems like you're right, but I didn't get any errors
oh, I messed up
17:42
http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/bac7afbfe1e5cb77
I dunno
This wandbox thing is too esoteric to me :D
yeah, now I get the error. I guess now it has two templates named X with the same signature
@cybermonkey I wasn't talking about icase. I'm talking about the grammar option (ECMAScript, basic, awk, etc)
@cybermonkey multiple kleen stars are generally an anti-pattern
I don't think so, cause if you use 'friend class X' instead of 'friend X' there's no error

Well overall it seems clear, if using 'class' it doesn't expand X indeed, without the 'class' it does expand it, and construct like 'template <class U1, class U2> friend X<T1, T2>' is just invalid (it's a weird mix of a template and a specialization)
@cybermonkey also why didn't you post as your account?
are you question banned?
17:46
If use this construct by itself, I'm getting the exact same error, seems logical
@Mgetz under an old abandoned account since I don't know how the community will perceive the question
and no, I'm not question banned
@cybermonkey having sockpuppets is generally prohibited
@Mgetz Another account is not against the terms as long as they do not interact (as in, cross-voting, etc.), which they have not (and will not).
@Justin Which grammar option do you suggest using?
@cybermonkey Idk, just make sure that the flavor works for you
using std::regex::ECMAScript|std::regex::icase made it work
so should I snatch the rep from your question? (jk)
17:53
That's weird. ECMAScript is supposed to be the default.
@Justin the code overrides it with icase, thus probably it was invalid flag
have you tried it, @cybermonkey?
@Incomputable But it's not overriding it: "If no grammar is chosen, ECMAScript is assumed to be selected"
So that's a bug IIUC
@Justin and a very serious one, it seems. Where can I report it?
Bug report for the MS STL I guess.
Idk where that is
"The other options serve as modifiers, such that std::regex("meow", std::regex::icase) is equivalent to std::regex("meow", std::regex::ECMAScript|std::regex::icase)"
well, gcc 7.2 doesn't comply to it then
17:55
@Incomputable Not yet, will try with the stl version.
strange, but now it works
@Incomputable Submit a bug report with libstdc++ then (ofc checking for an existing report)
@cybermonkey, I believe you fixed it when made transition to raw string literal. Non-raw version certainly didn't work
template<class T1, class T2>
struct X {};

template <typename T>
struct X<char, T> {
    using r = X<int, int>; // OK, can be used to name another specialization
};
Hm, how could r be used to name another specialization?
I tried template <> struct X<char, int>::r {}; but it doesn't seem to work
@cybermonkey, yeah, I was able to reproduce it. The warnings are gone. So the issue was the unknown escape sequence then
17:59
@Incomputable Check the newer link I posted earlier, the problem still exists.
@cybermonkey I coped the code directly from there, it works fine
@Justin Tried with std::regex::ECMAScript|std::regex::icase as you suggested, same issue.
@Incomputable With what compiler and debugger?
gcc 7.2, on ubuntu 18.04
@Incomputable Still have the same issue with Visual Studio 2017, so far I've got it working flawlessly on gcc via the online compilers/debuggers but not on VC++.
@ledonter have you tried X<char, int>::r?
@cybermonkey I'll check it later on reboot into windows
18:06
@Incomputable Cheers, I'm going to go and test the code in the lab (I'm at a university, so the university's installation of VS should rule out whether this is a compiler bug introduced with an update (since their version is way out of date)).
I got it by now, yeah, thanks :) it's just that using 'r' is allowed not in a definition of a specialization but elsewhere
I mean I used your string is my example that I tried (last line above) by I think it would only work outside a definition, like X<char, int>::r var;
@Incomputable please tell me how to format inline? Backticks don't work here :(
you're not using backticks. Backtick is the symbol on ~ button. Russians also have letter Ё on it
the button is directly below escape button on keyboard
X<char, int>::r var please format me
waaat
@ledonter that symbol is different from ' :)
multiline
`X<char, int>::r var please format me`
Here it is
I know it's different :D
18:13
@cybermonkey I tried it on my windows machine, still hangs
So I can't format on multiline messages?
@ledonter for multiline use triple backticks on start and end
@ledonter ` chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/1/sandbox . You can't have code blocks interspersed with non-code blocks in a single message
In one multiline message I guess
@cybermonkey, my compiler version is 19.13.26129
18:23
sln fixed it. Turns out that the regex was OK but it was a matter of the regex engine in Boost/STL not being able to overcome the backtracking issue and the engine that regex101 uses can.
well, looks like it was simple
18:47
http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/5f68783b53ab0151
should it work? I practically copypasted it from http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/injected-class-name#In_class_template
Or they didn't imply that would work...
hlt
hlt
19:26
I don't think that should work, because the X that it resolves to is not a complete type (if you used a pointer or something like that, it compiles as expected)
They have it right in that X means X<int, char> here - but you can't use that type because it is not complete yet (like stackoverflow.com/q/6349822/1106415)
20:10
Does anyone here have Code::Blocks installed?
If so, can you explain this witchcraft?:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50241226/object-returned-without-return-keyword
it's undefined behaviour
also, if Code::Blocks doesn't enable warnings by default in their projects, get another IDE
It does actually. I use it for testing smaller things, it doesn't take very long to load, looks simpler.
From what I gather, undefined behaviour = a bug that works even though it shouldn't?
it's "implementation can do whatever"
it's like dividing by zero
> undefined behaviour behaviour, such as might arise upon use of an erroneous program construct or erroneous data, for which this International Standard imposes no requirements
from C++ standard, §1.3.12
20:27
Ah hmm. I'm reading about it here: http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/ub

I'm having a hard time digesting the fact that it doesn't malfunction, it sounds like it should, or the compiler should throw out an error, doesn't make sense to let something so broad/vague "happen".
don't leave your house without enabling warnings
5
20:48
@milleniumbug actually I'm not even sure how that compiled as I don't think its well formed
@JackOfBlades it just so happens that x is allocated in eax or rax (assuming x86 or x86-64) which is the return register for most ABIs
Ah, okay. Had a thought there for a moment, a "misthought" about assembly. Ironically enough I'm studying compilers right now.
but yeah honestly that shouldn't have compiled as I'm pretty sure it's ill formed
if anything I think it's a GCC bug
21:26
woo asked a dupe and already deleted it
 
2 hours later…
23:13
@Mgetz Nope--not ill formed. Calling it is UB though. At one time you only got UB if you tried to use the value it didn't actually return, but now it's UB even if you never look at the value it didn't return.

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