« first day (921 days earlier)      last day (4256 days later) » 

user142019
18:00
public class Base {};
public class Derived : Base {};
public static class whatever {
    public static Foo(this Base x) { ... }
    public static Foo(this Derived x) { ... }
}
Base x = new Derived();
x.Foo(); // which Foo will this call?
user142019
I don't have a C# implementation at hand.
user142019
Wait, Ideone.
it will call this Base x
I believe so as well
user142019
Apparently. ideone.com/OdpMr3
user142019
18:02
Is there a way to create virtual extension methods?
Maybe it shouldn't be an extension method then
user142019
(x as dynamic).Foo(); // haha
user142019
dynamic is awesome because fuck visitor pattern.
Hi, I have a question about malloc? Can anyone help please?
@Chandan You want the C room, not the C# room...
Unfortunately, there is no C room because C is easy.
18:07
C is easy? Are you serious?
@LewsTherin The core of the language and its base libraries are easy to learn.
@Chandan ask the question, I suck but the rest of the guys in the room does not :D
Well, if you please help, here is the question, suppose I write this code:- int *x, x=malloc(sizeof(int)), x[0]=1,x[1]=2,x[3]=3;
why does it run?
@ShotgunNinja No
@LewsTherin Huh. I thought they were.
18:10
@Chandan maybe it just writes where it should not? I'm just guessing, I have no clue
user142019
@Chandan I can help.
Learning a language != learning how to use a language well.
user142019
@Chandan it's bad code.
Knowing != Grokking
@ShotgunNinja Ok, that's better.
@Zoidberg :D
18:11
Don't knock it till you grok it
user142019
@Chandan you are casting the result of malloc to an int. Don't do that ever.
user142019
Enable compiler warnings.
@Chandan Are you sure it runs?
@ShotgunNinja Learning a language ⊂ learning how to use a language well.
@Chandan It just writes where it shouldn't.
user142019
18:11
In C, you can redefine a variable.
Yes, I am sure it runs. I have printed those values later also. They work.
user142019
At least, in old C. :P
Is malloc a variadic function?
user142019
@Chandan you have undefined behaviour since you write past the end of an array.
user142019
You must never do that.
user142019
18:12
@LewsTherin No.
@Chandan Are you sure it works? It could be undefined behavior
@Zoidberg That's what I thought.
user142019
C does no bounds checking, unlike C#.
@ShotgunNinja yay, I know C without ever had used it!
user142019
@LewsTherin "could be" it is. :)
@Zoidberg :D
user142019
18:13
@Chandan try this instead:
I see. So if I write malloc(sizeof(int)), x[0]=1,x[1]=2,free(x)
will it free the value at (x+1)
?
user142019
Oh wait.
On your system, it works because there may be more memory allocated to the program than what you have explicitly allocated, due to how malloc() can be subject to memory block alignment.
@Chandan How about, don't write C code?
user142019
You are using the comma operator.
18:14
@Zoidberg Ohhhhh!
:D
user142019
Do this, please:
Nice catch
no, i used ; here I wrote using ,
I would avoid using commas to delimit C statements....
well, you can put multiple lines in this editor, by using Shift+Return or Shift+Enter.
user142019
int *x = malloc(sizeof(int) * 4);
x[0] = 1;
x[1] = 2;
x[3] = 3;
18:14
Like
This
See?
user142019
If you then do free(x), it will free the memory pointed to by x.
user142019
Also: don't use C. It's obsolete.
Ok. what if I wrote malloc(sizeof(int)+1) instead?
@Zoidberg I think he wanted to know what happens if you did free(x+1)
@Chandan That won't work if an int isn't 1 byte...
user142019
18:15
@Chandan That will allocate the size of an int bytes and one extra byte.
but x[1]=1; still works
@Chandan Yes, because you don't have range checking.
user142019
Read up on undefined behaviour
@Chandan Undefined
user142019
It may work now. It may not work at all. It may crash your computer.
18:16
I really hate C :D
Can you refer some source?
user142019
The C standard allows it to get you pregnant after it has changed your gender.
@Zoidberg LOL
Also, if x points to 0x10, x[0] will point to 0x10, and x[1] will point to (0x10 + sizeof(array type)).
Indexing into an array will not add 1 to the memory location; it will add the size of the array type.
Ok. so when free(x) is used it will only free x[0]?
18:17
@Chandan No, the size of the allocation block is stored in either an allocation table or in subsequent memory.
No it frees the allocated memory.. it is contiguous remember.
If you read from an address that is not within the bounds of any of your malloc calls, it could return any int value or it may crash. All depending on what garbage you have in memory.
user142019
@Chandan it will free everything allocated by malloc.
user142019
malloc allocates a bunch of bytes. It doesn't care about the type.
