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00:00
I'm so hungry, I could suck off the dead animals after zoidberg has... no.
WTF is up with my interstuff? The girl+kitten has only just loaded ;(
Something is sucking off my bandwidth.
@user2511414 I could catch that.
I'm off to bed - too tired and emotional.
@user2511414 Throw her
@MartinJames It may be because Zoidberg just had anal sex with your bandwidth
@not-sehe My router has its ass firewalled.
00:17
Tighter feels nicer It sure feels like friday
Ell
Ell
Oh base
*gawd
@not-sehe My router is only six years old!
It's getting awfully reddit here.
@not-sehe Creepy
I plead temporary insanity: still trying to talk sense into this completely misguided individual:
I declared the rule in the same namespace and then assigned it an expression using %=. It did not compile — user2496553 23 mins ago
Was tempted to respond "No shit Sherlock". I kept it at "Cough." Not sure he'll pick it up
00:19
I plead ratted. I guess that's 'temporary insanity'.
@CatPlusPlus It looks as if her pussy doesn't smell right
@AshKetchum G'day. This may be a bad time to visit. There is a thread about raping underage routers.
My head is messed up. Going to sleep now....
@MartinJames It was consensual (there was an ACK)
Ooops. I think mini-tech just graduated from "rep"-whoring to the real deal:
I will do anything for 20 PayPal-dollars right now. Well, almost anything. One-off coding jobs, anyone? They don’t have to be quick.
Isn't he a mod these days?
00:26
lol
lol
Heh. As if pure coding was a significant part of software development!
I like to think it is. But these days I'm finding out it's also about bravery, humility and pure nerve.
Anyone can the fuck do coding. Delivering stuff that works is a different matter.
Coding stuff that works is coding
00:32
@not-sehe Yeah, if only customers could 100% specify everything, there would be no problem. There again, if they could do that, they could write their own apps.
Why mention specs all of a sudden :)
customers always make assumptions about what software dev is like and they tend to take things for granted, so they don't know how to specify apps for shit
@not-sehe 'cos I'm slaughtered. Plus I'm behind with docs on my current unicode shit.
@StackedCrooked yeah, that was fun
Which compiler? — hexafraction 12 secs ago
How does that have anything to do with the question
00:41
I misread the question.
I noticed
lol
user142019
> This page intentionally left blank
I hope my answer won't get downvoted by pedants
user142019
IT'S NOT BLANK ANYMORE YOU ASSHOLES
00:42
Ironically that would have more chances of not happening had I not linked it here
I feel like answering this properly would take a very long time.
It would
(i.e. it seems the OP doesn't understand a lot of concepts)
Well he's probably new to C++
I mean if you haven't heard of overloads it's understandable that it would look like "magic"
Benjamin's answer makes std::cout << 10 << "Hello"; look like magic too
00:50
@Rapptz I was tempted, so, here you go:
It's C++. Nothing more, nothing less. operator<< is a function and it takes parameters. The parameters have types. That's how 'it' knows. End of mystery. — not-sehe 15 secs ago
~12-20 seconds.
"properly"
It doesn't get more properly.
I meant in detail. It's a bit silly to attempt to do so anyway.
The guy needs a good read on the basics of the language, especially operator overloading.
Yes, I already said that.
00:51
@Rapptz Is my point. You're mistaking "properly" with "enough so the OP understands"
Or for anyone who doesn't really have a proper grasp at the language.
But like I said, silly to do so.
Shall we bother him with ADL? Say, why doesn't he need to do using std::operator<< before it works? <grin/> — not-sehe 5 secs ago
@Rapptz ^ lol. I'm in an evil mood. Still relevant, though :/
lol.
rapptz how are you feeling tonight?
I'm okay, stomach hurt after I showered which is weird.
00:58
well at least for me, if I hardly eat anything, I know I'mma feel better
yesterday was awful though, I think I had a bad reaction to several things at the same time
:(
I think I should go to the doctor soon.
yeah
You can edit you question. And add the 'mfc' tag. Also, yes this will make it impossible. I'm not sure whether that counts as "more difficult" — not-sehe 3 secs ago
that might help
My stomach is beginning to hurt after I eat almost constantly.
01:02
not that it really did for me
but it's nice to have someone try to help you
plus, you might not get fobbed off with antacids and weight loss for years like me
Well, I don't weigh a lot!
Plus truth be told I don't like doctors too much here.
So I never go.
http://stackoverflow.com/a/17386112/583833
Hahaha xD I created a monster
How's that a monster? That's just Boost Multi-Index
pff, that's nothing at all
Why doesn't std::map<int, bool> work for him?
