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02:00
Ugh, my UCD processor is so fucking slow.
What's UCD?
@R.MartinhoFernandes The C# program?
Yes.
Been at it for 10 minutes now :(
@Jefffrey Unicode Character Database.
Lol. There's a pretty obvious troll on Haacked's blog comments: haacked.com/archive/2013/10/21/argue-well-by-losing.aspx (look for "Leslie Dawson")
And I have no progress reporting, so no fucking clue how long it'll take.
I should go to sleep.
02:02
"When it's ready"
> Avoid thoughts that produce self-doubt.
@Jefffrey Anxiety is real. Therefore, it doesn't really require rationalizing. Just realize it's there. Every once in a while. When you do your monthly introsepction
That is going to be hard.
For some, yes. Not for puppies
@R.MartinhoFernandes Breakpoint :P
02:04
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't remember it taking so long
the lounge's asleep! guess I should go to bed, too
I'm not asleepo
It's not.
chat was lying to me
it said the last message was posted 2 hours ago.
sehe don't you have a job or something to do go in the morning? :P
02:05
and it still does. wtf
@melak47 lolno
@DeadMG coredump, gdb (has mono "plugins" for pretty printing CLR stacks), pstack etc.
@DeadMG No. Though, I do have kids. I might go to bed anyways
@melak47 cookies/timezone mishap
02:07
@Jefffrey no, because I'm going to bed :p
let's see...today's wednesday. ugh, calculus II tutorial later. >_>
night everyone
> These rules govern what happens when you have a reference to a reference type, which previously was illegal.
By this, does it mean like a pointer being **?
@Pawnguy7 C#?
Huh. Ever single tag on [Meta.SO] would be a right?
what tag was removed?
@melak47 C++. rvalue references
02:12
oh lol.
@DeadMG [resolved]
@Pawnguy7 No.
@ScottW Month of, actually. New job starts Nov 1st
@Pawnguy7 wut
@Pawnguy7 Imagine std::add_reference<std::add_reference<T>::type>::type.
02:13
@Pawnguy7 I hope it is about reference collapsing, instead of "rvalue refs". Because, otherwise: burn that tutorial/guide
@sehe I believe I recognize that sentence as being written by myself.
in that case
imagine template<typename T> void f(T& t); f<int&>();.
@DeadMG That's what I reckon. And I reckon you were splaining reference collapsing :/
pretty fuckin' sure.
02:15
That was right after, yes.
I meant to say, it was related to them.
I think?
yep.
perfect forwarding is based on reference collapsing.
Instead of continually adding on indirection?
We have multi-star programming for that!
Or std::reference_wrapper<std::reference_wrapper<T>> (okay, that's gross and inaccurate. But funny)
@Pawnguy7 Yep. You can't point or refer to a reference.
I was wondering because, I often pass something by reference, which then passes it by reference again. I am doubtful that was only possible in C++11, though. Is it that the rules were... expanded?
02:18
That's not the same as indirecting to reference.
@Pawnguy7 That's unrelated. You're saying you're passing a T& as a T&. Which is,... passing the reference by value
@Pawnguy7 Reference collapsing was introduced in C++11, but C++03 didn't really need it.
@sehe programmer ********************************* sehe;
template argument deduction could deduce it so that there wouldn't be an error.
it would only happen if you explicitly tried to create that type.
@JerryCoffin Thank you. I feel so appreciated now
02:19
say, through something like std::add_reference<T&>::type.
it's more useful now in C++11 because perfect forwarding depends on reference collapsing.
This project is so mindbogglingly boring.
@sehe Always glad to help. :-)
mindgogglingly gory
Suddenly: Night all
I'm making a site I couldn't care less about for a project I couldn't care less about.
@sehe G'night. [Was it something I said?]
02:21
@sehe Passing by reference is akin to continually passing the same T * const?
@Pawnguy7 Give or take.
Under what circumstances do you get a T& T& -> T&?
when you do f<int&>.
it's not a very common use.
but you only get an rvalue reference when both sides are rvalue reference.
I cannot seem to picture this.
Is it something along the lines of.
A T &, where T is also a T &?
