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05:00
@RMartinhoFernandes Normally it does, but not this time..
[  1%] Building CXX object Release/Darwin/x86_64/lib/Futile/CMakeFiles/Futile.dir/src/LeakDetector.cpp.o
clang: error: argument unused during compilation: '-I /Users/francis/programming/projects/jalf-stm/QtTetris/../Futile/include'
clang: error: argument unused during compilation: '-isystem /Users/francis/programming/projects/jalf-stm/QtTetris/../3rdParty/Boost'
clang: error: argument unused during compilation: '-isystem /Users/francis/programming/projects/jalf-stm/QtTetris/../3rdParty/STM'
make[2]: *** [Release/Darwin/x86_64/lib/Futile/CMakeFiles/Futile.dir/src/LeakDetector.cpp.o] Error 1
as in, it is erroring because of -Werror?
I'll try turning off -Werror
@keithlayne Yes, it's a warning...
-Qunused-arguments
it doesn't say warning. It says error. Duh. Stupid robots.
It'd be very silly to make it an error by default.
05:03
@StackedCrooked But turning off -Werror is accepting defeat!
Are you trying to make me go cry in the corner again? I was trying to make a point. Sheesh.
@RMartinhoFernandes As long as I don't commit nobody will now.
@StackedCrooked Did you try -Qunused-arguments?
@RMartinhoFernandes I saw but didn't try it because it was about 'driver arguments'?
But I shall try.
Lol and it works.
I was thinking removing -Werror temporarily might give the option that turned off that warning
05:08
clang is a driver.
@StackedCrooked Of course it does. Why did you even doubt me? I'm magnificent.
@RMartinhoFernandes I will never doubt you again.
@stacked are you a mac guy?
The sky is pink.
05:09
Robby the robot lives in a Technicolor world.
@keithlayne I'm currently using an iMac.
fancy.
Does clang provide standard C++ headers?
I don't find them in the svn repostory.
doesn't it do just code gen?
good morning.
05:11
It uses libstdc++ or libc++.
now for today's question.
0
Q: Why Was the GObject System Created?

IntermediateHackerThe Introduction Okay, so after version 0.60 of GTK+, the designers realized that for future development and progress, the entire toolkit needed to be rewritten to be object-oriented. Now, since C doesn't support OOP, to provide object-orientation and in inheritance heiriearchies, they created...

