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05:16
Hey guys:D. I wonder:

Why would I use "mutable" with lambda expression while I can use reference instead?
 
2 hours later…
nwp
nwp
07:02
@Rick Because the lambda may outlive the referenced object and adding a global variable is less good.
 
3 hours later…
10:15
In c++ code, i ll use system( )to execute shell commands.. is there any way to get the desired output (i.e grep the fields) without using grep/awk.. ? using c++ feature..
nwp
nwp
Depends on your platform. You can do the classic pipe + fork + exec or use something more reasonable like QProcess or boost::process.
thanks @nwp
will look at these.. :)
10:35
anyone know what a TWC would be in software indusrry?
10:56
@Rick stateful lambdas. In cases you want your lambda to produce different result every time ... (and get a lot of hatemails too)
and reference requires that the referred value stays alive as long as the lambda is
11:11
Could anyone please tell me how to understand this behavior in printf? If I write printf("Bill is 42% gf 100$", "4");, the answer is Bill is 42 0f 100$, I don't know where the 0 came from. If I write printf("Bill is 42% of 100$", "4");, I get a random garbage value. I'm unable to understand this. (PS: I know how %d, %0.6f, etc. work. I'm just curious about how this single % sign works)
I have also read the Wikipedia page - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf_format_string#
@GaurangTandon Please post the code in its own message, then explanations and questions. Probably people will be able to spot the error without explanation.
#include <stdio.h>