01:07
because there are two ints he wants to use as keys
std::map<std::pair<int,int>, bool>?
and they are likely not in mutually exclusive sets
that's not ordered on each key independently
it's ordered on both keys.
@Rapptz Does C++11 specify comparison for pairs?
C++03 does
01:08
He wants to be able to lookup using either the first key or the second
@not-sehe It wouldn't offer the same semantics anyway.
Why wouldn't C++11?
Oh really
Well, I don't know what this is
@DeadMG "the same" - sloppy language :) And yes, I know. And I agree. That's not my point.
01:09
It's a link-only answer.
And a bad answer too
You can shorten this by doing namespace mul = boost::multi_index or something. — Rapptz 26 secs ago
Yeah I'm going to do that
(a) the linked article does entirely different things (ordering by composite keys != indexing by distinct keys) (b) link-only answers are not desired on SO — not-sehe 8 secs ago
you know
it's amazing, I played Metal Gear Solid again, and holy shit, you can't aim your weapon for shit
01:12
I'm arguing about whether a certain language behavior is a bug or not.
When in doubt: it is
The JASS programming language's precedence for everything is perfectly consistent with discrete mathematics precedence, except for AND/OR precedence
consider, without parentheses true or true and false
JASS evaluates that from left to right
Would you label this a 'bug' or a 'feature'?
The discussion is moot by definition, because the rules of discrete maths don't apply to a programming language, unless the specification says so
I'm really happy I remember boost::multi_index existed, I never used it before xD
@Magtheridon96 A specification
01:16
There is absolutely no specification for this language by the guy who made it
so yeah, it is moot
@Borgleader Using Boost Intrusive directly would be so much more awesome :)
@Magtheridon96 So, the implementation is the spec.
Boost Intrusive!?
Is that what they use in Boost::Serialization?
@not-sehe Why can't we all live in a happy mathy world? ;_;
You can only say the spec is "surprising" or perhaps even "inconsisten" (if other places do have other precedence rules within the same language)
@Magtheridon96 Because nobody would be able to tell we're here.
Yeah, I did say inconsistent, and because I really hate it, I took a step further and said "bug"
just like raw pointers
hurr durr
01:18
Go on. You'll feel better
I'm not the internet argument kind of person okay ;_;
user142019
mkdir -p src/{main,test}/scala is why I fucking love the command line.
@Borgleader Actually, not that I know. Could be. Anyways, Intrusive is several kinds of cool. But it's not for convenience. You'd use it when you absolutely must control memory layout and have multiple indexes at top-performance, AFAICT
@rightfold Yup. Do that all the time. Even nicer with things like mkdir -p {before,after}/test{1..99} && touch {before,after}/test{1..99}/{actual,expected}.bin
user142019
> To speed up your edit-compile-test cycle, you can ask sbt to automatically recompile or run tests whenever you save a source file.
user142019
This sounds like a nightmare for my CPU.
01:22
Depends on how many tests you have and how often you save
user142019
I save practically after every LOC I write.
user142019
Tests would constantly fail.
@rightfold I figure it could queue/throttle?
user142019
user142019
^ My favorite feature in Finder.
01:25
I was able to point out 1 offtopic point, 3 insults and 1 circular reasoning
I think I'm satisfied now ;__;
user142019
Wait.
@rightfold ewwww OSX
user142019
It should have a Merge button. :v
user142019
Normally there's a Merge button.
I like OS X, I don't care what people say /o/
01:26
I used OS X for a class (we had to code an iPad application)
I raged all fucking semester
user142019
Oh there's a duplicate file.
@rightfold Ya know. That's why I like CLI too: cp -auv (or cp -pru etc)
user142019
I hate how cp overwrites by fucking default.
I may be confusing the sensation of being in my happyplace with actually liking the OS though
user142019
It's a horrible bug.
01:28
@rightfold Wait, how can it effectively merge without a base revision? Two way merge is brainless
Everything is a bug
@rightfold So, what do you give std::copy? A fucken lambda to resolve conflicts, no?
user142019
@not-sehe The merge button appears if there are no files in A and B with the same name.
user142019
If you click it, it will simply merge A into B.
user142019
That is, merge by-file.
01:29
@rightfold Lol "Merging" directories. Rock star feature. I still like cp or rsync better
user142019
I'm going to use rsync to install Vim plug-ins from now on.
user142019
Hurray my first Scala program!
user142019
object Main {
  def main(args: Array[String]) = println("Hello, world!")
