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user3010322
18:00
If you can afford to default-construct stuff, construct with size and then resize to 0.
@CatPlusPlus shared_ptr is really for pointers, though :S
A shared_ptr<T> always holds a T*. A unique_ptr<T, D> always holds a D::pointer.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which raises the question: why?
I liked The Verve.
@R.MartinhoFernandes D::pointer being a placeholder to "the thing that D deletes?"
it doesn't necessarily delete anything, it might even allocate :P
@StackedCrooked Yes.
user784668
18:03
D::pointer has to be a pointer, unfortunately.
@Fanael it was allowed in c++98, and I'm not aware of a change in C++11 forbidding it
user784668
You can use it to deal with Windows HANDLEs, but not with POSIX ints.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, unique_ptr first checks ptr != nullptr.
It has to fulfill the NullablePointer requirements, but doesn't have to be a pointer.
@Fanael So what.
unique_ptr is not a pointer and yet unique_ptr<int>() != nullptr is a valid expression.
18:04
@Fanael is this also the case with shared_ptr?
0
Q: C++ error 'else' without a previous 'if'

user3377924Im new to C++ and have been working on an assignment I keep getting the error message: [Error] 'else' without a previous 'if' for line 69. the first else. WHat I need this to do is when I put in the author level (A,B, or C) it can calculate the persons pay based on how many words they have wrot...

holy mother of if/else
user784668
@StackedCrooked No idea, I don't use shared_ptr.
I remember seeing shared_ptr being (ab)used as a scope-guard technique.
shared_ptr<void> ptr(nullptr, [](void*){ scope_exit_stuff(); });
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right, that's what I mean.
user784668
Can you define operator!=(int, std::nullptr_t)?
user1804599
18:06
Unit testing CSS is so fun.
@Borgleader Yeah - I would have used tables 'cos the ugliness.
@MartinJames My eyes are still bleeding T_T
whoops, not that one
@StackedCrooked Robot's Law of Scope Guards: Everything that can be abused as a scope guard will be. Scope guards not exempt.
@Borgleader I closed it quickly after the first couple scroll-down clicks, so my eyesight still OK-ish.
18:08
Why would you need to modify this? o.o — Borgleader 40 secs ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes It wouldn't have to, though
Cant wait for an explanation on this one
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, it sucks.
user3010322
Whoa.
user3010322
THat sanitary pad guy from india is a badass.
18:09
And now there's a proposal for those scope guard abuse incentives.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Which one?
I mean, why would one use code when you could use data tables that could be loaded at startup? Rebuild for every change - no thanks.
Sorry, I meant "RAII wrappers".
std::make_scoped_resource(_open(pszPath, O_WRONLY), _close, -1);
Just wrong.
Totally wrong.
And I'm not even seeing the underscores from here.
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes O_WRONGLY
badumtss
user3010322
18:11
Ahahahaha.
user3010322
That's actually kind of like my "handle" class.
Then your "handle" class is just wrong.
Totally wrong.
And I'm not even seeing the underscores from here.
Wait, that last one was not meant to be there.
user3010322
My handle class is right. Totally right~
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why?
@ThePhD "I just don't get RAII." is what I read.
18:12
It's almost like part of bracket except it doesn't fit anything in the slightest
user3010322
handle<HWND, hwnd_deleter> // works for me~
@ThePhD That's totally unlike that thing above.
@Fanael The client has to provide the destructor at every call site.
user784668
@ThePhD Is that a renamed unique_ptr?
user3010322
I presume make_scoped_resource is analogous to make_shared or make_unique
@ThePhD Except the client has to provide the destructor at every call site.
user3010322
18:14
If you needed a destructor or to make a destructor for something like make_shared, doesn't it share the exact same problem?
It's a primitive for resource providers at best, but that's already part of the language so
I would assume the destructor is specific to the scope.
I'm not at all sure that I've ever shared Windows handles anyway.
@StackedCrooked That almost never happens
@StackedCrooked I would assume the destructor is specific to the resource.
18:15
@R.MartinhoFernandes in that case yeah
user3010322
Well, just make your destructor stateless and default-constructible and you're good to go.
Also it'd be much better idea to add finally to the language to handle that case
@StackedCrooked That's the overwhelming if not the only case.
user1804599
I’m rounding to an even number with n & ~(1 >>> 0) but there should be a nicer way to do it.
I guess make_scoped_resource inherently sucks then due to "resource" in its name.
user3010322
18:15
If t needs state, it should all be obtainable through the resource/handle/pointer.
