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04:08
this is lambda syntax and it make sense
[&](){}
but what is that means
([&]{
loop here
} (), ...);
this iterate over packed parameter but I don't understand the syntax
what is the meaning of (, ...) and can the order of lambda change from [&](){} to [&]{}()
04:44
so how come, the comma operator, if this is what it is, magically iterate over the packed parameter
 
3 hours later…
07:27
@ma1169 At least at first glance, it looks like that's a fold expression, not a comma operator. en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/fold. It iterates over a parameter pack because that's what fold expressions do.
@ma1169 The lambda expression itself is always has the (...) before the {...}, but 1) most fold expressions have to be enclosed in parens (depending on precedence), and 2) the () part of a lambda expression can be omitted if you don't need to pass any parameters to it.
08:23
@JerryCoffin this code is almost exactly the same as bswap_impl, I know it's dumb of me, I already read that before and i understood half of it, but I didn't understand what is the basic syntax for folding expression!
I don't understand why there's operator between args and ...
for example
I know syntax like std::forward<Args>(args)... or args..., to unfold the arguments, but I didn't know that we can capture the iteration itself

so what is the difference between (std::forward<Args>(args)), ...) and std::forward<Args>(args)... ???
08:40
@ma1169 This page goes into more in the way of practical information you might find more helpful: studyplan.dev/pro-cpp/fold-expressions
thanks, i will look into it
08:55
@JerryCoffin thanks, it make sense now, it still didn't explain why the lambda has the lower curvy brackets (),
But I get it now <3
@ma1169 Cool. Glad it was helpful.
 
13 hours later…
21:36
@JerryCoffin yeah I deleted the copy ctor and copy assignment and created move counterpart
But it doesn't automatically use the move constructors. I still have to use std::move
I will create a short example
21:55
In the comment I said move constructor, I meant move assignment
@LewsTherin Yeah, that's by design--when you have an lvalue, it's up to you to tell the compiler: "yea, I'm fine with treating this as an rvalue so it can be destroyed by being the source of a move".
22:20
ohh ok makes sense I guess
so moves actually have a side effect of destroying the object?
I thought it was the same object just the address is maintained
 
1 hour later…
23:28
@LewsTherin Yes, at least potentially (though for some simple objects like an int, a move is likely just a copy that leaves the original intact).
@LewsTherin A typical case where moves make a big difference would be something like a std::vector which usually contains only a pointer to its data, and a couple of size_t's for the size currently allocated, and the size currently in use. When you move from one of them, you typically copy those three fields into the destination, then set the pointer to a null pointer, and both sizes to 0 in the source object.

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