}
@rightfold You're 10 years behind. Use pathogen or vundle. With git
@rightfold gratz lol, I had did REST in scala for a class, that and used Lift to serve webpages (using snippets to modify the page server before sending it)
user142019
01:31
I'm learning Scala right now.
user142019
I'm writing a web server.
inb4 Hexapoda in Scala
user142019
@AshKetchum Yes.
user142019
@not-sehe :D
@not-sehe inb4 Hexapoda in <insert next language fad after Scala>
01:33
Hexapoda is still a bug tracker, or did you repurpose this name for something else?
@AshKetchum Do we really need rare species of oceanic squids to procreate by injecting sperm into an external 'pouch' near the oral orifice of the female?
@CatPlusPlus It's still vaporware. But it's in erlang, ruby, python, C++, node.js and more languages!
user142019
@CatPlusPlus Bug tracker with version control stuff.
user142019
I never finished it.
@not-sehe Are you Tony?
@rightfold Well, yeah, figured.
@CatPlusPlus No, I'm serious
user142019
01:34
@not-sehe Haskell, C and Python.
Oh I forgot those. Oh, I got one right. Did I win something?
user142019
Soon Available in D.
Hexapoda wants the D
2
user142019
@not-sehe Een klap voor je kop.
user142019
@Borgleader C++ wants the D.
01:35
@rightfold En dan ben ik nog niet klaar, want dan ...
user142019
Want dan krijg je er nog een!
party pooper
@AshKetchum Oh god. Last time someone said that, the room went berserk for an hour, and it ended in a ban for the user. Granted, the question was a little less inane that time
@rightfold C++ has Wide
ITT Wide owned by C++
nah
01:38
"not a little less inane" != "more stupid"
Anyways, good luck with that. I'm off to bed
user142019
Wide sucks.
user142019
C++ sucks D's D.
@AshKetchum The point is, we really don't have to.
cough VTC cough
user142019
auto C = 'C';
assert(C++ != 'D');
assert(C++ == 'C');
01:39
@Borgleader Flagged as spam instead. I don't have privs to VTC
Oh thats good too :)
You may, though that'd be silly.
@not-sehe Sure you do. :v:
@CatPlusPlus Nah. The bother. It's only spam. Flagging was good enough
-1
A: What downsides is defining variables just before first time use it?

davidstarHaving all variables of the same scope in the same location of the code is easier to see what variables you have and what data type there are. You don't have to look through the entire code to find it.

^ awesome reasoning. Shall we guess, javascript, php or C?
If the code is verbatim then C#.
01:46
Well, make all your variables global and sort them by name. No, by type. Wait, what's the recommended order? — not-sehe 10 secs ago
@rightfold I'm pretty sure the second assert would fail.
user142019
@Rapptz Execute them in their own threads and make C thread-local.
user142019
@not-sehe PHP requires $ before variable names.
@rightfold Duh. I meant the author of the answer.
More importantly, the loops do totally different things! The second loop will end up with total equal to 99999not-sehe 8 secs ago
user142019
> In D, a Voldemort type is a type that cannot be directly named outside of the scope it's declared in, but code outside the scope can still use this type by taking advantage of D's static type inference.
user142019
01:55
Heh, nice name.
In case you care about the rep, you might consider deleting the answer :/ — not-sehe 3 secs ago
user142019
Will C++ also get this when you can use auto on abitrary functions?
Good question. In a way, it already could in c++03 (if RTTI counts). But that's not static type inference, so, yeah, that could happen.
Will be a nice border case to trip up the MSVC compiler with <grin/>
Awwww yiiisss I was able to plug "The art of readable code" in an answer. Its a really good book.
user142019
Well, I guess it's possible with C++11.
02:01
@Borgleader Says the guy who "created a monster" just minutes ago :)
@rightfold Hmmm?
@not-sehe Why do you think I need the book ;)
user142019
Oh wait, nevermind. Requires language extension.
@rightfold The famous [] { struct X {}; return X(); } kind of extension?
user142019
Yes.
user142019
02:02
-> is missing.
Not really, some compiler already implement this. It wouldn't be c++11 for sure, but I didn't claim anything in that area
user142019
I mean, -> is missing so it's non-standard.
surprisingly, it's Visual Studio which is already more permissive about some kinds of lambda
user142019
clang allows lack of -> in lambda expressions.
@rightfold It's not as much -> is missing, rather it is lambda body is not a single return statement
02:04
well, I don't care about Facebook and I don't care about how original he was in creating it
so, none.
what are your thoughts on not constantly pestering us with completely inane questions?