02:36
posted on October 22, 2013 by Ankit Asthana

Introduction As a part of the VS2013 preview release the 'Performance and Diagnostics Hub' was introduced. The Profile Guided Optimization (PGO) tool is a new performance optimization tool  that integrates with 'Performance and Diagnostic Hub'. The tool is not a part of the out of the box install of Visual Studio 2013 but can be downloaded and installed from VSGallery (Download

@Pawnguy7 Yep.
25 mins ago, by DeadMG
@Pawnguy7 Imagine std::add_reference<std::add_reference<T>::type>::type.
Does std::forward not use some kind of move?
not if the source is an lvalue.
then it returns an lvalue.
it's a conditional move.
According to an SO answer, it is syntax sugar for static_cast<T&&>(t)
No, that's std::move
02:39
not exactly.
and also that's std::move, I think.
27
A: How does std::forward work?

XeoFirst, let's take a look at what std::forward does according to the standard: §20.2.3 [forward] p2 Returns: static_cast<T&&>(t) (Where T is the explicitly specified template parameter and t is the passed argument.) Now remember the reference collapsing rules: TR R T& & -> T& // lv...

the long and short of std::forward is that you give it the T that was deduced, and it casts the argument into an lvalue or rvalue, depending on whether or not the argument is an lvalue or rvalue.
@Pawnguy7 Yeah that's std::forward.
Oh move also removes reference
std::move is static_cast<typename std::remove_reference<T>::type&&>(t).
02:41
Yeah that makes sense
@Pawnguy7 Remember that if T is T&, then that'd be static_cast<T&>(t), after reference collapsing.
so that isn't really a move at all.
The way I am thinking about this is, you pass a T. Not a reference, just a T, as if you just constructed it. And that, if you have a parameter that is a T&&, then the identifier refers to an instance of it that was move constructed.
wat no.
You read fast :D
how the object was constructed is absolutely and completely irrelevant.
let's say that you have template<typename T> void f(T&&);.
02:46
I thought that was what it meant by a compile-time branch.
then if you do f(expr), T changes, depending on whether expr is lvalue or rvalue (let's ignore const for now).
Stupid ass Omnibar doing searches on perfectly valid addresses
if expr is an lvalue, T becomes T&, and reference collapsing is applied to make the argument T& as well.
Say, foo(x(stuff)) calls the T&&, whereas x(stuff); foo(x) calls the T&
if expr is an rvalue, T is T, which gives T&&, so it's a named rvalue ref (which is an lvalue).
so when you pass T to std::forward, it says, "Oh hey, if it's a T&, then we know this shit was really an lvalue"
@Pawnguy7 No.
whether or not it's in a variable is really irrelevant, except that named values can never be rvalues so you'd pretty much always get T& from that.
all that matters is the value category of expr if you do f(expr).
and it can be lvalue if expr is a variable, or a function call that returns an lvalue reference, stuff like that.
02:48
I meant it specifically in terms of an lvalue vs an rvalue, that was the first thing that came to mind. A common case, I would think.
The... reason for needing them in the first place, correct?
As one expression would end up copying something that is going to die anyway, so you may as well steal it.
nah
well.
I think their very original purpose was that an "lvalue" was something that could be on the left-hand-side of an assignment.
that was way back in B or something, I think.
The reason for rvalue references, I mean.
well, rvalue references is perfect forwarding and move semantics, they serve both purposes.
you'd want perfect forwarding even without move semantics because you get the same problem with cv-qualifiers.
You say if the expression was an lvalue, then it is a T&, and thus gets collapsed, with T&& T& -> T&, But... isn't it T&& T?
wat, no.
that would give T&&, which cannot bind to an lvalue.
this would defeat the purpose of perfect forwarding.
02:53
Apparently my incompetence is measured in "wat, no"'s/second :D
Why did I choose per second :\
Doesn't std::move take a T and return a T&&?
people said that their code quality at Microsoft was measured in WTFs when Bill Gates reviewed it
@Pawnguy7 No.