because it sucks
Because.
Ask people who made that decision?
I doubt anyone remembers it anyway.
they're probably ashamed of it nowadays.
One of their greatest past mistakes. :D
I doubt that, too.
05:13
probably exactly the opposite
@keithlayne you mean they're proud of it?
It was probably before C++ was standardised, so it was a mess of incompatible compilers.
although wasn't Vala invented kind of for that purpose?
yeah, but Vala isn't an incomprehensible mess.
@IntermediateHacker yes, probably fiercely so. C people are certifiable.
05:15
@keithlayne that's scary.
GObject is on lower level than C++ OO support.
Like Linus.
Anyway, the question is pretty much useless, because a) nobody cares b) nobody remembers.
And also subjective.
how is that subjective?
because of a and b.
05:16
I'm just asking why a design decision was made.
Because they felt like it.
When I make design decisions for my pet projects, I don't bother inventing reasons.
Ah. So they had the Perl & PHP syndrome...
how's your foray into GLX coming along?
And this is a decision made ~14 years ago.
And keep in mind C++ was much less usable then.
Most people didn't even consider it.
I don't really agree with that.
05:18
@CatPlusPlus but wasn't C++ at its most famous in the 90's?
Well, at least IME with open source software.
I think that was more ideological than anything else.
Mozilla is one of the few I know from that time that decided to use C++. And it was a mess.
Maybe I'm wrong. Again, who cares.
@IntermediateHacker Yes, yet modern C++ only came to be in the early 2000.
History is boring.
05:21
@stacked what made it modern?
The first company I worked for started building it's codebase around 1998. They banned STL because they could get it to compile or optimize on all required platforms. So they decided to build their own framework. Can you imagine doing this today?
@keithlayne RAII and some other things.
@keithlayne Modern C++ refers to a programming style, not the language itself.
Boost started around 2000.
Boost bind and spirit were early libraries.
05:23
my copy of stroustrup that I had in 1997ish talked about auto_ptr...not trying to belabor the point, and not like auto_ptr was that useful, but anyway.
I remember colleages frowning upon the _1.
And compiler support was terrible until ~2003 (remember VC++6?).
I don't like it either, but it worked
I never used VC until after that, always gcc or Sun's (garbage) compiler
Okay, gotta go catch teh train.
I remember learning about C++ and learning that using std::string; syntax doesn't work on VC6.
05:24
have fun
GCC 2/3 wasn't all that good either.
Did anyone of you ever try digitalmars?
@StackedCrooked me!
the DM C++ compiler?
Admittedly, I was mostly taught C with classes. std::string wasn't even standard yet.
05:26
Seems to only work on Windows though.
@StackedCrooked it's quite good. very small compile time. robust size and optimizations.
I guess I was lucky to be exposed to the STL in school before it was standard.
It compiles awesome *.DLLs
damn, the chat bot's gone. :(
the chat bot. @Zirak.
19 hours ago, by IntermediateHacker
@thecoshman there's a bot here. @Zirak
@IntermediateHacker Oh.
Anyway, I just came back from some standard diving so I'm going to hit the shower now.
Perhaps an application should be treated as a user. It can only write to its own home directory so it doesn't clutter your system with log or temp files. You can remove apps just like you can remove users with shell commands. You could put a limit on disk usage etc.
06:04
Damn, now I have 400 upvotes in but I need to answer more questions.
06:15
Can I use static storage constructors and destructors for calling library code and not run into any troubles?
@Pubby I presume you now that function local statics are created lazily and that they are destroyed in the reverse order?
@StackedCrooked Some apps in the unixy world pretty much do that already, but I like the idea
@RMartinhoFernandes yeah, reading standardese makes me feel dirty too
@StackedCrooked Oh, I knew that but it didn't 'click' until now. Didn't realize that the reverse order kept me safe.
You should still be careful.
Is that supposed to do something?
Shows a blank black page here.
It shows crazy Ballmer :)
Oh God..
It's kind of impressive.
It's a edited version of this video.
@RMartinhoFernandes I think it uses JS or something
@Pubby That sounds very informed.
Oh, and it makes FF drag.
So I'm closing it.
I have a dream: one day the Internet will be free of these stupid read loops stackoverflow.com/a/9747458/46642.
07:16
Oh, the humanity!
07:26
The names of IOStreams functions are so annoying.
I wonder if Steve Ballmer is bananas or only pretends to be bananas.
...or both
@IntermediateHacker He goes bananas when it comes to money.
"Developers, developers, developers" is translated in his mind as "Money, money, money!"
07:49
You're confusing him with @sbi.
08:21
with gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.1.1/gcc/Atomic-Builtins.html what's the appropriate way to do just an atomic read?
08:33
__sync_fetch_and_add(ptr, 0)!
Kidding.
@awoodland I think memory barrier followed by reading the variable.
5
Q: C++0x atomic implementation in c++98 question about __sync_synchronize()

ScaryAardvarkI have written the followin atomic template with a view to mimicing the atomic operations which will be available in the upcoming c++0x standard. However, I am not sure that the __sync_synchronize() call I have around the returning of the underlying value are necessary. From my understanding, ...