26 mins ago, by Ash Ketchum
you really just had to say yes or no to answer the question, what the heck
user142019
Anyone into a toothpaste sandwich?
oh, I see.
well then I'mma get the bin button charged and ready
@rightfold Thank you I'm fine
look
you obviously didn't notice this, but most of the other guys in here are way nicer than me
so kindly don't waste my time trying to appeal to me because that never, ever works
too late
@Tenev Code tags using [tag:c++] => .
Told you I was a horrible person.
@Tenev You don't take a hint, huh
02:12
Because I'm a horrible, mean person who sucks (cue related crying)
@DeadMG No you're not.
@EtiennedeMartel Well, I think it's undeniable that I am pretty ruthless about hitting the bin button and I laugh at their tears.
@DeadMG And I really like apple juice.
which probably qualifies as "horrible" in the context of "A chatroom on the Interwebs"
In fact I'm gonna go drink some right now.
02:14
also, I thought that you thought I was a terrible person?
huh
now I feel kinda disappointed
I see you more as one of those pseudo-cynics who try to look like a jerk to seem cool.
now I definitely feel disappointed.
you're talking to the same guy that you accuse of re-defining everything under the sun to suit him ignoring all convention, and claiming he wants to seem cool?
take hint plix
I think that's a good way to separate the run-time encoding interface from the not-run-time encoding interface.
... I think.
02:18
Bin.
@ThePhD /cc @StackedCrooked
Stupid.
Haha, I was in the process of writing "Are you really trying to get binned"
@AshKetchum Your tears give me erections.
Anyways, I have annoyed you enough today.
Time to move forward and go do something else somewhere else.
Not sure how to react to that.
02:20
@ThePhD So when are you going to submit another purrequest for Wide?
I have stuff that needs doing y'know
I'm trying to get a good reflection system to work first.
Then I'm going to attempt to make that available in Wide.
... Reflection is in the plans for Wide, right? >_>
Because if it's not, I'm totally jumping ship. D:
yep
Okay.
in fact, I intend that for Wide, you can reflect on C++ types
Also, at the moment, how do you compile and build Wide in Visual Studio?
Is there a Platform Toolset?
02:22
with the "Build" button.
So... F7 works?
er, I think that I just coded an explicit operator bool, so you might need the CTP
@ThePhD I have no idea what that hotkey does.
I only code in the CTP.
@DeadMG Build.BuildSolution is the command.
then yes
Can I make a Wide project?
02:23
nope
Oh. Wait, then how does it work? D:
oh, do you mean "Build the Wide compiler" or "Build Wide code"?
Oh, sorry. Build Wide Code, not the compiler.
that's not currently possible
Maybe I should make it possible.
02:24
would be fine by me
I already have a VS addin which I have set up to have access to the exposed CAPI
but really, there's a lot of other intermediate things to do first
I've only made very small progress on fixing the parser to be suitable for use
and the AST and analyzer need substantial refactoring too
;~;
ASTs are scary.
the parser is scarier
AST is easy
Parsers are scary, ASTs are simple.
my error handling code for operators in the global scope went from "Throw if not expected type" to about 30 lines.
and that was a relatively simple case.
plus there's a bunch of outlining persistence stuff that needs work
0
Q: Can't name my C++ static functions with similar names

rodrigoalvesI have a C++ class where I declare two static methods that have (and they should have) similar names, but definitely not the same name. So I did this: #include <cstdio> struct Cat; class Cat { public: int age; Cat * mother; Cat * father; Cat(){}; ~Cat(){}; static Cat*...

Dafuq struct Cat; followed by class Cat; I cant believe the compiler isnt shitting brix about this
02:30
I think it's only a warning on all major compilers
VS I know for sure only warns
welp I'mma go to bed
wish me luck with the sleepings
'night :) may your innards leave you the fuck alone
@Borgleader Yep, just a warning.
I have a feeling though that it can't resolve which of the two Cat types it's supposed to use for the static functions though.
It's the same type.
But either way his explanation is he wanted to have member variables to type Cat so he made the Cat struct
so its useless he can just remove it
02:42
Class and struct differ only in default access. It's not the issue.
Most likely though the error is in code he didnt post
Well, yes, Sherlock.
The real problem is with Cat.
It's always with Cat.
(Fun thing is you don't which Cat I'm talking about)
s//know/
Lol the twat renamed all his code
the real function name was "delete"
way to fucking use a reserved keyword
:laffo:
I sure ain't voting that up.
user142019
02:51
Phew. Almost hit ⌘R instead of ⌘T on YouTube.
Well I just voted the question down, he completely obscured the issue by renaming everything
user142019
Hitting ⌘Q instead of ⌘W is also very fun.

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