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Xeo
Xeo
09:09
NSHookUp
user1804599
NSBukkake
NSShutupRightfold
@ScarletAmaranth that's a good one
@ScarletAmaranth Btw, are you still watching One Piece?
ye, that's the only one I haven't stopped watching
Awesome.
although the latest ~3 episodes
are pretty much copies of each other
09:17
Well. It's OP.
sure, it's just kind of funny that you watch it for 1 month and you are almost where you started :P
Still are still hanging in the air while being carried by the wasps.
yup; and they still haven't managed to climb up the fortress :D
Law is still chained. Poor guy.
I can't imagine what it must be like to have watched the entire show from episode 1 as it started airing
user1804599
09:19
@StackedCrooked Screw wasps.
user1804599
I heard that decoy wasp nests keep wasps away.
user1804599
Because wasps are afraid of nests that aren't their own.
@StackedCrooked where was the show at when you started watching? I think it was Skipieia for me
Xeo
Xeo
@ScarletAmaranth I watched the beginnings of OP when it aired on TV here, until the Enel arc I think.
@Xeo oh wow; there were like 350 episodes out when I started :D
Ven
Ven
09:26
@rightfold I was at epitanime.
@ScarletAmaranth I started three years ago at ep 1. I caught up after the Whitebeard war.
user1804599
?
Ven
Ven
I came back at 5am, went to sleep at 6am and just woke up.
I was* sorry >_>
@StackedCrooked I see - good place to catch up! :P
user1804599
nice
09:27
Indeed. It was the arc with luffy, sabo and ace as kids. After that the new world arc started.
Ven
Ven
@StackedCrooked I remember you talking about that when I went to sleep already, around 5am, is that wrong?
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Obtw, do you also read the manga?
@Ven Yes. Deja vu.
@Xeo Nah. I have a few volumes though.
Xeo
Xeo
k, no spoilers then :D
Ihave only ever read one manga
and it's one of those embarassing ones
(Nodame Cantabile, the one that hasn't been anime'd) - Opera Hen I think it's called
Ven
Ven
09:30
@StackedCrooked actually, I did see you talk about this: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/23595686#23595686
@ScarletAmaranth Yeah, read the manga of it?
@StackedCrooked yup :P I really didn't like the way it ended in anime
I really like that series.
I've only seen the anime though.
yeah it's pretty good; but it's not your typical seinen / shonen that people admit to watching ^^
It's a josei manga.
Apparently it was published in Kiss.
user1804599
09:32
Mango.
user1804599
Mango > manga.
I would watch the Opera Hen if they ever turned it into anime even after having read it
@ScarletAmaranth I will never admit to watching shonen!
@LucDanton so all the anime you've ever seen is pretty much just Ghost in the Shell :P
btw, what is up with SnK recently? I adored the first season, it ended on a great twisty - cliffhanger
Ghost in the Zshell.
I'm not aware of any updates concerning SnK.
09:37
fuck
why are they not turning it into anime seriously?
it must be very popular - I mean, it's really really good
Apparently it's planned for 2016.
(albeit VERY VERY grim :D)
@ScarletAmaranth only slightly :)
There's an OVA of two episodes that is pretty good.
Dunno if you've seen it.
slightly? humanity is on brink of destruction and it's probably people who work on destroying it
but I love the mystery around it
is there anything further away from the "city"? what's in the "cellar" :P?
I haven't
I will watch it tho
(also, why the fuck are there kyojins in the walls :P)
One thing I noticed in SnK is that it seems more and more that the enemy is internal.
09:40
yup; at first it was giants vs humans
but it seems that humans are involved
so it's basically humanity ruining humanity - which is... uhhh, why is that not AS surprising ^^?
The armored titan and the red one might be insiders just like Annie was.
Xeo
Xeo
has read the manga
lalala~
Maybe everyone is a titan. And switch roles between eating and being eaten.
@ScarletAmaranth Hey now, there’s all the seinen :)
@LucDanton all the seinen is basically Ghost in the Shell ^^ jokes aside, any good seining you know of :P?
09:46
mmh keep in mind I haven’t watched anything in a while
@StackedCrooked oh, that's almost for certain; it seems that all the intelligent giants are humans (maybe even the "regular" giants as you said)
@ScarletAmaranth I know Monster was mentioned here recently and was praised, but I’ve only read it.