Is it worth it to enable the stack protector in C++ (and I mean decent C++, not C with Classes)? If using vectors, strings, streams etc, I can't imagine how to cause a buffer overflow.
std::vector<int> v(10);
v[10] = 42; // buffer overflow
You need more imagination.
Good point.
Though it's on the heap, but you are right. (:
Make that std::string then. Some implementations use the small string optimization, meaning the value will be stored inline if the string is short.
08:42
Yes, Clang does that afaik. Ah I'll just enable it.
It can't do any harm.
libc++, I meant.
09:14
Dangit, my PC reboots quite often lately.
I think I really need a new system.
No apparant reason. Sometimes during POST, sometimes during GRUB, sometimes when I do something normal in the OS.
Is there a program that measures mainboard voltages and such for Linux?
Oh.
Ow.
I suppose there's something in lm_sensors or somesuch.
Check if $ sensors shows that.
sensors-detect is handy if it doesn't
fredrik@workhorse:~$ sensors
acpitz-virtual-0
Adapter: Virtual device
temp1: +40.0°C (crit = +75.0°C)

atk0110-acpi-0
Adapter: ACPI interface
Vcore Voltage: +1.18 V (min = +1.45 V, max = +1.75 V)
+3.3 Voltage: +3.30 V (min = +3.00 V, max = +3.60 V)
+5.0 Voltage: +4.87 V (min = +4.50 V, max = +5.50 V)
+12.0 Voltage: +12.48 V (min = +11.20 V, max = +13.20 V)
CPU FAN Speed: 1046 RPM (min = 0 RPM)
CHASSIS FAN Speed: 733 RPM (min = 0 RPM)
CHASSIS2 FAN Speed: 750 RPM (min = 0 RPM)
Everything looks normal, except for the CPU voltage I guess :)
09:22
the voltage is ok, thought the min/max recommendations are insane
(assuming you pc, is not from the stoneage)
I seem to recall previous mentions of it being old.
Well, 2006 is not that old, is it? :)
try running memtest overnight perhaps
@FredOverflow no, it's fine then
09:25
Maybe I should finally perform that memtest I have been putting off for so long now :)
OTOH, if memtest fails, it could be RAM, mainboard or power supply, right?
probably RAM
Or bug in memtest!
is there any way to have a regular IRC chat behave more like SO chat? As in, be able to read everything from when you weren't online?
Woah, wait a moment. Trailing commas are allowed for array initialization but not for enums?
I'm pissed off.
Can anyone help me in building Windows 7 Ribbon Application Sample with Windows 7 SDK integrated with Code::Blocks
09:35
@RMartinhoFernandes In fact I keep adding trailing commas to my enums and getting bitten by that.
@RavikaJain can codeblocks build/import MSVS project files?
Which is weird as I otherwise don't use them in my initializers.
@rubenvb Ya...
Wait, now I'm confused.
enum foo { x, y, };
int main() {}
GCC just compiled this.
Did I dream that this was not allowed in enums?
@LucDanton Oh, maybe it wasn't a dream.
@RavikaJain is that a yes? Then I suggest importing the example's project file and clicking the build button.
09:38
Ah, but 4.6 rejects it.
reaches for the standard
@rubenvb OK... But I'm trying to build my own project... But I get errors... Can you tell me how to build via command line?
> enum-head { enumerator-list , }
They fixed it!
I'm no longer pissed off.
Good to know.
@RavikaJain you need either a makefile or project file. What are the errors? Have you googled them?
@rubenvb There are 38 errors :'( How many will I google?
09:41
@RavikaJain usually the first, prevents the errors caused by the first error to mislead you.
@rubenvb error C2504: 'CComObjectRootEx' : base class undefined
@rubenvb OK! I'm reading it now... Thanks in advance
@RavikaJain I would hazard a guess that you forgot to include atlcom.h.
0
Q: Linker errors for namespace being included multiple times

LaurentI'm trying to fix an "explicit specialization in non-namespace scope" error using the method described in this post. So I managed to move the templated functions into a separate namespace, and I'm calling these functions from my class (see the code below). The code now compiles, however I'm gett...