int main(void) {
printf("Bill is 42% gf 100$", "4");
return 0;
}
nwp
nwp
@Incomputable ?
but basically, use double % if you want %
@nwp I just thought that this is one of those easy cases where question can be dispatched from just glancing at it
@Incomputable there is not much code (or MVCE) as you can see, it's just a single statement. printf("Bill is 42% gf 100$", "4"); gives Bill is 42 0f 100$. printf("Bill is 42% of 100$", "4"); gives a garbage value. I wish to know why.
@Incomputable yep, I know that
11:15
@GaurangTandon IIRC it is undefined behavior, so no guarantees
:(
I thought it would be something interesting
nwp
nwp
As far as I can see "% " is an invalid format string.
thanks though!
@GaurangTandon I tend to assume UB by default :)
even if my code works correctly and I'm suspicious about it
11:17
:P
nwp
nwp
@Incomputable Maybe, but people asking here usually cannot tell and I'd rather have them specify details I could have imagined myself.
@nwp yeah, may be it's just I haven't been here for long enough to see some craziness
there is a point where more details just obscure the error, but often askers don't give enough
nwp
nwp
@GaurangTandon clang and gcc warn. An easy way to fix this problem once and for all is to enable warnings and forget about the issue.
@nwp Nice, I used to repl.it
@Incomputable OMG I committed a noob-sin in C :O
May Mr. Ritchie forgive me
repl.it/languages/c doesn't seem to have warnings enabled though
do you know how to enable warnings in it? what command do I need to type in the terminal?
I use wandbox.org , though sometimes I feel guilty for not donating
I like repl.it because it keeps all my code in one place (under my account)
Is that the -Wall -Wextra flag that enables warnings?
@GaurangTandon yes. Some people also add -Wpedantic and -Werror . The latter converts warnings to errors, e.g. fails to compile.
11:26
gcc version on repl.it seems to be ancient. I wouldn't recommend it
lol I just noticed, you're right
wandbox.org is nearly gcc 10
Newer versions of gcc usually add more warnings and improve wordings of errors. Clang is usually really good at giving more useful error messages
someone's already requested that, upvoted
it doesn't seem like anybody cares about gcc there. The site includes react and other web stuff, which is probably much more popular and easier to maintain
yeah, I guess so
onto wandbox for the time being
thanks for the heads up @Incomputable!
11:32
@GaurangTandon you're welcome
If I'm reading it right, the one on ideone.com is even more ancient. It reads "C (clang 4.0)" :O
am I right? @Incomputable
@Incomputable apparently repl.it doesn't even accept those commands in the right side terminal :(
@GaurangTandon clang 4.0 is not so ancient. IIRC clang was released a quite a few years later than gcc
if my memory serves me well, clang 4.0 should have full support for C11 and C++14
oh, so clang is a different compiler for C
why does everyone use gcc then?
gcc comes in default package with the system
11:35
clang needs to be downloaded and installed. Apple systems is an exception though
@GaurangTandon licensing and momentum
so I should be using gcc too, that's what my college would be having as well most probably
@Mgetz oh cool
@GaurangTandon no you should be writing portable code that compiles with multiple vendors
@Mgetz shouldn't warnings and -Werror eliminate that ? IIRC warnings do cover extensions
@Mgetz so I should be writing Java instead?
I realize Java was much better :( no idea why they teach C
11:38
@Incomputable lol no, but that would be nice. No you need to CI with multiple compilers
@GaurangTandon Heck no, Java is crap and owned by Oracle
@Mgetz hmm right...then is C open source?
@GaurangTandon c and C++ are ISO standards, Java is not
Nobody can sue you for implementing the standard (although you do have to pay ISO 400ish for a copy)
whereas Oracle did sue Google... and unfortunately won
hmm right, IIRC Oracle was suing Android lately
yup
11:41