My theory is that titans are government secret agents
Xeo
Xeo
Go watch Inferno Cop.
it's free on youtube even!
Seen Monster, 10/10
09:47
@ScarletAmaranth The regular ones are still a mystery to me. In the ova it is hinted they have fragments of human emotion left in them. I'm certain they used to be human at one point.
@LucDanton I finished Monster like 5 months ago
time flies
@LucDanton is it the one with the doctor?
Monster is top tier animu.
@StackedCrooked oh wow, nice
09:48
@Rapptz Agreed.
I saw first 2 episode
I didn't like Monster at all o_O
Monster gets really good towards the end.
you'd be in the minority
@Rapptz Don’t think I’d ever watch it. Part of the pleasure of the story was all the build up. Unless the anime diverges significantly from the manga; but then why bother?
Damn, that gunfight between the cop and the fat guy.
09:49
It starts slow, it's not a random shonen
@LucDanton every episode ends in a cliffhanger :v
so the build up is there
Yeah but will I know the resolution? is my point
don't see why not
it's gonna be full HD, ye
it wasn't cancelled
if that's what you mean
Monster was a little slow in the middle though. Reminded me of watching Schwarzwaldklinik.
Xeo
Xeo
Turn on subtitles
I don't think anyone would enjoy it if it ended abruptly
No, I mean I already know the story
oh well yeah
09:50
There is no build up if I already know the stuff
if you know it there's really no point in watching
unless you like doing that
I rewatch things every so often
09:51
@Xeo Lol, Inferno Cop.
don't do X followed by "unless you like doing that" works for each X
I should watch more of that.
Well the change of medium can be interesting in its own right but I don’t think that would be where the strengths of Monster shine
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Best cop ever
And Trigger's doing another "trashy" anime like that this season - Ninja Slayer
@StackedCrooked any idea as to why wait for so long inbetween SnK seasons? isn't it a cash cow?
09:53
@ScarletAmaranth I have no idea.
You could probably find more information on the Anime News Network website.
how old is the S1? 2 3 years already?
morning
well, I am totally looking forward
@ScarletAmaranth They seem to milk it buy releasing two movies first.
09:55
and OVAs
why would I watch movies :-\
aren't they unrelated and / or spoilery?
@ScarletAmaranth when there's porn, right?
pretty sure one of the OVAs is canon
but I don't like SnK at its current state
@Rapptz current state being the manga?
user1804599
My camera is canon.
09:56
@ScarletAmaranth I suppose it reached a large audience in Japan. The series was a big hype there.
I think the OVAs were pretty good.
@ScarletAmaranth I stopped reading a couple months ago
@StackedCrooked I think it's objectively very well written; it's not like one of those "KIll la Kill" is awesome but it's more of a subjective feeling
Xeo
Xeo
Whiny Eren got annoying after a while
@ScarletAmaranth If all things fail, time to go shoujo.
@LucDanton yeeey Shoujo; go Nisekoi!
Xeo
Xeo
09:59
Sabagebu! is classified as Shoujo. And it's great.
@LucDanton I dunno, explicit specializations and template definitions isolated in separate TUs were allowed before C++11, which is when extern got standardized. The way I understand it, which could be wrong, the Standard specifies that the instantiation is not triggered. I think the post is meant to show that even if a definition of the template is available to the calling TU, the template is not instantiated in that TU - in your example, the definition was only available in a separate TU.
IOW I see extern just as an optimization
OMG @AndyProwl wtf are you on about C++ in this Anime room
8
Scary stories of giants eating humans probably existed thousands of years ago. It's such a simple primitive concept and I think it's cool the anime managed to pull this off.
@ScarletAmaranth oh shite I'm sorry wrong room
@AndyProwl Explicit spec or explicit inst?
10:01
@LucDanton Sorry, explicit inst
(just woke up)
@AndyProwl The post is meant to show what I showed you.
@AndyProwl Never used extern templates, but your reasoning is how I see it as well.
Anime sucks.
Us humans, unlike @LucDanton and @Xeo, are slow at absorbing this information.
But eventually we do get it.
@AndyProwl Controlling instantiation is also important for point of instantiation issues aka avoiding self-immolation.
10:06
instantiation can be difficult to control properly
I'm thinking of the noexcept stateful constexpr mess refp posted some time ago
@MarcoA. An extern template is all it takes to suppress implicit instantiation. That was my whole point in fact.
