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user2213764
01:49
I think I'm in love with C
user2213764
its so simple.
user2213764
and you have so much control
user2213764
<3 this thing
07:44
@Braineeee wish it were so… (UB)
07:57
helloc all;
helloc @PeterVaro;
@mirabilos You're in control. You don't have to use UB, but you can, if you want to...
@Braineeee yeah well.. if you are talking about only the syntax, then yeah, C is simple -- otherwise, take a look at the C11 Standard and then tell me how simple it is :)
@mirabilos ...
@mirabilos read docs:
   -Wwrite-strings
       When compiling C, give string constants the type "const char[length]" so that copying the address
       of one into a non-"const" "char *" pointer produces a warning.  These warnings help you find at
       compile time code that can try to write into a string constant, but only if you have been very
       careful about using "const" in declarations and prototypes.  Otherwise, it is just a nuisance.
       This is why we did not make -Wall request these warnings.
not only that, but it is not standard-conforming.
08:47
@AnttiHaapala that's nonsense, stop spreading such
@mirabilos how so?
@AnttiHaapala that's what I said yesterday
@AnttiHaapala you're not allowed to use UB
what?
who says?
@AnttiHaapala the standard?
C standard doesn't disallow using UB, C standard says that such a program is not strictly conforming.
08:48
@AnttiHaapala those compilers (GCC is a repeat offender) which optimise UB into brokenness
@AnttiHaapala the amount of security issues introduced by UB
etc.
so in short, no.
@mirabilos lol, your reading skills are really lacking.
@AnttiHaapala suuuuuuuuure
@AnttiHaapala can we stop with the ad-hominem attacks now PLEASE?
@mirabilos me?
@AnttiHaapala yes, you.
read again:
@mirabilos You're in control. You don't have to use UB, but you can, if you want to...
there are things that are UB by the standard.
some things even require you to use UB things, like POSIX.
they're extensions to the standard.
see appendix J.5
08:52
@AnttiHaapala that works iff the entire system supports additional promises beyond the C standard
BSD also gives you promises beyond POSIX
it's just a matter of portability, and of ensuring everything running on it knows that
if you need to rely on those
UB is a… weird beast, though
the biggest problem are the myriad books and teachers who tell people to "experiment in C"
 
3 hours later…
11:56
@AnttiHaapala further more, the ones, who teach you: if it compiles and runs on your system, then it is working..
although I have to say: teaching C could be a challanging thing to do! if you start with all the things a student have to be aware of, then I bet most of the students will give up after the 2nd-3rd lesson..
(that's why I always say: stop teaching C as a first language! teach C, when the students have enough generic knowledge on how things are roughly working in a computer, and have a deep understanding of programming concepts)
My instructor said this is not ub:
int x = 20, y = 35;

x = y++ + x++;
y = ++y + ++x;

printf("%d %d\n", x, y);
@littlepootis just show him C11 Standard 6.5p2 (page 76) + footnote 84
12:53
@PeterVaro yeah… when I don't even understand UB fully, after 17 years of sorta-knowing C
@PeterVaro true, I’m a friend of assembly as first language
@littlepootis heh you have an instructor, lucky you ;)
@mirabilos IMO a top-to-bottom approach suits most of the students' needs -- start with a very high-level language, and go deep down to assembly
@PeterVaro possibly, I don't dispute that
it’s just I’d start with asm
that’s my approach and concept
that's why I said "for most", some likes the bottom-to-top approach -- but, while I was teaching (unfortunately not developing) I realised, that most students prefer the former approach. probably, because understanding higher level of abstrations for first is easier, and then explain how that works and why is better, because they already know the outcome, so during the explanation they can always justify everything in their heads when their eyes are on the goal
13:34
@littlepootis your teacher is stupid, or that's a koan...
you cannot get anything done in ASM in ages
first need to teach computer architecture, addressing, program counters, registers, binary numbers, whatnot.
13:49
works for me
also, you don't need all of that upfront
and when teaching a until-then-non-programming admin, you can skip architecture
addressing can also come after some hands-on
 
1 hour later…
15:17
Who the fudge in this sane mind (yup, no iOS devs) would name the function in... 740 characters? o_0
 
2 hours later…
17:26
Did anyone try any interpreter implementation in C?
@Kamiccolo who the fudge in sane mind would use MISRA :D
@Ananthu CPython ... :P
@Ananthu yup, Lua
or you mean write an interpreter?
I did my own shitty script language half-way...
bison + flex and then got bored...
17:28
Well I am impressed
I am not
just half-assed
@Kamiccolo Lua? Is it similar to lisp?
This is almost a subset of the python room.
well python implementation is cool
but how it implemented in C?
Does it have to be Lisp or are you just interested in interpreters in general?
17:34
well i got a project
I am already having the python implementation
but also needed to be implemented in c
I suggest starting with a calculator program. It just needs to handle the symbols + - * / correctly.
@Ananthu nope. From the point of syntax... ummm... it's quite minimalistic. And, I'd say, somewhere between Python and Pascal. Quite... known among gamedevs.
lisp is easier than a calculator program
you do not need to do a complicated parser
just a parser for s-expressions
@Ananthu thus to begin, make a calculator, that uses lisp syntax
(+ 1 (- (* 3 4) 2))
A prefix calculator.
wel, you could do that too .P
17:40
It how can i implemented in C?
Once you get the basic arithmetic operators working, add support for ( ).
Does lisp require parenthesis to make sense, like is + - 1 2 3 meaningful in Lisp?
@QuestionC does
but that is the beauty of lisp, it just has exactly one structure
S-expressions
i.e. parenthesized lists
you just need to parse parenthesized lists
Yup.
lisps are known for the property that the source code is the syntax tree.
@QuestionC another easy thing: the lists are singly-linked:
that is very easy to do in C.
The begin command just means 'Execute this list of commands in order' then
?
17:47
"begin"?
http://norvig.com/lispy.html

