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11:50
error C2558: class 'Card': no copy constructor available or copy constructor is declared 'explicit' I get this error even if I have a copy constructor declared in class Card. Should I provide code too?
Yeah guys, forget the question, I forgot to add const in parameters of copy constructor, so it wasn't a copy constructor.
12:46
if(formaltag==0)
      strlcpy(formaltag_name, "none (\"_\")", sizeof(formaltag_name)/sizeof(char));
    else {
      tagsym=find_tag_byval(formaltag);
      strlcpy(formaltag_name, (tagsym!=NULL) ? tagsym->name : "-unknown-", sizeof(formaltag_name)/sizeof(char));
    }
Would using nested conditional operator for the above code be a bad idea?
why not make it a variable filled inside the condition and put the strlcpy after it
const char* tag =  "none (\"_\")";
if(formaltag != 0){
  if(tagsym == null) tag = "-unknown-";
  else tag = tagsym->name;
}
strlcpy(formaltag_name, tag, sizeof(formaltag_name)/sizeof(char));
nwp
nwp
@MuhamedCicak Sounds like you are not following the rule of zero. You should consider doing that.
13:06
@Yashas sizeof(char) is always 1.
@Yashas ternary operator is bad for readability if subexpressions of it are complex. It is easier to document code with if/else block as well.
@EuriPinhollow I use sizeof/sizeof everywhere so I thought maintaining the same style would be better.
but using it for string length is fragile when you ever change it from a const char[] to anything else
nwp
nwp
You can replace it with template <class T, std::size_t size> constexpr std::size_t array_size(T (&)[size]) { return size; }. It has the advantage of not compiling in case you accidentally pass a pointer to it instead of an array, which will happen sooner or later.
Alternatively just use std::array. It has a .size() and proper iterators and so on.
@nwp but I'm using C :'(
char formaltag_name[sNAMEMAX+2]="none (\"_\")",actualtag_name[sNAMEMAX+2]="none (\"_\")";
    if(formaltag!=0) {
      tagsym=find_tag_byval(formaltag);
      sprintf(formaltag_name,"\"%s\"", (tagsym!=NULL) ? tagsym->name : "-unknown-");
    }
    if(actualtag!=0) {
      tagsym=find_tag_byval(actualtag);
      sprintf(actualtag_name,"\"%s\"",(tagsym!=NULL) ? tagsym->name : "-unknown-");
    }
If I can guarantee that my string buffer will never overflow, do I have to worry about it?
nwp
nwp
@Yashas Well, that's on you :P
13:15
I am thinking if I should replace sprintf with the safe strlcat (same as strcat except that it takes the buffer length as an argument). But this would make it ugly as I would have to call strlcat three times.
or I would have to make a safe sprintf :/
snprintf
lol did not know it already existed
nwp
nwp
"safe" is an overstatement though. Instead of writing over the buffer it just stops writing, so instead of a possible crash you get incorrect behavior, which arguably is worse.
snprintf(formal_tagnames, sizeof(formal_tagnames),"%s\"%s\"", formal_tagnames, (tagsym!=NULL) ? tagsym->name : "-unknown-"); or strlcat?
The first %s might make snprintf make a copy of formal_tagnames onto itself.
nwp
nwp
13:27
@Mgetz Oh, that's pretty cool.
All I am trying is to enclose a word in quotes and append it to a string.
nwp
nwp
String manipulation is surprisingly tricky, especially in C.
@nwp it might be my favorite C++ addition, it's so dumb that you have to ask why it wasn't in before. You could cheat with a type trait (std::extent) but it was ugly
Hello