@LucDanton I disagree, I think the OP's point is that "To not waste compile time and object file size, there is an extern keyword which makes the compiler not compile a template function.", i.e. extern is an optimization." - and yes it does feel suspicious to disagree with you, cause that usually means I'm wrong, but can't help it in this instance. After all, if extern was necessary, then how would the whole thing work before C++11?
oh god wrong edit
@AndyProwl look at what you've done; swinging the conversation to C++ and stuff
I do feel guilty for that
@AndyProwl I suspect, but don’t know how to check that in the Standard, that an implementation can still reject e.g. your proposed program. That is, the Standard (AIUI) says very little with regards as to when an implicit instantiation is required or not.
10:10
@LucDanton Are you saying that before C++11 those programs were ill-formed, no diagnostic required - or implementation-defined? I doubt it
There should be a "Teach yourself templates instantiation in 24hours" book somewhere by Schildt
without even knowing C++ first
@AndyProwl Implementation specific, not implementation defined (which is a term of the Standard). After C++11, too.
That would be a TIL. Tempted to ask on SO. Maybe I could summon @FilipRoséen-refp again
IOW you don’t really expect the full program template<typename T> void foo() {} int main() { foo<void>(); } to be rejected, do you?
Why would it be rejected?
10:14
Because no instantiation of foo<void> has taken place.
How is that the case? foo<void> is implicitly instantiated
Well now you say it is.
I don't see any contradiction
I hate all your damn acronyms, I will have to install a "acronym-translator" chrome plugin to understand your sentences.. TIL IOW IANAL
But in your previous example, a fragment of which looks like template<typename T> void foo(); int main() { foo<void>(); } you say an implementation is allowed to not require an instantiation.
10:15
you pay for what you use, but keyboard isn't one of these things
And maybe it is. If it is, then I’m glad we have extern templates. If it is not, then I’m very glad we have extern templates.
@Rapptz that will be useful
user1804599
I want codictions.
user1804599
Contradictions suck.
10:16
there isn't a IANAL though
@LucDanton Yes, because in my program there's an explicit instantiation somewhere else
Pull requests welcome.
@Rapptz you don't simply pull a IANAL out
template<typename T> void increment(T t) { return t + 1; }
extern void foo(int); // don't instantiate increment(int) here

// however this also compiled, but what does it mean?
template<typename T>
extern void increment(T t) { return t + 1; }
user1804599
I bbq'ed in the rain yesterday.
10:17
@AndyProwl Which the implementation can only ever learn at translation phase, in which case there’s a host of point of instantiation issues that raise their heads.
user1804599
The tent was good.
@ScarletAmaranth Listed as shounen on myanimelist.
@LucDanton Are you trying to make me see a contradiction in what I wrote? I don't see any. In your example, there's no explicit instantiation anywhere else, so implicit instantiation is required. In my example there is, so an implicit instantiation is not required - there's no contradiction. Or are you trying to show me something else?
pun was intended
10:19
@LucDanton huh... seems very shoujo-ey to me vOv
@AndyProwl No contradiction. I want to show that one way or the other, the story is much more complex than it appears, and until more is figured out then I won’t agree that extern templates is at its core meant to be an optimization.
@ScarletAmaranth Not knowing the first thing about it I can’t really comment.
@LucDanton I found the original proposal, let's see if it helps clarifying
Possibly relevant:
> In addition, N1448 proposed "extern template" as a mechanism to provide greater control over the point of instantiation of a template. It should be noted that the current standard provides no such guarantees, even in the presence of explicit instantiations, and this proposal does not attempt to provide such a feature.
That 'no such guarantees' is telling.
Am I just being horribly biased by what I wish it meant for thinking that it means it's an optimization?
Death of the author dear Andy. It doesn’t matter what the proposal writer thinks :Þ
10:28
I played Splatoon for like
10 hours today
RIP me
This last message was too dense for me to decipher. Are you saying his intent is immaterial?
The Death of the Author (French: La mort de l'auteur) is a 1967 essay by the French literary critic and theorist Roland Barthes. Barthes's essay argues against traditional literary criticism's practice of incorporating the intentions and biographical context of an author in an interpretation of a text, and instead argues that writing and creator are unrelated. The title is a pun on Le Morte d'Arthur, a 15th-century compilation of smaller Arthurian legend stories, written by several anonymous authors with heavy reinterpretation by the editor, Sir Thomas Malory. As a result, the final text of Le...