^ "When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail..."
He he.
09:47
@rubenvb Hey one sec... There is no atlcom.h neither in C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.0\Include nor in C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\include
@RavikaJain ah yes, you need the true VS for that. The Windows SDK doesn't have ATL. You can't use that class.
As a temporary workaround, the Visual Studio 11 beta is free, but will stop working in a while.
You're saying VS9 doesn't have ATL?
"(...) nor in C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\include"
@rubenvb But Microsoft states that we can build Ribbon Application with Native API via Windows 7 SDK.
I just fixed the other answer. Me nice.
OMG, I just solved my mouse problem which had driven me mad for weeks. Sometimes, during drag and drop, it would appear that I had stopped holding down the mouse button, so I got quite irritating effects. I even re-installed the operating system, to no avail. Wanna guess how I solved it?
09:52
Buy a better mouse.
Clean the mouse.
vacuuming?
or blowing?
Otherwise open the mouse and duct tape something.
I unplugged the mouse and plugged it back in.
Erm.
I totally didn't see that one coming.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes. Actually I've installed only Windows 7 SDK. Visual Studio 9.0 was included with it, but it doesn't include IDE
09:53
@RavikaJain I'd say that particular class has absolutely nothing to do with the Ribbon interface.
great, Firefox just crashed... twice!
@RMartinhoFernandes no, the Windows SDK includes the VS compilers, not the fancy stuff like mfc and atl.
@FredOverflow That's what you get for replugging your mouse.
@rubenvb Oh, I didn't know that created the VS9 folders.
Do ignore me and proceed, then.
09:56
Great, MSVC10's cl.exe is not succeeding in compiling an LLVM source file. 700MB steady 100% of one core. Let's see how long it runs...
I always thought "not succeeding" was cl's primary mode of operation and whenever it did succeed you guys threw wild parties that put ancient Roman bacchanalia to shame.
3
It finished! After about 10 minutes.
is it common to name parameter names in declaration files or not?
10:13
@bamboon I do it, gives some meaning to two std::string parameters next to each other for example, or two ints
0
A: function pointer to the main() method ( function ) MS/C++

Cheers and hth. - AlfHere’s how to obtain a pointer to the main function: #define DECLARE_UNUSED( name ) (void) name; struct name int main() { int(*ptr)() = &main; DECLARE_UNUSED( ptr ); // Prevents using `ptr`. // Don't use `ptr` here. In particular, don't call. } Note that main must ...