I have a rather naive question for how to deal with large matrices in c++. Namely, I have a matrix, that contains a matrix, that contains a matrix, ... this repeats 10 times. Now using [] operator it's basically completely impractical way of accessing elements, because we'd have (assume array is called M), M[][][][][][] and so on... Are there different ways of either accessing elements of such array, or alternatively, different ways of storing this matrix, other than arrays, more suited here?
sparse or dense? what access pattern will be used most often?
13:36
@user929304 depends on how you allocate memory, if you're using a single contiguous std::vector you'll need to decide how you want to stride all of that in (this is usually the recommendation for dense matrices)
@ratchetfreak I don't know what that means :(
for sparse I would suggest using an existing library
Hello people
@Mgetz I'm defining it as a vector containing a vector and so on
@Mgetz Like what library? Sorry I'm a big amateur. (any links where I can read more about alternatives would be hugely appreciated. Has this possibly been discussed on SO yet?)
@user929304 sparse matrix is matrix with few elemets defined and all others being zero or some other value.
13:39
How can be resolvable a kind of error like: error C2555: 'Interface<T>::get': overriding virtual function return type differs and is not covariant from 'Subtype<T>::get'
@user929304 I do not see how using any notation other than [][][][][][][] would change anything significantly.
@EuriPinhollow aha, thanks. Then in my case it is dense
nwp
nwp
@user929304 Eigen deals with matrices, vectors and so on. I think you can find multi-dimensional matrices under tensors.
A subtype in base(subtype) returns a a reference to a local member and in derrived Interface should I return different, like a double pointer to base member
@Mgetz I do not see how this answers the question though. Neither can I understand how matrix being dense or sparse relates to it.
13:42
@EuriPinhollow sure, but it s really a question of practicality, of avoiding to write things like [][]][[][] in the code
@nwp neat!! let me check it out
if it was sparse then a map<index_object, value> would be better than a ton of std::vectors
@EuriPinhollow it was a quick off the bat answer, tbh the best answer is and always will be to use a library
@ratchetfreak sure but obviously it was not what question is about tho.
@Mgetz you mean like Eigen as suggested by @nwp ?
nwp
nwp
@LXSoft Some context would be useful. You generally can't have the overriding function return a different incompatible type. Can you make an example on coliru that shows what you want to achieve?
13:44
fellows it's okay... please don't fight, it is just a really noob question :(
@user929304 yes, the problem with doing it yourself is there are a lot of numerics pitfalls you can run into doing it the naive way, ditto memory use, ditto everything basically
@user929304 I don't think we are?
@Mgetz great then :)
@nwp 2 minutes
@Mgetz Any other libraries other than Eigen come to mind?
@user929304 there are a couple, but from C++ Eigen is probably the easiest to use.
13:48
@nwp would it make sense to collapse the matrix to a 1d vector so the accessing is simpler? (one would have to come up with a correct mapping i agree, between original matrix indices and the 1d vector indices)
nwp
nwp
@user929304 Most likely yes.
@nwp is there a routine in c++ that does that or one would have to do it manually? the mapping that is.
it's manual
nwp
nwp
I'm pretty sure you would need to do it manually. It's not too hard though, you basically just multiply the dimension to the index.
@nwp :(
13:53
@nwp This is
@nwp template <class S> class Subtype
{
protected:
S myType;