@rightfold n - (n % 2)
user3010322
Wrap that up in a function and you're good to go.
user1804599
@CatPlusPlus Hmm, nice. :)
Basically, my point is that auto&& iFileDesc = std::make_scoped_resource(_open(pszPath, O_WRONLY), _close, -1); should not be a thing. The right thing is: ns::file_descriptor fd = ns::open_file(...);
Also, ugh, I just noticed the Hungarian notation too.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes That doesn't mean std::make_scoped_resource shouldn't exist at all.
user1804599
18:17
Also ((n / 2) | 0) * 2. :P
user3010322
In fact, ns::open_file can be implemented in terms of std::make_scoped_resource.
For that matter, it can be implemented in terms of unique_ptr too.
It shouldn't exist because either the better tools already exist or the better tools should exist instead.
user3010322
unique_ptr requires overriding typedefs and writing a deleter manually. std::scoped_resource doesn't seem to need that requirement: it works with pre-existing functions that take T and do something to it.
user3010322
So, it's less work and it generalizes the concept of a std::unique_ptr. I certainly don't mind that idea.
@ThePhD That doesn't make a big case for the function.
user3010322
18:22
This could be better solved if static functions could be used as template arguments
user3010322
With nasty decltype and passing in the function pointer, yeah.
user3010322
But that's ugly and kind of a nuisance.
Pretty much the only argument I ever see is "less keystrokes when I need to write this here bad code".
@ThePhD That's the same thing the scoped_resource thing does.
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes. "This could be better solved..." refers to a solution outside of scoped_resource or unique_ptr.
user3010322
18:25
std::unique_ptr<HANDLE, decltype( &find_handle_close )> arf ( myhandle, &find_handle_close ); // Doesn't quite work, need to override pointer typedef in deleter...
Which is something you do once and call it a day.
The author of that proposal even mentioned that OMG I have to create a class.
user3010322
Or several bunches of times, a la OpenGL or many other APIs which use a singular type (GLuint or related) but have multipler deleter functions.
@ThePhD Yes, and then you can call it a day.
You don't have to keep make_scoped_bullshit all over.
user3010322
I'm not arguing for make_scoped_bullshit right now.
user3010322
I'm arguing for std::unique_ptr<GLuint, glDeleteBuffer>
user3010322
18:27
where glDeleteBuffer is a function.
What I'd have is unique_resource that's a non-constructible abstract primitive from which you derive new resources, and unique_ptr built on that
@ThePhD Still puts the responsibility for the destructor in the client. Bad.
user3010322
? I don't see what you mean.
Passing a dtor function to unique_ptr ctor is still a non-feature, because it's the responsibility of resource provider
(And it being a part of template signature is just dumb)
user3010322
18:29
glDeleteBuffer is a function -- a static function. It's address doesn't change. It can be default-constructed and assumed at compile time. The default syntax would be...
user3010322
std::unique_ptr<GLuint, glDeletebuffer> arf( my_buffer_integer );
The point is that you shouldn't have to say glDeleteBuffer ever
user3010322
It's necessary for APIs that use a singular handle type.
user3010322
And seeing as these APIs are prevalent and not dying anytime soon, the people who write wrappers on top of them would like the tools to deal with them, so other people don't have to.
@ThePhD Doesn't fix the fundamental mistake in d::make_scoped_resource(_open(pszPath, O_WRONLY), _close, -1); which is the fact that _close is right there in client code.
@ThePhD It's a small annoyance.
18:30
Note that we're talking about client code, not internals of the resource provider
It's really really minor.
> I like this game very much but it shouldn't be used by the coin system.
It's like "OMG annoying" writes class in five minutes "Ok, let's do something real now".
Client code should never need to know that either glGenBuffers or glDeleteBuffer exists
^ A review we got for one of our games.
user3010322
18:32
u.u I'm not arguing for d::make_scoped_resource, I don't care about that. The syntax is wonky and I don't really mind or care for it. It's just a generalized unique_ptr. The same problem happens everywhere where you don't write a wrapper deleter / class to do the work. It's always going to be a problem. So the solution is "write a class".
user3010322
That doesn't mean scoped_resource by itself is a bad idea, just std::make_scoped_resource is a bad idea and should have the same limitations as make_shared and make_unique.
@ThePhD You're arguing for something that shares the same fundamental mistakes, though.
