@Questionare232 I can't help but notice you can hardly type a full sentence. I can reassure you there is no limit on chat messages (well, not that low anyways) :)
@BryanEdds Ups and downs. I'll get there. Case of the head aches right now
There is a problem with the inventory.spoiltquantity variable, when i run the cash register it copies the quantity and what its sposed to do is only display the quantity of items discarded not sold..
sleep(3);
printf("This program is optimized for Fullscreen mode.\n Press 'alt + enter' to go Fullscreen.\n\n\n");
sleep(2);
printf("Program will now load. Please be patient..");
sleep(3);
Awesome. I remember seeing code like that in ~1990
ok no problem, it won't matter but here is the issue anyways. The issue is that the the inventory.spoiltquantity variable is supposed to only show the quantity of the item that is disposed but when I run the cashregister, the amount sold is copied to the spoiltquantity for some reason that i have spent hours looking for
@Questionare232 I can only offer the overwhelming likelihood of Undefined Behaviour. You'd need to at least provide the input to reproduce the behaviour.
@sehe - I clean up a lot of naming as you suggested, tho some of the names are still a bit longish, perhaps due to my lingering paranoia about C++ resolution rules.
@sehe - hope you can get around to tackling the UB when you get a chance :)
@BryanEdds oh yeah, by all means, use proper namespaces and un-ADL-sensitive names (prolly best to not name all your functions get and swap). But beyond that, namespaces are your friend. It looks much lighter already
@BryanEdds It's on the list. But head aches are plaguing me. So, likely weekend it's gonna be
I just whipped up a Makefile because the library author had neglected any non-MSVC platform. Aaaand I wanted to be able to switch compilers at leisure.
@BryanEdds Nah. You're talking about vexing parse and I mention name shadowing which plays into this. The compiler, when seeing int something(thing); can see a MVP iffthing is a variable that happens to alias a type.
@BryanEdds I'm getting loadsa errors from stdlib functions caused by their usage of var and val as verbol names and their apparent inclusion after the #defineition
// Assert a type is a container.
#define constrain_as_container(type) \
do { \
struct tag {}; \
static_assert(!std::is_same<typename type::size_type, tag>::value, #type " needs to be a container."); \
} while(false)
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@caps It's not a feeling. It's a fact. In a better language/better world the compiler would induce the room for optimization (it can't always know, I know). This piece sums up the argument: josephmansfield.uk/articles/need-value-pass-by-value.html
For the rest yes, practically, because of the limitations of the language and a (healthy?) preoccupation with mutable types yes the optimization used to be often required.
However, the situation has become MUCH less accute with move semantics (and especially noexcept), so the optimization has gone back to being premature much more often again.
All the while, even if warranted, the optimization was an optimization with a cost in complexity: passing around references has inherent lifetime issues.
With GSL's explicit ownership annotations (or Rust-like semantics) we can meet in the middle. Hopefully
@sehe Puppy made a weaker/poorer form of that argument. Other loungers persuaded me I should stick with Herb's advice (only take value arguments when you will be moving/copying anyway).
@caps It's really not that difficult. There are conflicting goals: first is correct expresion of intent (pass by value UNLESS you need a reference. Duh. It's much safer, easier to reason about and the compiler may generate equivalent (or superior!) code).
The conflicting goal is real life performance. In which case const& can be good to facilitate non-movables. The onus is on the programmer to be disciplined about the lifetime of the received reference (IOW: treat it as a value or as a reference depending on intent)
It makes perfect sense to be conflicted. The language itself is conflicted here.
It just seems like it makes an assumption that the parameters will be moveable. How is passing by value superior when you're passing in something you don't intend to move-from?
copy elision?
@sehe I guess that's what you're getting at here...
That is, presuming you mean "non-movables" to include types that are moveable but, in a particular instantiation, should not be moved-from (i.e. they need to hold on to their internal state).
The other problem is that it puts the onus on the callers to write std::move when they have a perfectly moveable object (i.e. don't care about its internal state after the call) that is owned by the local stack.
You seem to be proposing a wholesale replacement of const T& with T (or probably in my case const T) except when immutable reference is actually the desired semantic.
Again, with library-grade code there is a lot to be said to take generic arguments by const&. Just make sure to document the semantics ("optimized" value semantics or reference semantics)
@caps I don't seem to say anything of the kind. Reread everything I said and you'll see that I don't.
(The fact it seems so to you proves your bias - it simple surprise at work)
@caps So you keep repeating that half. And you keep expecting me to repeat the other half too.
I'm stating that semantically passing by value is (obviously) safer. And in the presence of optimizing compilers / move semantics it might be equivalent / better performant. That's all. That doesn't mean that pass by const& is not useful (I've repeated this at least 3 or 4 times with useful scenarios)
@caps Basically. And I wonder what the "if correctness is your goal" is about. When is it not?
Don't underestimate the confusion that references cause for optimizers. As long as everything gets inlined, it's usually ok. But once aliasing rules are in the picture, optimizations are toast. Passing by value can be surprisingly fast.
@caps And there are situations where you have to cater for the general case and const& can be the best there. Also, you can weigh the likely costs (cf. the inlining factor I just mentioned)
Compilers will have to consider the possibility of similarly-typed references to refer to the same object via different variables. This kills optimization opportunities big time (since additional load/store cycles have to be done just in case)