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00:44
@JackOfBlades Don't expect a programming language to expose all the plumbing. In particular, jumping to an arbitrary point of code would be a great way to invalidate stack balancing invariant
If you want to "simulate it on top", then also simulate the instruction pointer too
 
3 hours later…
03:55
:42608235
42608124 the assembler converts labels into address which is what you should do...
 
5 hours later…
09:22
My installation of VS2017 is using CMake 3.9.2. How do I force it to update to 3.10?
It's stated here that VS supports 3.10
> CMake Tools Upgraded to 3.10

In our effort to make sure you have access to the latest features of CMake, we have upgraded the version of CMake that ships with Visual Studio from 3.9 to 3.10. You can find the full lists of enhancements in the CMake 3.10 release notes.
 
2 hours later…
11:21
How come this code compiles(I hope I did it right with seperating files with coliru):
main.cpp: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/b3dad2b0aad5a11d
A.h: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/7f1b51058a7b7cf9
B.h: http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/eb77a6050e411aed
How does A know what B is? B is incomplete type, I didn't ever say anywhere in A what B actually is (I just forward-declared), yet it has access to A's private members and is, in fact, it's friend class.
 
4 hours later…
15:20
error: ‘struct expanded_t’ invalid; an anonymous union can only have non-static data members
union {
            uint32_t faddress;
            uint32_t findex;
            struct expanded_t {
                int16_t funcidx : 16; /* size used in static_assert (1) */
                int8_t scriptKey : 8; /* size used in static_assert (2) */
                uint8_t reserved : 8;
            } expanded;
            static_assert(sizeof(iscript::FunctionIndex_t) == 2); // (1)
            static_assert(sizeof(iscript::ScriptKey_t) == 1); // (2)
            static_assert(sizeof(expanded_t) == 4);
I don't see any static data members
It compiles in MSVC but fails in G++
nwp
nwp
Looks like gcc accepts it and clang considers it illegal.
I don't know what iscript is, but it doesn't seem relevant.
typedef std::int8_t ScriptKey_t;
typedef std::int16_t NativeIndex_t;
typedef std::int16_t FunctionIndex_t;
typedef std::int16_t VariableIndex_t;
nwp
nwp
This compiles under both.
that makes no change to the code, does it?
nwp
nwp
It makes expanded_t more visible than it should be. Otherwise no.
15:31
but the error disappearing makes no sense, right?
nwp
nwp
The error made no sense since there were no static members, but maybe it referred to different code.
It looks like you are doing type punning through unions. That's UB.
@nwp It referred to the same code. I have checked line numbers.
@nwp ?
nwp
nwp
If you do something like u.faddress = 123; std::cout << u.funcidx; you get UB.
yes I won't do that
I'll be using whichever was set most recently
every instance uses only one of those: faddress, funcidx or expanded
16:30
Is EOF the same as the value 0? My program can't differentiate between them, treats the input of an integer 0 as an EOF.
@JackOfBlades No. EOF must be a negative number (nearly always -1).
"Nearly"?
When would it ever need anything other than -1?
17:12
@MuhamedCicak class B in friend class B declares the type. It's incomplete, but you don't need B to be complete to say "I'm a friend of B"
 
4 hours later…
20:55
const std::map<std::string, std::string> keywords{{'{',      "TOK_LBRACK"},
                                                      {'}',      "TOK_RBRACK"},
                                                      {'(',      "TOK_LPAREN"},
                                                      {')',      "TOK_RPAREN"},
                                                      {';',      "TOK_SEMICO"},
                                                      {'int',    "TOK_INTEGE"},
                                                      {'return', "TOK_RETURN"}};
sorry, I forgot how to format code
but I keep getting: error: no matching function for call to ‘std::map<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char>, std::__cxx11::basic_string<char> >::map(<brace-enclosed initializer list>)’
{'return', "TOK_RETURN"}};
Th error highlights the last closing brace as part of the error.
4 messages moved from Lounge<C++>
@J.L.Louis '{' vs "{" probably?
Thanks :)
 
2 hours later…
23:19
@milleniumbug How does he know "which" B class? I mean, they are both completely separate files, what is the bound between them (A class and B class)?
I'm trying to get the contents of the pairs of a map, similar to the map in my previous question
I'm doing:
for (auto k : keywords)
{
auto first = std::get<0>(k);
}
but i'm getting the error that std::get() is ambiguous.
I'm pretty sure I've used this before with regular pairs
@milleniumbug Does the compiler just know "which" class B class is?
@MuhamedCicak Your question is unclear, try rephrasing it.
@MuhamedCicak these aren't separate files, you included the headers
@milleniumbug Yeah, I did include A in B, but not vice versa, as circular inclusion would happen.
@J.L.Louis All of my questions are, I'm afraid.
@milleniumbug Oh, you mean in the main.cpp file? Or do you? Im confused.
23:40
well, you have 3 files, M, A, and B. M includes B which includes A, but you also pass all M, A, and B to the compiler
IOW, A and B are treated both as a translation unit and also as a header file you're supposed to include
so I'm just as confused why are you doing this as you are
no "multiple definition error" happens because the involved member functions are inline
I'm sorry, I don't understand (bare with me :/), how do you mean "you're supposed to include"
If I include B.h in A.h, wouldn't there be a circular inclusion?
wtf are you on about
@milleniumbug lol
@milleniumbug am I that off?
you're including the thing and also pass it to the compiler as a separate translation unit
So if I pass it to compiler, I don't even need to include it?
23:52
g++ -std=c++17 -O2 -Wall -pedantic -pthread main.cpp /Archive2/7f/1b51058a7b7cf9/main.cpp /Archive2/eb/77a6050e411aed/main.cpp && ./a.out
look at this thing
Yeah... I tried using coliru.
Didn't turn out well I suppose.
it's as if you did g++ main.cpp iostream, with also including iostream in that file
Sorry, I really don't know much about this. If we could take my question as if I was to create A, B, and main files in Visual Studio (some version, e.g. 17), it would help me a lot.
So I change my question, forget coliru.
@milleniumbug and yeah, I didn't know that
it's you having a complete misunderstanding of how linking works. but then again, you're asking this very question because you didn't know it in the first place, so dunno what to tell here
@milleniumbug This is equvialent to the code with seperate files?
23:58
^ this is what we have if we remove "multiple files" aspect out of the picture

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