@Zoidberg What if he does free(x+1).. does it still free it all?
Or is UB?
user142019
18:18
It just allocated bytes and it doesn't know anything about structure.
user142019
@Zoidberg why *4?
user142019
@LewsTherin UB
each pointer passed to free needs to be one that originally came from some call to malloc.
user142019
@JohanLarsson he accesses x[3].
18:18
@JohanLarsson That's the size of an int.. in some systems
user142019
@LewsTherin irrelevant.
@LewsTherin Incorrect. The *4 is the number of values of the given type.
user142019
sizeof(int) is the size of an int on all systems.
user142019
sizeof(int) * 4 is the size of four ints.
ah, I'm not so C after all
18:19
@ShotgunNinja Oops, that's right.
user142019
malloc(sizeof(int) * 4) allocates sizeof(int) * 4 bytes, which you can use to store four ints.
@Mike F I think free(x) frees memory for any pointer x, I have used it.
The system keeps track of each malloc and knows what range was allocated to each pointer returned from malloc. free uses this information to free just the right range.
user142019
@Chandan for any pointer returned by a call to malloc.
malloc() allocates bytes. Array-bracket arithmetic and pointer arithmetic goes by the size of the pointed-to type.
user142019
18:20
Using free on anything not returned by malloc is undefined bahavior and you shouldn't ever do it.
I don't remember, does calloc take size_t as well?
user142019
calloc takes two size_ts.
@Zoidberg thanks, but what is the difference between the pointer to a space allocated by malloc and any other pointer?
Dynamic allocation
user142019
18:21
Well, that a pointer returned by malloc is returned by malloc. :P
@Chandan Either an entry into an allocation table, or a subsequent segment of memory specifying its size.
It is like using new in C++
/me double-checks that he's in the correct room (j/k, carry on).
Depending on implementation.
user142019
Or well, to be more exact: only use free on pointers that point to the start of a block of memory allocated by malloc.
18:22
malloc may allocate information elsewhere that contains things such as the length of the block.
@Chandan If you use new, malloc, calloc.. you must always free the memory. Otherwise memory leaks.. equals very bad. Normal pointers are declared on the stack so we don't give a shiz
user142019
int* x = malloc(sizeof(int) * 42); // allocate enough space for 42 ints
free(x + 1); // UB: never do this.
free(x); // free all memory allocated by malloc
If you pass it the wrong pointer, it won't be able to find that.
I grok C, btw.
It's just far too annoying to program in on a regular basis.
18:23
@Kendall Frey what do you mean it won't be able to find it?
I hate C, but give me a manual and I will drown my way through
Especially now since an optimizing C++ compiler exists for my favorite MCU platform.
user142019
8 mins ago, by Zoidberg
Also: don't use C. It's obsolete.
@Chandan It won't be able to find the allocation record.
@Zoidberg I am preparing for exam, otherwise I don't use C
user142019
18:24
Good.
user142019
Use a high-level language such as C#, D, C++, Haskell, Python or Ruby.
The reason free() even works at all is that somewhere, somehow, the length of each allocated block is stored where the dynamic allocation subsystem has access to it.
C is good for beginning I think.
Otherwise, you'd have a pointer to a location, and no idea how much memory past that location was allocated and how much wasn't.
Say malloc returns the pointer 0x1000. As an example, say there is a 4-byte integer for the length of the block, stored at 0x999C.
18:25
This is referred to as an allocation record.
@Shotgun but don't you have the type too?
@Chandan No. The type is not recorded in the allocation record, only the length.
If C could speak, it would say: "types are for the weak!"
user142019
malloc and free don't give a shit about types.
user142019
They allocate and free blocks of bytes.
18:25
If you pass the pointer 0x1001 to free, it will look at 0x999D for how long the block is. This is obviously wrong.
So, only those allocated by malloc are in allocation record?
C was designed to exclude type-specific information from allocations, because of its use in low-memory platforms.
user142019
@Chandan malloc, calloc and realloc, yes.
After exams I am getting myself a good C and C++ book
And C# of course
@Kendall Frey, I see, thanks.
18:27
Now, I've written a custom heap allocator, and to solve the allocation record problem, I allocated a few bytes more than what was asked, wrote the length in the first extra bytes, and then passed back the pointer to the memory address immediately following those bytes.
user142019
2518
Q: The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List