@DeadMG That was where I got it from, yes.
that would not be very useful.
move has two overloads, one for T& and one for T&&.
the first casts to remove_reference<T>::type&&
and the second is just cast to T&&.
I cannot understand how you get a T&.
the compiler gives you one when you pass an lvalue.
02:57
Specifically when passing to something taking an rvalue?
a deduced rvalue reference.
yes.
Hmm. So even casts can't beat reference collapsing.
of course not
(So I think there's a semi-pun in there...)
Seeing as how it collapses to a reference, don't you still need to copy it to pass it to the function? (the pointer underneath, or whatever you want to picture it as).
02:59
you need to copy the underlying pointer (assuming the compiler did not optimize it out).
@DeadMG Then why would std::move require two overloads? (Meaning, why would it use remove_reference for the T& version?)
but that has an essentially meaningless cost.
@MarkGarcia Dunno. I'm not even sure that it does. It's been a long time for me and I saw several pre-final implementations. It doesn't really matter how it's implemented anyway.
the core is that you give it a something, and it gives you an rvalue ref that refers to that something, even if it was an lvalue.
that's all that matters.
[Testing completed. All tests passed (237608 assertions in 26 test cases)]
SLEEEEEEP
237k assertions!? tell me you didn't write all those by hand :P
Fucking 5am. I'm going to sleep too. G'night.
03:01
He's a robot
Ugh I'm stupid
9
@Borgleader I stole the official conformance tests.
I had @ResponseBody on a method and I wonder why it doesn't resolve to the template
> Probably the reason everyone in solo Q dies of cancer.
03:12
Lol look at those top 2 questions: crypto.stackexchange.com/?tab=active
So Boost 1.54 is broken when used with VS2013.
Are you sure it's supported?
Oh there's beta 1.55. Gotta try it.
doubt it
@MarkGarcia I wish that was news.
03:16
@EtiennedeMartel I'm sure that it isn't. :P It's been thoroughly discussed in the mailing.
@MarkGarcia What's new in it?
@Borgleader Don't know yet. And boost's website is loading very slow in mine.
I refuse to star Cat's message. I miss having witty programming jokes on the side bar.
03:37
Someone took "convention over configuration" too seriously and even if you explicitly say you want something done this way (but it violates convention) then it doesn't work
This is not documented
Fucking Spring
lol. STL's been hunting for VC bugs in Boost's mailing list.
@MarkGarcia He could try responding to the one I sent him
@DeadMG Lemme guess: a bug concerning templates. :P
That may be one of the lesser of his concerns, as I've been experiencing more and more compiler implosions as I've used variadics lately.
03:50
yeah, but the compiler isn't his job.
Oh right. At least he could ask Jonathan. :)
@DeadMG lol. Spuriously asking questions for fun?
I have a question, why bother learning the answer for myself when I can get some shmuck to do the work for me in return for imaginary internet points?
Because knowledge is the greatest good.
After imaginary internet points, of course.
2 levels, 4 bedroom, 1 study 3 bedroom granny flat @_@
what does your granny use all those bedrooms for?
03:56
sure, and I can get other people to give it to me in exchange for imaginary internet points
@nightcracker precisely ...
Granny has to get off too, I guess.
I think it is an excuse for a 2nd dwelling
also, I find parsing the Standard for myself to be laborious and error-prone.
Granny & her 3 grandpa lovers/toy boys :x
04:05
04:48
mm food
lol
TIL
I see.
Tired
Got no work done today
biz meeting != work
05:11
Wait. I made much trouble making Boost.Filesystem to work in VS2013, when it already has filesystem! Dammit!
@MarkGarcia Even VS2012 had filesystem ;P
@Borgleader Yeah... :(
@ScottW Because I've already gone reading and tinkering through Boost source code, whose encryption is almost next to GCC headers. :(
not negative work ... just not enough work
I have successfully taught one of the baby magpies to eat rice today
yeah
rice & bread ... but pies prefer meat
going to upload a magpie feeding video soon
low resolution :(
Oo uploading a high resolution one
higher resolution
:D
increased by 2 O_O
haha, now they (the magpie family) are eating the sultana bread
05:48
lol Grand Rapids. I wonder if this is real
Only learned this song recently.