The examples use `begin` like `main`
ah of scheme
In that case, I guess the first step is to just print the parse tree of lisp.
yeah, it is pretty much useless, because everything else already supports lists of statements
yep
the Scheme tradition of lisps looks surprisingly simple...
what is funny is that the creators wanted to do a complicated language, but then realized that it all reduced to lambda calculus...
but I agree that I rather read Python or C than Scheme :D
which lang introduced lambda calculas?
17:52
thaẗ́'s the logo of Scheme... :P
So anyhow, if you can make a program that can turn (+ 1 (- (* 3 4) 2)) into 11 that's still basically your first step.
yeap
and Lisps are easier than languages like Python that have really complicated parsers just to get the AST.
So your interpreter sees `+ 1 (- (* 3 4) 2)` and breaks it down to `+` `1` `(- (* 3 4) 2)`.

Then it breaks `- (* 3 4) 2` down into `-` `(* 3 4)` `2`

&ct.
@Ananthu Scheme introduced it pretty much into general programming, there were Lisps prior to Scheme that didn't use lexical scoping; Scheme was the first one to do it right; later, Common Lisp picked it from scheme.
@QuestionC you can parse it from left-to-right
It's hard to say how to do it in C vs Python because a different language doesn't meaningfully change the approach.
17:58
( begins a new list, +, 1, etc you push into the current list
I feel that separating parsing from evaluation is kind of a high CS concept and not a good starting point.
Memory management in c is very tough for me
@Ananthu mathematics did.
@QuestionC naah, this is easy.
It's better but it's not step 1.
17:59
one needs to be able to do a singly-linked list.
the thing is that there are several BIF in python.. these needed get implemented in c in order to make a interpreter?
sorry Built in Functions
yeah.
@Ananthu I'd suggest you look into Flex
flex is for tokenizing input with regexes
C has all the tools you really need for something like this. Parsing is pretty simple, it's just conceptually deep.
18:04
damn hard to find current flex pages :(
You're just reading a string. It's pretty basic.
moving from python to C Troubles me
I wouldn't even think of it as a Python -> C project. That overcomplicates it. It's just a parser in C.
18:07
So i will split it in to Two parts, parsing and execution
* Make a prefix calculator
* Improve it to a Scheme calculator
* Reimplement your Scheme calculator by separating Parsing and Execution
* Add the rest of the commands

