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08:00
I saw a comment from a question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8116541/what-exactly-is-streambuf-how-do-i-use-it#comment89181164_8117182 , saying that
"....but the meaning is different: streambuf means you want the raw data to be the string itself, whereas stream abstracts away the encoding."
what does " stream abstracts away the encoding" mean?
Could anyone explain a little bit more about this :D? much appreciated
 
2 hours later…
Ron
Ron
10:16
Move ctor accepts a rvalue reference, right, not the rvalue? A bit confused on the actual terminology.
How would you invoke a move ctor without the use of std::move? And should you?
@Ron by passing a temporary, as in a expression that is not just a single variable and has return type T or T&&
std::move is a convenient way of getting a T&& from a variable
Ron
Ron
All hell breaks loose :)
I thought it was just T&&.
When implementing a move ctor must I explicitly call std::move on all the class data members I want to move? I would think I do.
yeah but you shouldn't need to implement one at all
rule of 0 and all that
10:36
@Ron yes its a bit tricky...because the lvaluness, rvaluness is independent from the type of expression ->> int&& x = 10;.....std::move(x) would turn the x (lvalue) into an rvalue with the type int&&.
or static_cast<int&&>(x)
Ron
Ron
Does that mean I can pass something obtained from T&& something = T();?
Or forget about all rvalue lvalue complexity and use std::move to be on the safe side?
remember that the T&& is still a reference
Ron
Ron
Aaah, right.
T& &.
@ratchetfreak All clear now. Thanks.
its an universal reference...it can be either an lvalue reference or an rvalue reference
Ron
Ron
What to do with the object I "stole" from? Leave it be?
10:49
yeah on destruct it will go through final cleanup
moved-from object are left in a valid but unspecified state, I believe the only thing you can rely on is destructing them everything else depends on the type
but most will make it the same as a default constructed object
Ron
Ron
Is it a rule of thumb to always use std::forward with a templated class?
If I want the move semantics, that is.
@Ron its equal to static_cast<T&&>()
not really, if you pass it a reference (a T&) it passes forward a T&
so you don't steal from objects that you shouldn't be stealing from
Ron
Ron
I don't understand what happens if a move fails with classes / objects, a copy ctor gets called or something else?
nwp
nwp
Depends on what you mean by "fail".
Ron
Ron
10:57
Indeed. I guess a cast to rvalue reference failed.
nwp
nwp
If it is a static thing like trying to move from a const object then the normal overload resolution takes care of it and you end up with a copy.
If it is a runtime thing like an exception being thrown then you get exactly that.
Ron
Ron
I see.
Thanks all.
11:17
@NonnyMoose this github.com/divideon/xvc/tree/dev for Android via NDK or any other possible way
Ron
Ron
12:16
What substantial C++14, 17 and 20 features should I mention when doing an intro to C++11 features? If any.
Perhaps a copy elision.
nwp
nwp
Copy elision has existed since forever. The new thing is that it is required.
Ron
Ron
I see.
I am thinking how to define lvalues in the shortest possible terms. Would "an expression that can be used on a left hand side of an assignment" be considered wrong?
nwp
nwp
You can probably find one of these for c++14. C++20 isn't out yet and speculations about modules and concepts have not come true in the past.
Ron
Ron
@nwp Awesome, thanks. Regarding lvalues and rvalues I find this MS article to be of use.
nwp
nwp
I feel tempted to dismiss that article after reading the first sentence.
Ron
Ron
12:27
The Every C++ expression is either an lvalue or an rvalue. part?
nwp
nwp
Yes. Depending on how you read that you could say it's simply wrong.
Ron
Ron
I see what you mean. The prvalue, xvalue, lvalue thing.
Nasty, I will have to leave out the rvalue, lvalue details.
nwp
nwp
From the C++17 list if constexpr, std::variant, std::string_view, std::invoke, std::apply and std::container::emplace returning a reference are the ones that have been useful for me.
Ron
Ron
Appreciate it.
nwp
nwp
Also maybe talk about the features that didn't turn out as well as expected. Uniform initialization for example.
12:47
@nwp I thought concepts got voted in
nwp
nwp
I heard there are like 5 competing versions with different issues. I don't know. Maybe they have settled on one, but I wouldn't be surprised if it got vetoed somehow.
@nwp appears to have been merged
that said nobody supports it yet, GCC only has the TS version implemented
Ron
Ron
If talking about dos and donts in modern C++ apart from raw pointers and arrays what else is worth mentioning?
Modern == C++11, that is.
13:02
@Ron use c++14
Ron
Ron
I see.
13:42
Also std::transform, auto and lambda everywhere.
2
14:27
Oh, I see. Sorry, but I don't really have the time. It looks like it could take some work. Basically, if you want to build with the ndk you will have to convert the cmake project to Android.mk makefiles.
That sounds un-fun.
 
8 hours later…
22:39
Hi! Um... I'm trying to do a replacement of chars in a C++ way, and it doesn't seem to compile. Giving cryptic references to rvalue/lvalue. coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/e1cac2cb9fda6597
What am I doing wrong?
you seem to be operating on a string in-place inside the function, but calling and pretending it accepts a string, and returns a new one
22:52
Yes I want to do it in place. --
OH
RIGHT
Thanks I get it now

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