I got the album Blue Lines because there was some kind of anniversary release.
And I like it :D
is is_arithmetic<T> defined as is_floating_point<T> || is_integral<T>?
nope.. doesn't have to be
that sucks.
Did you decide on a language yet?
And yeah.
@Rapptz Could be. And I think the standard doesn't give the implementation for those traits.
@MarkGarcia It's not required to be defined as that but anyone who doesn't is a dick.
@ScottW Eh.
not worth it if you don't know it
it's a different paradigm too
but binding is pretty neat
I'm okay with C++, Haskell, Python or C# so :P
any of those is fine by me
so go for something else
C++ is decent. Don't have to make everything a class. Python is okay too but it's dynamically typed so it's kinda meh. C# is decent too, at least it isn't Java.
06:20
And then you have Dart, where you can have the best from all the worlds.
And cry, since you have to put all different kinds of paradigms together.
I forgot Dart existed.
user1804599
@Rapptz Meh null.
@not-rightfold ?
user1804599
> C#
Oh.
I don't like checking everything for null. It's like, my frequent cause of crashes in C# lol
I'm not used to it I guess.
06:24
Whether or not you need to check for null should be well documented.
user1804599
Which it’s not in many cases.
user1804599
I want string? and Regex? and Socket?. :<
user1804599
And initialization lists.
In C++ I started using the convention of always passing or returning a reference if it can't be null. The few cases were pointers are used now really stand out and I know I need to check for null.
It's working pretty well.
user1804599
boost::optional<T&>
06:26
@not-rightfold C# doesn't have string??
@not-rightfold I don't think that works.
user1804599
@Rapptz No; ? works only with value types.
@not-rightfold That's actually forbidden in std::optional iirc.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Pretty sure boost::optional is specialized for references.
@StackedCrooked It does. And I've found it useful in some cases.
user1804599
06:26
@Rapptz Then I’ll keep using boost::optional.
I don't get why you would want an optional reference. What advantage does it provide over a regular nullable pointer?
Apparently it works.
user1804599
For one, you can’t accidentally do pointer arithmetic on it.
My trust in boost optional got a severe hit after I introduced a bug caused by unintentional use of non-explicit constructor.
Hm. T* const might work depending on how it's used.
06:28
@Rapptz I've once used it where I want to return a reference or a copy.
Both are optional.
user1804599
Return a reference to a copy!
anyway I've never accidentally done pointer arithmetic.
user1804599
flyx, Stuttgart, Germany
2.1k 7 28
user1804599
06:32
lol
@BoltClock lol, I saw that too.
O_____O
why was it deleted?
Beats me. I didn't see your answer until just now
how is it not relevant
I said the other C++ room would be inactive because people who usually hang around in this lounge have certain type of personality (not good or bad, just ... is ...)
was I wrong?
06:43
@Xeo Sort of. I've seen some 'list' or list-like code that I know I can't translate to ranges because they don't have a counter-part with just one type. I do have things like a range of 0-to-1 that's useful to mimic things like l >>= \a -> if someLogic a then [] else [b] (nevermind filtering, this is more general), but outside of that context it's not as useful.
Still though, this prompted me to reinvent Boost.TypeErasure so yes, I can erase ranges.
I don't have interesting examples in the unit tests but I did play with it a little and it can be used to naively translate things like Linqy or listy code.
In cases similar to the OP's though I try to avoid restricting range types so drastically. So I'd return the filtered range and let the caller deal with it, rather than have the one 'universal' range (because yeah, that way lies either erasure or falling back to containers).
Chat went down for me for a few minutes
I hate unresolved overloaded function type errors.
I hate unresolved overloaded function type errors.
You mean ambiguous overloads?
06:54
Better. :P
@StackedCrooked Nah, I meant the ones specific to templated functions.
News flash: life isn't fair. — BoltClock's a Unicorn 52 secs ago
@MarkGarcia Silence them :)
functors solve the issue I guess
@Pawnguy7 the thing is sometimes you want to hide as much syntax as possible.
06:56
ignore the cruddy std::bind usage I just wanted to save typing :(

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