02:38
@DavidRodríguez-dribeas "I have avoided telling him what the small issue in his answer is" IOW, you were trolling.
@DavidRodríguez-dribeas "that the requirement of two phase lookup forces the behavior (how is that not because the standard says so?)." Yes, it is because the standard says so.
When you tried to give me a taste of my own medicine, you end-up disproving my statements about C++ with D and a C++ compiler known for its brokenness in the very area we were discussing.
03:43
@curiousguy Once again, you failed to understand what was being said: Even if you decided to spend all your reputation in down voting my answers, it would not affect me. How you get from there to have something personal, I don't get it. But I do not have anything personal (with you in particular nor with anyone else in here)
04:33
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16:16
even if you somehow "prove" "that's how it has to be", and someone provides hard evidence (in this case, in the form of counter-examples) that it doesn't... then your "proof" is invalid. reality wins, no matter how much you try to ignore the counter-arguments. if you want to say the C++ committee requires it to be that way, say that. (it helps if you mention ISO 14882.) but of course, that means conceding david's point that the decision is arbitrary.
16:39
@curiousguy "proof" is the process (or result) of proceeding from accepted definitions to reach a logically inescapable argument. if, at any point in the process, reality conflicts with the definitions, then the "proof" is invalid inasmuch as it attempts to explain reality.
i dunno...that point where you tried to recharacterize the whole argument after having been shown wrong, that's pretty amusing i think.
@curiousguy show me where he changed his claim. cause it doesn't seem to be here, unless you're reading something different than i am. in fact, he made it a few times (you do know this entire chat is logged all the way back to the beginning, right?), and hasn't retracted it anywhere i've seen
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