grepsedawkThis question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are released every year. Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a good C++ book...

user142019
^ These are the only good C++ books in existence.
user142019
As for online tutorials, there isn't too much goodness either. codepuppy.co.uk/cpptuts/index.aspx is good but I've never encountered anything else that isn't terrible.
Looks like the puppy added some new stuff
There is of course no requirement that the 'header' information be immediately before the allocated block.
18:28
Not every allocator works this way; I've seen some that use allocation tables of fixed size to track memory, but they are very limited in how much they can track.
user142019
> © DeadMG "The Puppy" 2012
It could be in a table somewhere else.
user142019
> © nickname "other nickname" last year
> © ShotgunNinja "That One Dickhead" 2012
user142019
C++ allows for custom allocators for collections.
18:29
DeadMG is a puppy? I never would have guessed by the avatar.
user142019
lol
Thanks everyone, I have got my answer.
@KendallFrey Haha
user142019
No problemo.
@Zoidberg The problem with a dynamic allocation table is that for scalability, it should be dynamic in size already...
18:30
I wonder about sbi.
so the table-based allocation record approach is usually implemented atop a localized record system, so it can be done as a tree structure for efficiency.
Them crazy C++ers
user142019
@ShotgunNinja how about a hashtable?
user142019
18:33
Don't click it people it's a Rickroll.
@Zoidberg How do you avoid collisions?
user142019
@ShotgunNinja by using a decent hash function.
Do you use a backing bucket?
ZOIDBERG GOT RICKROLLED
@Zoidberg Yes, but how do you hash a memory address and allocation record?
user142019
18:34
And if there's still a collision you store two objects for the same hash.
user142019
Why would it be impossible to hash a pointer?
It's not... The problem is, this is for implementing a hash table WITHOUT dynamic memory allocation.
Think as if you don't have dynamic allocation, and you're trying to implement it from scratch.
user142019
OS X implements dynamic allocations using mmap.
user142019
mmap allocates single pages.
user142019
And you know the size of a page.
user142019
18:35
If you do per-page allocation management, you know the maximum amount of possible allocations in that page.
@Zoidberg oh god, a brony
Yes, but mmap is only on OS X. Say for example we are using an AVR microprocessor.
It doesn't have memory mapping or paging.
@Pheonixblade9 Oh, god, a perv.
@KendallFrey Oh god, a Kendall.
@ShotgunNinja god damnit, you beat me to it
user142019
18:36
You reserve space for the allocation table. If you have limited memory, you know the maximum number of possible allocations.
O NOES WE GON DIE
@ShotgunNinja Oh god, a... shotgun. RUN
user142019
And pages have an exact, known size, hence the comparison.
Is Google down?
worx in Sweden
18:41
Hi from Chile :)
Now, it's fine.. wtf
Is your internet down?
google works from Canadaland
works from Chile too
@LewsTherin You probably got sent a Spike. Restart your computer! But don't press ALT-CTRL-Del as your power supply may blow up.
18:42
@KendallFrey That's why I asked here.. to be sure. :D I had to refresh 5 times
@MaximilianoBecerraBustamante Hi from the Andromeda Galaxy.
@RyanTernier Lol, now I have to resist not trying that
cc/image Kendall Be Quiet
@MaximilianoBecerraBustamante What a name
That's not an English laugh... :P
@MaximilianoBecerraBustamante brasil?
18:44
HUEHUEHUEHUEHUE
@ShotgunNinja "Greetings from Chile"
@KendallFrey In Portuguese, it's Brasil.
Chili... nummy
@LewsTherin herp derp
@ShotgunNinja CANA-F*CKING-DURRR
@ShotgunNinja derpes
18:45
@KendallFrey dude, calm your tits.
You can help by suckling on them
My tits are perfectly flaccid.
@KendallFrey What the fuck did I just read?
I don't know. Gulliver's Travels?
Or maybe C# in Depth?
now kendell, you know you are not supposed to have sugared soda at lunch. you know what it does to you.
18:47
DIABEETUS
Well, fur fluck's sake.
@ShotgunNinja thanks (:
Assign a string field "9:30" and it becomes "09:30"?
@MaximilianoBecerraBustamante You're... welcome?
@KendallFrey new SimpleDateFormat()
18:50
I... like ellipses?
user142019
That's three periods, not an ellipsis.
user142019
This is an ellipsis: ….
News article; "British government wants to block porn on public hotspots". Wouldn't that effectively make the 'hotspots' just 'spots', since all the hot is blocked?
2
hiyoo
user142019
Tor. Problem solved.
18:51
@Zoidberg May I remind you what the room title is?
user142019
Nope.
May I hack your email address?
Old Path - New Path

\Documents and Settings - \Users
that regex again?
Guys what is the System folder to get these depending on the OS
No Kendall
:)
18:52
@KendallFrey I own that book! Any other C# books worth getting?
phew
@FredOverflow The one I will write.
hahaha @KendallFrey that worked like a charm, the regex on...I cannot thank you enough
@RoelvanUden I like your humor. You're like a C# version of me.
user142019
@FredOverflow C# in Height.
18:54
I saw that...but could not figure out anything...
I think i skimmed through it...
@FredOverflow You just successfully used both forms of your/you're. I think you're on the wrong internet.
let me read it now
@KendallFrey I've been doing my homework :)
@VivianLobo Look at the examples :-)
@FredOverflow In that case hang out here more, I want laughs from you :-)
Hey @FredOverflow, aren't you usually in Lounge<C++>?
18:55
Uh huh
:)...Does it figure out which OS and return the appropriate folders?
because it has changed compared to XP
user142019
hi
@VivianLobo Yes. That's the sole purpose of that func.
Done...used it...
sadly do not have a vm for the older machines to test
well will do something tomorrow
18:59
@ShotgunNinja Yes, but it's very crowded there. You go to the toilet, and when you come back, BOOM 128 new messages.
Thank you @RoelvanUden

« first day (921 days earlier)      last day (4256 days later) »