@AndyProwl It’s a literary joke, don’t take it too seriously.
oh, I see
well I'm at least getting more cultural know-how
on a completely independent note, based on what's written on wikipedia and not on knowledge of Barthes's literature, I think I don't agree with his theory
not in the general case at least
user1804599
I need to eat something.
user1804599
I don't know what.
10:37
Pizza
user1804599
"Damp rag" is my new favourite invective.
@AndyProwl In class we’ve always done commentary on the text itself, never the circumstances around it. We’ve also very rarely discussed or mentioned the author. I’ve always felt it forces the commentary to be to the point and prevents meandering.
unPizza
If a function template instantiation is triggered by lambda then how does one extern it? (Impossible?)
10:48
@LucDanton While I do understand that you can't read the author's mind and therefore you cannot paint a completely objective background for the message, my impression is that ignoring context (e.g. the author's declared beliefs, the events that were going on at the time, etc.) is more likely to distort something's meaning than help distilling it
I think a piece of literature or art in general has the meaning that the author wanted to attach to it, not the observer - and we as observers should respect that
I don’t think any disrespect is intended.
Not intended but eventually paid, in my opinion
If I were to write something, I wish people would read what I meant them to read in it
Yay, recursion works :)
10:53
@fredoverflow good job fred!
@fredoverflow That's quite cool
Reminds me I should achieve something
@AndyProwl For sure. The view I share with Death of the author is that it is possible to criticise with the author abstracted out. That doesn’t mean it’s the only way to do it, or that it is a superior way.
@LucDanton But isn't that what (Wikipedia says that) Barthes is saying?
'Literary criticism' is one form of criticism. That is, criticism of the text and only the text.
You can make a literary criticism laced with, say, social & political commentary, too.
@AndyProwl The #1 tip for achieving something is not hanging out in the Lounge ;)
You can blur the lines in some cases, too. I’ve seen literary commentaries mention cultural things (e.g. the use of chiastic structure in Hebrew text), which strictly speaking are a tiny bit about the author if you think about it.
@LucDanton Ok. All I meant to say is that I disagree that this kind of "out-of-context" criticism is more appropriate than the "classical" one, which is the opinion that Wikipedia appeared to attribute to Barthes - at least on a superficial read. Anyway thanks for the reference, I feel a bit less ignorant now which is a good feeling
@fredoverflow Success is so hard!
I should try this in our codebase. Might speed up compilation of much code.
11:03
@StackedCrooked Not sure: extern has no effect on inline functions and I'm not sure if that function template counts as an inline function - I'm tempted to assume it does
it will reduce binary size though
@AndyProwl The fact is that I managed to trigger a linker error while the inline function was visible in main.cpp
@AndyProwl ah
@StackedCrooked Oh, sorry, I didn't scroll the output till the bottom :P
Also the linker error is there because you don't have an explicit instantiation for float
haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay its @FilipRoséen-refp: reddit.com/r/programming/comments/37tt0c/…
@AndyProwl It indeed was not instantiated in main.cpp. Therefore main.cpp should compile faster, not?
@StackedCrooked Yeah but the program is ill-formed because you don't have an explicit instantiation for float anywhere else
11:08
@AndyProwl Yeah, of course. I'll need to add an explicit instantiation for float in test.cpp then.
Yes. And if you want main.cpp to compile faster, also an explicit instantiation declaration to test.h - although I'm not 100% sure because that could count as an inline function, and in that case extern would have no effect
oh wait
the extern is in main.cpp - sorry, I failed to spot that
Then whether it will compile faster or not only depends on whether a function template definition counts as an inline function
Ell
Ell
Will modules make compiling code with templates quicker?
@Ell Most likely maybe.
Actually no a function template definition does not seem to be an inline function so yes you're probably right
@Ell Unlikely
lol
they will speed up compilation of regular code significantly though
the actual question is whether they will ever exist
^ Probably relevant. From this book.
I only skimmed that chapter. I should probably read it more carefully.
11:19
I am browsing some water front property for sale, I saw this plot of land with a great view within walking distance to the ocean. So I clicked through the pictures & I saw this:
Xeo
Xeo
11:29
grmlgrmlgrml
VS'15's quick fix functionality inserts a space before the & of a reference parameter if you let it create the definition.
int &x; // aite
int& x; // peasantry
int & x; // criminal
Xeo
Xeo
If you write int &x in my codebase, I will poke you with a pointy farm implement.