Yes, the solution is "write a class". That's how RAII works.
user3010322
No, the thing I'm arguing for puts the deleter in the type declaration and instead of demanding a pointer typedef, goes on the assumption that what you put in the type declaration ( e.g. std::scoped_resource<T>) doesn't need the class to add the * to it for you. That's all scoped_resource is doing: taking away the * assumption.
user3010322
18:34
I should split that up.
@Borgleader Range for would be readable, both of these are dumb and repeat the types
user3010322
1. scoped_resource is good because it puts the deleter in a type declaration and doesn't assume the only kind of resource is a pointer. It also removes a bit of cruft because you no longer have to define typedef my_handle pointer on a deleter. This is overall a great thing.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah I could suggest that too. I didn't think to replace for_each.
for_each has very few uses these days.
Fuck algorithms until ranges and polymorphic lambdas are a thing
user3010322
18:37
2. Other argument (not possible in C++) is just being able to consider static / constexpr functions as template arguments, so that you don't have to pass the function pointer everytime you create a new instance of that said pointer class. Minor annoyance, but combined with scoped_resource removes the need entirely to write a class in the first place. That's win for everyone.
After LINQ <algorithm> is a very sad joke
@ThePhD It's not. Are you not reading?
If the client code has the deleter in it, it's not a win for anyone.
user3010322
The client code no longer has the deleter in it. It's in the type's declaration.
user3010322
Can you read?
user784668
@R.MartinhoFernandes Did it ever have any?
18:38
Then what does the client code look like?
It's still exposed to the client unless you write a class anyway
user3010322
9 mins ago, by ThePhD
std::unique_ptr<GLuint, glDeletebuffer> arf( my_buffer_integer );
@ThePhD I see glDeleteBuffer right there.
WTF
That's not client code, that's low level internals at best
user3010322
In the type declaration.
18:39
@ThePhD Which is still client code.
WTF
gl::buffer my_buffer = create_buffer();
user3010322
using glBuffer = std::scoped_resource<GLuint, glDeleteBuffer>;
Well, it should probably just do in the ctor
user3010322
That's all you need in the library.
user3010322
Anyone can use it, no need to pass the function pointer.
18:39
gl::buffer my_buffer; — this is good client code
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus I've always wondered -- in release mode, is that class not constructed?
Why wouldn't it be constructed
The whole point is that it's constructed
user3010322
Because weird stuff happens when you do new gl::buffer; without () or {}
@ThePhD And it misses all sorts of other use cases.
@ThePhD what exactly do you mean by "constructed"?
18:41
@ThePhD Only for silly PODs
If you have a default ctor, it'll be called
You'll want a class anyway the moment you sneeze.
user3010322
I just meant if the case of
user3010322
gl::buffer my_buffer; // default construction happens
gl::buffer* p_my_buffer = new gl::buffer; // default construction happens... maybe?
@ThePhD see what the cat said above
user3010322
I remember @MooingDuck getting a crash related to the second line.
18:42
non-POD types always get initialized by having their ctors called
C++ makes you dumb
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't see how: user constructs resource with new or create_buffer or whatever they want, and hand it off to the rule-of-zero class (scoped_resource<T> or std::unique_ptr<T>).
@ThePhD And the client gets a glBuffer with the scoped_resource interface. Yay.
@ThePhD What about the users not having any hoops to jump through and just... create a buffer variable? (see cat's example above)
user3010322
If it's a C-style handle, everything happens through functions anyways. So you're going to just end up with my_c_function( scoped_resource.get(), ... ) which differs from std::unique_ptr... how?
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Because the original libraries aren't written like that?
18:44
@ThePhD So what?
@ThePhD Who the fuck cares.
Just use the original libraries if you want then :S
user3010322
This is a special casing for things like C-style libraries. If you have the freedom to create your own API, then you wouldn't need ANY of this in the first place because you'd be using by-value semantics.
I have an example of FFI!
18:45
Are you saying this is a special casing for writing the-bad-kind-of-lazy code?
user3010322
I'm saying this is an elegant way to wrap and deal with bad lazy code, so I can present a nice interface to my user that's exception-safe for the least amount of boilerplate code.
https://github.com/TheCatPlusPlus/roguelike/blob/master/Roguelike.Allegro.FFI/BaseHandle.cs
https://github.com/TheCatPlusPlus/roguelike/blob/master/Roguelike.Allegro.FFI/Handles.cs#L7-L14
https://github.com/TheCatPlusPlus/roguelike/blob/master/Roguelike.Allegro.FFI/Bindings.cs#L18-L21
^ internals
https://github.com/TheCatPlusPlus/roguelike/blob/master/Roguelike.Allegro/Display.cs
^ actual thing clients use
It just makes more lazy code.
user3010322
How is not writing classes and not writing pointer typedefs making people more lazy?