^ I answered a silly-question, yay!
Should I use OpenGL 3 or 4 if I'm only using functionality in 2?
@Pubby use the Core profile?
@rubenvb ??
@rubenvb The core profile is not frozen. New features are added to the core profile with each version.
@Pubby Requiring the lowest version that supports your feature set has the advantage of broader support.
10:26
@RMartinhoFernandes All I need is simple 2d rendering. Any downsides to using an older, more compatible version?
ah, ok. I thought it was an updated OpenGL2 base thing. Nvm then.
Just don't use a compatibility profile.
@RMartinhoFernandes You mean using deprecated stuff?
@rubenvb It is. There is core and compatibility. Core has only the good parts, compatibility has all the stuff from 2.0 and the new stuff.
@Pubby Yes.
Yes, I mean "don't use the deprecated stuff". I realized a single "Yes" could be ambiguous.
hmm
i wonder whether there isn't a way to define a default constructor and destructor for an anonymous union
I want to say this in global scope: union { std::string str; char buf[sizeof(std::string)]; };
10:37
@JohannesSchaublitb I suspect you already know the answer ;)
but since the ctor and dtor of the union will be deleted, i need to define empty ctors and dtors
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: You can now put trailing commas in enums. And there was much rejoicing. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
is there a way?
@RMartinhoFernandes no i dont know :(
@JohannesSchaublitb what would be the use? a std::string is just a pointer to the heap, right (along with some other cruft?
Plus size (or end pointer).
Plus any extra bookkeeping for optimizations.
10:40
@rubenvb to prevent it to allocate an empty string
one can later say new (&str) string; instead
but still have "str" visible everywhere
anyone knows how I add the offset to a register location in the encoding of an mov-instruction from reg + offset to reg in x86_64?
@CheersandhthAlf what does #define DECLARE_UNUSED( name ) (void) name; struct name do?
@IntermediateHacker at a high level of abstraction, it declares that it is intentional that name is not used. at the implementation detail level it first of all uses name so that the compiler won't complain (Visual C++ is apt to otherwise issue sillywarning), and then it shadows name with a struct declaration so that actually trying to use name will err
OK, "shadows" is perhaps the wrong word here
It is a C thing, that the pointer name and the struct name are both defined but in different "C namespaces". I am not sure about the details of that!
But anyway, it works. :-)
10:47
yeah. but it's kind of confusing.
@CheersandhthAlf In C, it wouldn't work.
struct name; doesn't hide the previous name, because you need to refer to it as struct name, not name.
A typedef would be required.
y !
oh, i c
thx!
That's what is meant by namespaces in C: there's a "global" namespace, and a struct namespace (and possibly more, I can't list them from memory).
Ell
Ell
hi guys
damn, searched for questions for the past 41 minutes. Haven't been able to answer any of them. Edited them to overcome my irritation. :(
10:52
So why are you sad? Edits help. You should be happy.
but answers help much more.
@IntermediateHacker first thing i discovered about SO is that the RSS feed (or whatever the feed is) really lags the in-SO-presentation, so that when something appears in the external feed, it already has many answers. it doesn't help to update often
Now you can just keep a tab open in a tag page and its title changes as new questions come in.
Ran memtest for 1 hour, no problems.
Interestingly, the 2nd pass took twice as long as the first pass. Is that normal?
11:07
in C,a file that says struct A { int m; }; makes m have file-scope
abuse of some c++11 things: stackoverflow.com/questions/9747947/…
0
A: Controlling the order of static objects' constructor

Johannes Schaub - litbPerhaps like this? // ... .h template<typename T> union FakeUnion { FakeUnion() {} ~FakeUnion() {} T inst; }; extern FakeUnion<test> inst1_; extern FakeUnion<test> inst2_; static constexpr test& inst1 = inst1_.inst; static constexpr test& inst2 = inst2_.inst; //...