I believe that it is more of an issue with Oracle, than with Java. Java has nice ecosystem though, with all of the tools and stuff. C++ is catching up though, but slowly
@Incomputable it is, but at the same time the legal guarantees of an ISO standard are nice. C# has an ISO standard (that is sadly lagging the implementation by a lot)
yeah, I too think Oracle sued Android over using some proprietary API, not for using Java
(and i've been writing Java for long, I don't wanna be sued! :O)
@GaurangTandon no they sued them over not paying licensing fees when making an implementation
which Oracle requries if you don't use OpenJDK
@Mgetz does that depend on size of the committee? WG21 got quite a lot of people, and started working in a more productive way. Or is it the approach of TS-es and stuff that impacted it?
@Mgetz oh, okay
11:44
@Incomputable It was more that MS lost interest in keeping it up for awhile, and then Nadya took over. They are in the process of getting I think C# 7 standardized right now
@Mgetz yeah, I heard that there were tons of fiascos with previous CEO
@Mgetz Nadya or Satya?
you are allowed to create your own java runtime based on the javadoc however it must a complete implementation (including crap like awt, swing and other platform dependent stuff) and passes their compatibility test.
google culled parts of the standard java runtime which I believe is where they got bit
@ratchetfreak The compatibility tests also cost money, and google didn't pay
@GaurangTandon lastname firstname
11:48
@Mgetz lol. what notation is that :P
the javadoc license explicitly (paragraph 2) allows creating a Independent Implementation of the Specification with constraints
@GaurangTandon we're referring to the same person
@Mgetz aye
I'm just bad at spelling his name
Anyway, is it really difficult for the folks at repl.it to update their gcc from 4.6.3 to 8.1?
looking at the page gcc.gnu.org it seems like a single day task
what's holding them back?
(apart from procrastination)
11:50
@GaurangTandon bincompat would be #1
welcome to ABI hell :)
4.x and 5+ are not binary compatible
@Mgetz I didn't understand how's it valid here. what does it do? :/
They are probably on some version of RHEL or Debian stuck in the dark ages
@Mgetz oh, backwards incompatible. sad.
@Incomputable ABI?
11:51
@GaurangTandon Application Binary Interface
@GaurangTandon, application binary interface
@Incomputable Ah. Actually I misunderstood mutable keyword for lambda. Later I found that by default, local variables captured by value can't be modified in lambda function body.
Thanks anyway
@Rick be careful that it applies const to the right. E.g. if you'll capture a pointer, pointer will be const, not what it points to
:D OK
11:55
"In computer programming, undefined behavior (UB) is the result of executing computer code whose behavior is not prescribed by the language specification to which the code adheres, for the current state of the program. This happens when the translator of the source code makes certain assumptions, but these assumptions are not satisfied during execution." Could anyone tell what the bold line means?
translator == compiler
@GaurangTandon translator is usually a compiler. Broken assumptions are like buffer overflow, divizion by zero, etc. Compiler assumes programmers knows what they're doing. But often it is not the case
ah
nice, thanks!
why'd they call it a translator instead of compiler o.O
Why doesn't C define a behavior though? Did the committee run out of time when defining the standard, so they couldn't define the edge cases?
For example, why doesn't C raise an exception when doing 1/0, or define a value?
@GaurangTandon 1. portability 2. performance. 3. not having reasonable option
@Incomputable then why doesn't Java have UB too? Certainly, it would also love portability and performance
12:09
@GaurangTandon java targets different programmers and problems
@nwp yep, I was reading the linked thing: blog.regehr.org/archives/213 am on "Why Is Undefined Behavior Good?
"For example a C implementation has undefined behavior when:

An unmatched ‘ or ” character is encountered on a logical source line during tokenization.

With all due respect to the C standard committee, this is just lazy. " rofl
"Actually, since the C99 standard lists 191 different kinds of undefined behavior, it’s fair to say they got a lot carried away." woah!
"The program executes more than one call to the exit function"
Huh, how can the program execute the second exit call if it already exits first?
any idea?
nwp
nwp
12:25
Because the exit call doesn't exit anymore? Reasoning about undefined behavior is futile and pointless.
"Because the exit call doesn't exit anymore?" :O can that even happen?
Ub is as UB does
nwp
nwp
Anything can happen in undefined behavior land. Time travel occasionally happens.
those are unsubstantiated rumors
12:29
indeed
13:07
Maybe not necessarily C++ related, but does anyone know how an atomic write is implemented (x86)?
Atomic read is generally (without any alignment or alike) smth like "lock cmpxchg (addr, 0, 0)"
But what is an atomic write?

I understand that often we first atomically read the value and then just do "cmpxchg (addr, prev, new), but what if I just want to atomically write?
nwp
nwp
As far as I understand reads and writes of aligned pointer sized memory is atomic already on x86.
There is nothing special you need to do
if you are paranoid you can do lock xchg
13:27
Is it possible to have a pointer to a function like: void foo(int) and to have a foop variable which points to foo(5), and when i do foop(); it calls foo(5)
is that possible
sorry for my idiotic english
but i am kind of tired to type a reasonable english
I wanna assign a function to function ptr but give its parameter already while assigning, not later when i am calling through the ptr
int var = 5;
auto foop = [var](){foo(var);};
but foop is not a function pointer but a lambda
Umm... Yeah I guess that doesnt work for me. As I want to pass this as an argument
nwp
nwp
What stops you from passing the lambda as an argument?
make the function a template or use the std::function wrapper
oh true, I was thinking that it would be problem cuz of the reference to the var, but I dont need to do it that way, so its ok, sorry fellas i am sick so my brain is slow here :D
Yeah I'll go with std::function
thank you
13:39
Hey all! I have a question: why doesn't \% percent escape the % symbol in printf function in C?
why did they chose %% instead of \%? (the latter option seems more reasonable, at least to me)
because you'd need to pass in \\% one \ to escape the % and once to escape the \ itself
then if you wanted to emit a \ you'd need \\\\
using only % as the special char is simpler in the implementation of printf as well
just loop until you find % or \0 and if it was % you do a switch on the next char
in JS, I can do console.log("\""); and it correctly escapes the quotes. Then why in C, do I need console.log("\\\\%");?
java's Pattern class has that issue, when mixing levels of interpretation it's a bad idea to have them share escape chars
@GaurangTandon you'd need console.log("\\%");
13:46
@ratchetfreak isn't raw character string literal part of C too?
@ratchetfreak okay, then what is the problem with console.log("\%");?
nwp
nwp
@GaurangTandon JS and C should have the same rules for string literals.
"\%" is not a valid escape sequence.
In either language.
@nwp it's invalid in JS?! But console.log("\%"); correctly prints % :/
nwp
nwp
@GaurangTandon It might correctly print % is C too. It's invalid, so do whatever.
The thing is that \ is special in string literals and % is special for printf. And since you pass a string literal to printf you have to obey both overlapping rules.
@GaurangTandon also for console.log("\""); there the quote is escaped by the compiler's lexer, while console.log("\\%"); the string is escaped to hold {'\\', '%'} and the implementation sees the \ and uses it to escape the %
13:49
@nwp it doesn't do anything in C though. Mind telling me where I can learn about which escape sequences are valid and which aren't?
@nwp but is it always guaranteed to be aligned?
I thought it's not so I mentioned that one specifically in the question
There is a common pattern of cmpxchg(.., 0, 0) at least, I thought there could be smth for write as well
@GaurangTandon the docs of the function you are using
@ledonter if you hover over a message there is a little arrow that appears, use that to reply to specific messages
@ratchetfreak but C doesn't have official documentation, and there isn't a single mention of \% on printf devdocs :(
nwp
nwp
@ledonter According to C++ rules it must always be aligned. You need to do some UB casting before you get an unaligned pointer, and in that case you are screwed either way.
@GaurangTandon there is a C spec, and the proper escape for printf is %%
nwp
nwp
@GaurangTandon Use this instead.
@ratchetfreak let me clarify myself: I was trying to ask the motivation behind not allowing \% a valid way to escape the special character %.
@nwp maybe you by any chance know if there is something in generic x86?..
nwp
nwp
@GaurangTandon What do you mean by "doesn't work"? Line 5 is undefined behavior so the program behaves correctly no matter what it does by definition.
@nwp I meant that you said we need to "obey both overlapping rules.", so I thought it might work. Okay, I guess it's UB again... :(
nwp
nwp
13:54
@ledonter Something what? Something that makes unaligned int accesses atomic?
@nwp yes
@nwp atomic writes specifically
@GaurangTandon because it is much simpler to only account for % as special char and you don't want to reuse \ because that leads to massive multiplication of \ for no real gain
@ratchetfreak " it is much simpler to only account for % as special char" doesn't printf already account for both \ and % as being special characters? Like, \n still works, so `\` is also given special character status
nwp
nwp
If I remember right if you have unaligned accesses in x86 the processor will silently do 2 accesses and bitshift it to make it work. You lose some performance, but it does the right thing and it is still atomic unless the memory spans across cache line borders.
The proper way to handle it would be to simply use std::atomic<T> and let the compiler worry about such details.
@GaurangTandon but that is in a different part, the compiler is who accounts for \ while the implementation of printf accounts for %
14:00
@ratchetfreak hmm, I realize I don't know how printf works then
nwp
nwp
"\%" is not a printf issue, it's an issue with how string literals work.
It's broken even before printf gets to see it.
@NonnyMoose could you take a look at building it for me?
nwp
nwp
"%" is a printf issue because it's a valid string literal but an invalid format string.
basic implementation would something like:
while(*c){
    while(*c != '%' && *c != '\0'){
        putc(*c);
        ++c;
    }
    if(*c=='\0')return;
    ++c;
    switch(*c){
    case '%': putc('%');break;
    //...

    }
}
sadly, I guess I have a lot to learn before being able to understand the answer to my question. I'll bookmark the convo for the time being, thanks for the help! ^_^
14:12
Just found out Arduino has no <functional>, any way to fix this?
nwp
nwp
Add -std=c++11 as a compiler flag.
nwp
nwp
You can also try 1y, 14, 1z, 17, 2a and 20, but your compiler probably does not understand the later ones.
@GaurangTandon Note that if you want a printf format string to print out a percent sign, you're supposed to double the percent. e.g., printf("%%"); prints one percent sign. No need to deal with back-slashes at all.
 
1 hour later…
15:42
@OhenepeePeps Sorry, building what?
 