18:46
The std library should just have using thread = unique_ptr<void, thread_deleter>;, or something.
https://github.com/TheCatPlusPlus/roguelike/blob/master/Roguelike/Program.cs#L10
^ client code
user3010322
Since when have miniature deleters and typedefs built character?
Why are you so scared about writing classes
user784668
@CatPlusPlus terrible
@ThePhD It's lazy because for the cost of five more minutes you can have code that is lots more robust.
18:47
wow, second life, still a thing huh
user3010322
It's not about writing classes. When I write my type-safe VertexBuffer class, inside of it I want to have an exception-safe resource handle. I would like to not have to write a utility class, and have a reusable container that expresses what I want to do.
user3010322
Why is this a bad or lazy thing?
user3010322
What am I gaining from the typedef and deleter function that will just call the regular deletion function in the first place?
17 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
Note that we're talking about client code, not internals of the resource provider
user3010322
scoped_resource isn't for clients obviously!
user3010322
18:48
It's hardly meant for that space, jesus christ. This is for library developers.
It's proposed for clients! That's the whole discussion :v
Even for library developers it gives very few benefits.
What C++ needs is a better C FFI
The big buck for library developers is in more power, not fewer keystrokes.
I like SafeHandle
18:50
This enables a total of zero things that were not possible.
user784668
@CatPlusPlus C++ needs better C++ FFI, too.
C++ needs to die
user3010322
scoped_resource is a generalization of std::unique_ptr. That is not a bad thing.
user3010322
If you disagree, that's your problem.
@ThePhD It's not. It's the same written differently.
It doesn't generalise anything. Generalisations enable more things.
18:51
I actually lost track of what the argument is about
user3010322
unique_ptr assumes T*. scoped_resource doesn't.
T4 is cool
@ThePhD unique_ptr doesn't!
@ThePhD It assumes deleter::pointer, not T*
@CatPlusPlus There has been an argument?
18:51
Name one thing you can do with scoped_resource that you can't do with unique_ptr.
(Cue syntax)
user3010322
In the absense of deleter::pointer, it assumes T*.
Default deleter assumes that
@ThePhD That's merely a convenience for a common case (hah!)
scoped_resource is the same thing, except with different name and possibly no default deleter
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Which std::unique_ptr can be built upon.
user3010322
18:53
Again, why is that a bad thing?
user3010322
It's a better primitive.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Feel free to write a deleter for std::unique_ptr<Woof, my_woof_deleter> and not include a typedef Woof pointer; and see what is "assumed".
It's almost exactly the same, also the issue with the proposal is that it's geared towards client code
2 mins ago, by Cat Plus Plus
I actually lost track of what the argument is about
@CatPlusPlus It's also geared primary towards ridiculousness.
(See "loop advancement")
I'm now laughing like a mad man.
Again.
user3010322
18:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes Less assumptions, more control, and if C++ ever gets it together enough to allow me to take a constexpr or static function as a template parameter, completely removes the need to have lots of boilerplate deleter classes.
"Loop advancement" never fails to crack me up.
Not more control.
@ThePhD Less assumptions, but not any more control
3 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Name one thing you can do with scoped_resource that you can't do with unique_ptr.
You can have one function_deleter<> that doesn't assume a pointer vOv
There's a finite total allotted number of keystrokes per human life.
user3010322
18:56
@R.MartinhoFernandes In combination with something like constexpr-static function template parameters? Removing boilerplate.
user3010322
Which is always a win for me.
4 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
(Cue syntax)
user3010322
Yes, syntax is important. Interface is important.
user3010322
It's why auto was introduced.
user3010322
Because manually writing out and computing some things is quite tedious.
18:57
auto enables new things.
user3010322
The primary use case for auto is "thank god I don't have to write out these 80 character long typedefs".
user3010322
Because, syntax is important.
unique_ptr's interface for non-pointers is a minimal annoyance and it doesn't really justify a different class that is the same thing.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait what
18:58
Yeah I see it
But
Someone doesn't know about for loops.
What
Also
> The following two (obviously useless) functions were compiled with Visual Studio 2010 for 32-bit Windows. Notice that the code generated by test_unique_resource() is only 32 bytes, compared to the 57 byte test_scoped_resource(), which does the same thing.
:allears:
I like the "obviously useless" remark.

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