after installing microsoft web platform with joomla, how does one get at the IIS configuration in Windows 7?
it's no longer in computer management
I tried inetmgr, no such :-(
I think, all the "web platform" does seems to be to redirect ports to directories, and all the justification for the seems to circularly be that with it, there is no general IIS configuration tool that could be used to do that manually. is this right? is it really just marketing-ware shit that should be uninstalled promptly?
I never trying that Joomla thing, but it didn't remove the IIS configuration thing when I installed it. I only installed ASP.NET MVC, so it could be related.
thanks, but never mind, i'm uninstalling that
if it were worth anything, not just sabotaging system, then it would have been or should have been obvious
it's just annoying to have used so much time on that, and the joy of discovering apparent microsoft support for open source (bah!)
@FredOverflow you can bet it is normal (different operations)
11:24
Anyway, I suspect it's my graphics card. When I was running Windows, the blue screen always mentioned something with ATI. I'll try and see if a new graphics card solves my problems.
Out of interest, whats everyone here using as an IDE
ideone :)
Eclipse
Visual Studio
lol ideone as an IDE :D
2 hours ago, by FredOverflow
I think I really need a new system.
^^ or a new powersupply
But my power supply is so awesome! It's bequiet.
Can I plug a modern graphics card into my 2006 motherboard? Are there compatibility issues between several versions of PCI express?
I guess my mainboard has PCI express 1.1, but I'm not sure.
2 x PCIe x16 , Single VGA mode: x16 (Default), SLI mode: x8, x8
1 x PCIe x1
2 x PCI 2.2
Since PCI express 2.0 was released in 2007, I'm pretty sure it doesn't have that :)
Wow, I can buy a passively cooled graphics card for under 30 Euro? Cool!
11:37
Just see the card's specs.
I'm reviving my old desktop!
XP be gone.
Ell
Ell
My machine is new from christmas :D
Hm, it seems to be worse than my 6 year old old graphics card :)
nice website btw
I haven't powered it on for half a year or so. XP is crying it's outdated.
Ell
Ell
i was going to buy a hd 5450
@CatPlusPlus Well, XP is well over 10 years old, so yeah, it's pretty outdated :)
@Ell but not anymore?
Ell
Ell
11:41
but i bought a gtx 560 ti cuII instead
Can I plug a PCIe 2.0 card into my PCIe 1.1 motherboard?
Ell
Ell
I think so?
it wouldn't fit in the slot if it was going to break anything, I would have thought
Internet says it's backwards compatible. So it should just run slower.
Now I just need to find a card that isn't worse than my old 2006 card :)
Yeah, I, too, looked only at the first result. :P
Ell
Ell
11:46
@FredOverflow the hd 5450 can play minecraft I think :D
I don't play many games.
Ell
Ell
and doesn't need a power supply other than the PCI
awesome
Ell
Ell
@FredOverflow what do you do? howcome you are upgrading?
He thinks it broke.
11:47
@Ell My computer keeps rebooting randomly, Windows blue screens mention my ATI card. RAM is fine according to memtest.
Ell
Ell
ahh kk
It could be motherboard damage, too.
Hmm... any way to find out?
except Douglas? lol
Just trying with different configurations.
I only have this one configuration, and I don't want to molest my (non-nerd) friends :)
Ell
Ell
11:48
have you got another card at hand? or integrated graphics? try unplugging it?
Unless you're Legendary at electronics and can find broken thing manually.
It's only few billion capacitors, transistors and whatnot to check.
Ell
Ell
haha
@Ell I don't think my motherboard has integrated graphics. There's no VGA connector or such.
It was a very cheap motherboard back in the days.
Ell
Ell
okay
hmmm
is it seated properly? :L maybe a silly question but just in case
What's the designation?
11:51
@Ell I've had this system running for 6 years without problems.
Ell
Ell
oh :L
It's hardware. An atom of oxygen in the wrong place can break the whole thing.
I never breathed into my computer if that's what you're implying ;)
i still have my lenovo T60
lol
Hell, I managed to break one of my HDD's electronics just by plugging it in.
Ell
Ell
11:53
@CatPlusPlus how exactly? :L
I have never broken anything, no lies :O
How should I know.
It worked, I changed the plugs configuration, it broke.
Ell
Ell
arghh why on earth does my code not work :'(
Because it sucks!
Ell
Ell
It does, but I can't figure out any other way!
Ell
Ell
11:54
I'm making a control for .net that is like one of those resize handle things, the east, southeast, and south handles work fine
on next monday in 2 days. they will remove 4 teeth of me :(
Ell
Ell
its all the others that messes it up, but I really don't know why >.<
I have had 2 teeth removed before :L
Gah, I'm dumping data from that PC to external USB drive, and the transfer rate is about 600KB/s.
@CatPlusPlus You mean the master/slave jumpers?
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus use usb 3!
11:56
@JohannesSchaublitb Wow. How much will it cost?
@FredOverflow That, and cables.
@Ell You don't "use" USB 3, you need mobo support for that.
Are the four teeth on the same side (left/right)?
Ell
Ell
Is it true that in america everyone has perfect teeth?
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus but you need a usb3 drive enclosure? I would call it using usb3? meh. All that matters is that my mobo supports usb3 :P
11:57
Everyone but the British immigrants.
The drive itself supports USB3.
Ell
Ell
I'm british and apparently we have bad teeth? and the americans all have good teeth because they pay for private dentistry
But you don't really decide on the mode, it's either USB3 if both sides support it or USB2.
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus but you need a usb3 cable?
The cable was included.
Ell
Ell
11:59
well I would still calling it "using" usb3 :L but y'know. Potato Potato
even usb2 is faster than 600 KB/s

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