1 hour later…
16:51
Why does Java allow mutation of constant arrays, while C doesn't? See identical reference code - C and Java - one successfully compiles and gives output, other gives error
that's because Java doesn't have constant arrays
the only thing that final prevents is assignment to the variable
As far as I had understood it, variables (like char[]) are just references to a specific location, and the reference can stay constant, even while the value at the reference may change. I believe the same should hold for C. But it doesn't :/
@milleniumbug woah
it doesn't
okay, I realize I don't know how arrays work in C and Java - they're probably more different from each other than I think they are
@milleniumbug right, that's why I said mutation. But C doesn't allow even that :(
if you do int[] arr = new int[40];, Java reserves enough space on stack for a GC reference, and creates an array object at GC heap
@milleniumbug hmm yeah I understand that. What about C?
if you do int arr[40];, C reserves space for the array on the stack
IOW, you can't reassign to point it to a different array because at no point a pointer is involved
16:58
yep, I got it
it's almost as if you wrote int arr00; int arr01; int arr02; ... int arr39; in Java
@milleniumbug isn't this the same as what was for Java above?
2 mins ago, by milleniumbug
if you do int[] arr = new int[40];, Java reserves enough space on stack for a GC reference, and creates an array object at GC heap
no?
@milleniumbug okay, that Java statement declared and initialized the array object as well. But that C statement only declared. But, actually, if you do int arr[] = {1, 2, ..., 40};, then C would have to reserve space for the array, as well as create the array object and store its values. Am I right?
there is no "array object"
4 mins ago, by milleniumbug
it's almost as if you wrote int arr00; int arr01; int arr02; ... int arr39; in Java
can you repoint an arr? no
17:03
@milleniumbug oh. C isn't object oriented. there's no objects in there! :(
okay, so int arr[] = {1, 2, ..., 40};, is just shorthand for declaring forty separate integer variables in C, and a single contiguous memory location (an actual array object) in Java. Am I right?
@VioAriton I dealt with that again and here is the answer of your question. The x variable (which is an lvalue itself) is of type rvalue reference to int. The reference part is in the case of type deducting ignored, this means now only int is deduced to int&. Further T = int & && collapses to lvalue reference int&. So you forward at the end an lvalue reference which results in the invocation of func(int& x).
@GaurangTandon the important part is the indirection
@milleniumbug what does "indirection" mean in this context?
you can "repoint" at a different array because you have a pointer in Java case. You can modify its value to point at a different array
C arrays are accessed directly
that said, you can also do what Java allows, too, but you have to operate on the array through a pointer
Sorry, I didn't get the "you can "repoint" at a different array". In Java, I was just "repointing" a single value (at index 1). I was not repointing the whole array.
17:09
16 mins ago, by milleniumbug
that's because Java doesn't have constant arrays
there's a const keyword reserved, so you can't use it for anything, but it's not used by the language either
okay, it's sort of starting to make more sense
i'll think it over once again, thanks! :D
you can't say "don't allow me to modify the elements of this array" in Java
you can achieve a similar effect through collections, but it's not something that arrays support natively
is it possible to enable mutations in C, the same way in Java?
...by keeping the array final
just don't declare it const
hmm okay
 
4 hours later…
21:23
hi
psy
psy
22:09
Hello Everyone. I am trying to convert a C string to C++ std::string.
void myfunc(unsigned char * input) {
string val = input;
}
I get invalid conversion from unsigned char * to const char *
nwp
nwp
Looks like your compiler uses signed chars by default. Your input should simply be char *input to avoid the issue.
psy
psy
Thanks a lot @nwp. That worked.
@nwp Note that char, signed char, and unsigned char are all distinct types. godbolt.org/g/kCNGC6
From cppreference‌​: "char ... has the same representation and alignment as either signed char or unsigned char, but is always a distinct type"
nwp
nwp
Weird. I thought it was a typedef for one of them.
Yeah, char is a special case.

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