I've started writing pointers the peasant way for some reason
Xeo
Xeo
Good.
How do you write function signatures that return a reference or a pointer?
Xeo
Xeo
11:34
Cause my prior message also applies if you write int *x
int const& x(); ?
Xeo
Xeo
@Prismatic The same I would write any other function signature?
@Prismatic yes
@Prismatic You use a typedef
...oh, you mean pointer to data
then const int& f();
11:35
@Prismatic lol, I am a criminal.
The only value I see in writing '*' or '&' write next to the type is you can easily look it up
Xeo
Xeo
Sup Brobot.
hellew rawbawt
@R.MartinhoFernandes Cheers
I'm such an idiot.
11:36
But I write const the correct way, so that doesn't work out
@R.MartinhoFernandes howdy
or ref<const int> f();
what happened?
where ref is template<typename T> using ref = T&;
Xeo
Xeo
@Prismatic C++ emphasises types over syntax, that's why I group the & to the type (although officially it's part of the declaration)
11:36
@AndyProwl what's the issue? (I'm currently on my phone)
@Prismatic hmm?
@FilipRoséen-refp Long story short, whether extern explicit instantiation declarations are required to make programs well-formed or they are just a sort of optimization to reduce code size and speed up build times
we can take it once you have access to a more comfy device though
@AndyProwl are you asking if an explicit instantiation is valid in one TU, even though the instantiation of said template would be ill-formed?
if so; no, the standard says that the template in an extern explicit instantiation must be instantiated elsewhere, otherwise the program is ill-formed. As such it makes no sense talking about a specific explicit instantiation
@FilipRoséen-refp Say I have a function template which is only declared, not defined, and invoked in main.cpp, and the definition (together with the appropriate explicit instantiation) is somewhere else in hello.cpp. Is the extern declaration required in main.cpp to make the program well-formed?
but maybe I'm not understanding your real question
maaan this subway is crowded
@AndyProwl ah, no - the explicit instantiation is not required in such case - it is merely a way of saying "dear complier, do not generate code for this template in this TU - you will find it elsewhere"
That's my interpretation as well. Me and @LucDanton where trying to figure out whether that's the case and had different points of view
11:44
In order to compile main.cpp the body of the function template is not required, as such you only need the template declaration in that TU
I'm finding it hard to express myself when on my phone (since this chat sucks balls on mobile devices), but I hope you see what I mean
Yes, that's in line with my understanding. Thank you
no worries
ploff (spending my cellphone's battery elsewhere)
@AndyProwl meh, I just can't take a hint.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That doesn't sound too bad, if I understand what's going on
More context required :D
Too much stuff happening right now.
11:58
Sure, take your time to sort things out or digest them - disclaimer: this statement is fuzzy because it intends to refer to the various possible scenarios that what you wrote might imply. Whenever you feel like sharing, do.
@AndyProwl andy such consideration
I'm reading about Godel's theorem and it inspires complex thoughts in my mind, but I'm afraid it's just an attitude - I don't understand the shit
it's a life goal though so eventually I will
12:21
auto sum = std::accumulate(begin(b), end(b), 0,
    [](int counter, boost::optional<cell> cell) {
        return counter +
            boost::apply_visitor(
                number_getter(),
                boost::get_optional_value_or(cell, 0)
            );
    }
);
This is truly beautiful
Stop rightfolding
Oh god, what have I become
3
Ell
Ell
@Jefffrey can't you do value_or()?
return counter + cell.value_or(0)
idk what cell is though so vOv
@AndyProwl the butterfly and that stuff?
@Ell It's a boost::variant, but yes value_or is better, thanks.
12:33
oh wtf
doesn't matter if you can't read the text: the images talk by themselves
@MarcoA. butterfly?
oh, nice edit :D
@AndyProwl yeah
That's a hoax
12:56
@Ven oh my, that was a dangerous typo indeed - I will fix it asap!
@Ven wait, no - that's correct
Xeo
Xeo
... wtf. VS'15 still can't do decltype(func(...))::member :(
@Xeo if I recall correctly you can use an alias such as template<class T> using indirection_t = T; and indirection_t<decltype (func (args...))>::member, but yeah - msvc = :(
Xeo
Xeo
ye
I'll just split it up as , class X = decltype(func(...)) and then X::member
since I'm in a template anyways.

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