^ That's how you get from 0 to done.
There's nothing special about it being done in C which makes the problem harder, just more tedious.
THanks all :) lets crack this :P
Your professor might be of more assistance too. That's kind of his job.
But this is a test to measure our potential
18:24
% echo '(+ 1 (- (* 3 4) 2))' | ./a.out
a opening parenthesis
an operator: +
a number: 1
a opening parenthesis
an operator: -
a opening parenthesis
an operator: *
a number: 3
a number: 4
a closing parenthesis
a number: 2
a closing parenthesis
a closing parenthesis
flextest flextest.l; gcc lex.yy.c -lfl
the flex manual is there ^
@Ananthu no sane person writes a parser in C from scratch, they use flex
what is flex?
Its very usefulstuff. thanks
18:40
@Ananthu I'd also watch this tutorial series: youtube.com/watch?v=54bo1qaHAfk
19:08
isnt 80char per line overrated for C, if the monitor is too big to see further :P
@ravi.zombie it depends. Splitting vim window into... like... 5 --- screws things over pretty fast.
hmm, true. but only for those with splitwindows.
19:35
is there a way in vim to split the screen in to two and using one for coding and other one as a output screen
20:07
@Ananthu yup
static int get_if_type(int *argc, char ***argv, enum nl80211_iftype *type,
                       bool need_type)
{
...
...
      tpstr = (*argv)[!!need_type];
      *argc -= 1 + !!need_type;
      *argv += 1 + !!need_type;
mmmhm. Can You do arithmetic with "bools" like that? o_0
can uint8_t be used as a boolean?
21:01
> 7.18 Boolean type and values <stdbool.h>
1 The header <stdbool.h> defines four macros.
2 The macro `bool` expands to `_Bool`.
3 The remaining three macros are suitable for use in `#if` preprocessing directives. They are `true` which expands to the integer constant 1,
`false` which expands to the integer constant 0, and `_ _bool_true_false_are_defined` which expands to the integer constant 1.
4 Notwithstanding the provisions of 7.1.3, a program may undefine and perhaps then redefine the macros `bool`, `true`, and `false`.
user6754053
21:37
Hey guys.
user6754053
Just found you through @NathanOsman.
helloc room;
@Kevin Yep just got a new logo
helloc @MarkYisri && @Dsafds;
@qaispak short answer is yes (because any value that is not 0 will be logically true); the long answer is, as @Kamiccolo said: C11 Standard 7.18 (page 287)
@Kamiccolo IMO it is better to point to the standard (draft) directly -- at least this approach shows the standard for the OP, if s/he is unaware of it, and using the C11 standard as a link, will gain attention to the latest version of it
we had some chat about making the standard draft available as an HTML version with @DrorK., which could be searched and linked and stuff -- but as it happens, the standard draft's text cannot be reproduced that way.. which is silly, as the draft itself is freely available..
21:48
Did we make a request and ask for permission to format/redistribute it?
nope, you just pointed out that on the committee's site there was paragraph which can be interpreted this way
And one could use the existing unofficial HTML standards available, although they're far from being perfect/thorough...
although it is a borderline if you ask me..
@DrorK. so should we contact them?
I don't know if it's worth the hassle
but if we are making it without their approval and they will force us to remove it..
that would be a disaster and a lot of unnecessary work..
21:59
We could use the existing unofficial ones and that's it
helloc @NathanOsman;
@DrorK. but if they are not complete why would we want to do that?
'sup @NathanOsman? C fan? or just lurkin' around?
Better than nothing? :\
I was mentioned by another user.
But I am a C fan so there's that too :D
22:00
in that case, I think it is better to provide a link to the pdf draft..
and have you suggested us somewhere?
(according to that user..)
@PeterVaro I guess I've seen it already in HTML format...
@Kamiccolo I think those are the ones mentioned by @DrorK.
there is even a single page HTML version IIRC
but that is just terrible..
(the formatting and everything is just wrong..)
what I imagined is more like a wiki => everything is linked to each other, and there are anchors everywhere
so for example it would be very easy to refer to only one paragraph at a time
Can someone explain me more what is done in linking stage?
I know first is preproccecor stage..
which gets all the #includes , #defines, and stuff done
and then it compiles to an object file
@Dsafds CPP has nothing to do with linking :)
and the compilation has nothing to do with the linking either
@PeterVaro No
First of all
I am designing OS in C github.com/bone-project/boneos
@PeterVaro And i am saying the whole layout proccess
22:06
@Dsafds we all know that already. Don't need to remind it tens of times. Really.
Wait no.. it compiles to an assembly file.. and that assembly file is put into assembler to get object
@Kamiccolo +1
@Kamiccolo No. peter thought i was doing CPP.
C++*
CPP == C Pre Processing
i was informing i am talking about C... Anways
22:06
CPP != C++
CXX == C++
@PeterVaro Oh i thought you meant .cpp .. my bad
anways can someone explain me what happenes in linking stage ones it got the object file?
I cant understand it for some reason after looking places..
i know the output becomes an executable format. But how.
instead of trying to answer you in a long answer, I would simply link you the first SE result that came up, after a quick google search ;)
14
A: What are linkers and loaders? How do they work?

Jerry CoffinThe exact relationship varies somewhat. To start with, I'll consider (nearly) the simplest possible model, used by something like MS-DOS, where an executable will always be statically linked. For the sake of example, let's consider the canonical "Hello, World!" program, which we'll assume is writ...

also
232
Q: How does the compilation/linking process work?

Tony The LionI've been programming in C++ for a while and I wondered how the compiler and linking process actually works? Can someone explain please? (Note: This is meant to be an entry to Stack Overflow's C++ FAQ. If you want to critique the idea of providing an FAQ in this form, then the posting on met...

im doing this because i want to know if i should utilize the .a or .so , static or shared libraries..
22:39
Hi all :)
I'm working on a project using a proprietary SDK written in C
and after calling one of their functions
I get the following error :
Unknown heap pointer 0xdeda6008: it was not returned by an allocation call for this heap memory manager
what could this mean?
Unknown heap pointer 0xdeda6008: it was not returned by an allocation call for this heap memory manager
Fatal signal 6 (SIGABRT), code -6 in tid 18211 (Thread-2)
22:53
working with oo language craves me out to use single-instance language again
i know the complexity of oo languages rank them up, but some errors u cant even explain
even the compiler cant explain
23:11
@MehdiB. mhm. May it be the case, that the library tries to free() the memory pointed by the pointer of the static memory You've passed?
For example, it expects something like this:
char *buffer = malloc(sizeof(somethingsomething));
fancy_sdk_function(buffer);
instead of this:
char buffer[somethingsomething];
fancy_sdk_function(buffer);
Can't say for sure without any more information.
@Kamiccolo, hmm. I see, that reduces my debugging ! Thanks!
(FYI, I'm passing a byteBuffer of Audio with Jni)

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