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09:07
@nwp if you're that desperate, you can do whatever you can even with enums; and I might be mistaken, but you can't do much with enum classes though, do you?
nwp
nwp
I meant that given enum { thing = 1};, making thing no longer evaluate to 1 is not possible with a const_cast. You would need a #define.
well, but you can take a concrete value of that enum type and cast it to int, then you no longer care what a user can do with it
nwp
nwp
09:47
I think you can do the same things except that you don't have an implicit conversion to the underlying type and that it's in a namespace.
 
3 hours later…
12:49
@AndreasDM the second template param of an Array<T,N> is not a type
@ratchetfreak that makes sense
 
1 hour later…
14:02
Hi guys! I'm new here in chat. It's a pleasure to talk with you.
I'm learning C++ and as an exercise I'm trying to write a simple poker card game
I have some question about how to check if an user has a winning game on hand, this to output a message. I'm learning about how to randomize the content of an array and how to loop the program execution until a condition is reached. Here is my question about this task stackoverflow.com/questions/55652290/…
If everyone can help me with the user cards checking and with the extracted card on the table, I will appreciate it.
nwp
nwp
The answer seems reasonable and is roughly what I would have said. Are you having trouble with the implementation?
14:27
No, no problem with implementation, I'm reading the code and I'm going deep about the various explainations provided inside the answer.
nwp
nwp
As you may have noticed, the random number generation in the C++ standard library is rather complicated.
Yes, I saw, I will do some exercise to better understand the concept.
Maybe I will have some problem also to set a list of winning poker cards and in checking them, but for now Ididn't write that part of the code.
that's more pattern matching, is there a pair in this hand, are there 2 distinct pairs in this hand, are all cards sequential, are all cards of the same suit, is there a 3 of a kind, etc.
15:37
I don't know much about patterns matching in c++ so maybe I need to write another kind of exercise
As wrote in the comments of my question an if structure will be the better choice, but this isn't suitable for my scope
16:22
Why are streams highly discouraged? My linter complains about including ostream.
@Yashas internationalization
Is there an idiomatic way of adding a conversion operator for a template class to allow class<T> to class<const T> conversion?
I need to write a conversion operation. The operator should exist iff T isn't const qualified.
@Yashas so that adds const if it isn't there
That tests if it is
what if T is already const qualified and I write a conversion operator from the same type to same type? It feels weird.
Anyone know if you can connect to ZeroMQ sockets using regular sockets? I can't seem to find any information on people doing so.
16:54
I am not sure but I was thinking that I need to conditionally enable a conversion operator.
@Yashas not sure why? anything that would be broken if you allowed it with non-const?
No. My class<T> can be logically converted to class<const T>. Nothing breaks. I should've tested first but I thought if T was already const qualified the compiler would complain that writing a conversion operator from class<const T> to class<const T> is nonsense.
17:09
Oh man, I am being trolled by C++ once again.
I am lost why the compiler is allowing an identity conversion operator.
 
2 hours later…
19:00
what's the difference between const std::span<T> and std::span<T>?
19:11
@Yashas the const qual of the elements and stuff?
19:51
@Yashas Very little. You can always create a std::span<T> from a const std::span<T>.
Accessing members through a const std::span<T> gives you T&, not T const&
std::span<T> is a lot like a pointer in that way
std::span<T const> gives you T const&s
AFAICT, the only difference between std::span<T> and std::span<T> const is that you can rebind std::span<T>.

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