public:
virtual S& getType()
{
return myType;
}
}

template<typename S> class SubtypePlatform : public Subtype<S>
{
public:
S** get()
{
return myType.getType();
}

}

struct MyStructure
{
int a;
int b;
float c;
}

class TestType
{
private:
SubtypePlatform<MyStructure> myTestType;
}
@nwp correction at S** get() in SubtypePlatform, method is getType()
nwp
nwp
@LXSoft When someone calls get on a Subtype<S> they expect to get a S&, but then you try to give them a S** and everything breaks.
@nwp Subtype have one more pure virtual method so Subtype instantiation is impossible
@nwp can I ask one more thing?
nwp
nwp
@LXSoft Ideally you would make both gets return the same type. Alternatively you use something like a std::variant<std::reference_wrapper<S>, S**> to show that the function can return different types without the compiler yelling at you.
@nwp Thanks I will check right now
14:01
@nwp do you know of good, easy to use, profilers for c++ for amateurs?
@nwp for more information during compilation, finding out how much time is spent in each routine, etc
nwp
nwp
Unfortunately no.
Modern Visual Studio should have a relatively easy to use profiler included.
it is also for linux users?
nwp
nwp
Otherwise valgrind/callgrind/cachegrind would be your best bet, but they definitely don't count as easy to use.
Also gprof exists.
In theory you can install Qt Creator and select the profiling tool which uses valgrind internally and gives you a nice easy to use summary.
@nwp thanks a lot
nwp
nwp
In practice there is a good chance it will not work out that way.
I have heard of some practices where people integrate profiling in their continuous integration so they have a performance history. In case the performance sharply drops they get a notification and have a git commit associated with it which makes finding the issue much easier. But I have never used that myself.
14:10
@nwp Actually, thanks a lot. I forgot that built-in datatypes are copied via default copy constructor. So I can follow the rule of zero easily now.
14:30
Guys, am I correct that this place is not the one to ask things about CMake?
Do you know which one is correct?
14:49
I've seen people asking CMake questions here as much as I recall.
all I know about cmake is that it's horrible to try and debug
15:27
Aug 5 '17 at 9:19, by sehe
@SzymonMarczak On the contrary. Please let's not teach bad C++
According to the above:
Hmm... IMO old answers should be updated every year.
there should be a remainder in StackOverflow which would ask you every year: hey, you, don't you wanna update your answer? that would be quite interesting too see in action ;P
@SzymonMarczak only the highly upvoted/valuable ones
@Mikhail good joke :P
nwp
nwp
15:50
@SzymonMarczak That is highly problematic. Leaving highly upvoted outdated answers is bad, updating them into potentially wrong answers with a ton of upvotes is bad, people not finding answers to old technologies is bad. SO has not found a solution and I can't really blame them either.
@nwp create new answer for new technologies
nwp
nwp
Well, having the auto_ptr answer with 1500 upvotes and then adding a unique_ptr answer with 3 upvotes will be very misleading too.
@nwp edit answer, don't change old parts, add new parts? duplicated questions are bad too...
16:25
i want to place a method which checks a tracked hand on specific gestures im my processing method -> coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/b4eb2ddaced39d32 maybe checkHandOnGestures(hand). My approach is, that this method returns the recognized gesture type in form of a named constant--->MOVE,GRAB,SELECT. The problem comes with the "where to process" of this gestures. I have two choices...one: in the processHands(handslist) method or outside.
Which refers to the problem how to bring the results outside.
@Yashas doing sizeof(formaltag_name)/sizeof(char) is shit anyway. If you want for it to actually mean something, write sizeof(formaltag_name)/sizeof(*formaltag_name) instead
that way it actually can adapt to the type changes
@SzymonMarczak this is what usually is done
Be very careful if the accepted answer has significantly less upvotes than the most upvoted one (like: 400 vs 2000, 50 vs 200)
it usually means it's wrong and/or outdated
@milleniumbug I've met an accepted answer with -2 votes (and there was answer with >150 votes) lol
yeah it basically means it was never correct
@milleniumbug and the timestamp of the accepted answer is older
yeah also that
@user929304 Such nesting usually means your program is very poorly structured
16:39
@milleniumbug and is less readable
17:01
@SzymonMarczak Users with lots of answers would find this somewhat beyond annoying. I'd have to update two to three answers per day (365 days a year) to update every one annually. Quite a few answers about algorithms (for one obvious example) are unlikely to ever really need updating. For one example, long before this answer is obsolete or subject to significant change, SO and the web in general will probably have been replaced (several times over).
no one an idea ?
@JerryCoffin Assume there would be an option for turning it for some/all answers :-) Also edits come with help. Some people edit answers to make them still valid for the present.
@SzymonMarczak Of course--any more I probably do more editing on old answers than posting of new ones. My guess, however, is that regular users would turn off such a reminder for all their answers. The vast majority of the rest would be accounts that post once or twice and never looked at again, so they'd never see the reminder. I doubt there's even 1% of users who'd actually make real use of such a reminder.
@FerencRozsa Sorry, but I don't know what LMOpenGLWidget is... Also I'm not familar with OpenGL. It'd be awesome if you could provide more code so we can see what's going on...
@SzymonMarczak OpenGL and LMOpenGLWidget is in that case actually not interesting....processHands() gets a list of tracked hands as parameter which i want to check on selfdefined gestures.
my approach is to do the recognizing of these gestures in my processHands method but the placing of the processing of these is triggy.
17:19
@FerencRozsa I would create a function getGesture(hand). I don't know what your problem exactly is, so can't help much.
@FerencRozsa Sounds like a reasonable use-case for signals and slots.
17:44
Well, you guys say CMake fits in this chat as well, well here you are
"The if command was written very early in CMake’s history, predating the ${} variable evaluation syntax, and for convenience evaluates variables named by its arguments as shown in the above signatures"
"variables named by its arguments"
.... I'm losing my english here
What does the last citation mean?
How can variables be named by arguments of 'if'?
18:24
youtu.be/LDxAgMe6D18?t=6m53s "this is a snippet from our C++ standard library I don't even what it does"
so much there is going on
@ledonter Did you read the example below (CMake help page)?
The implementation of tuple-cat is hard. It doesn't help that the standard library implementers have to use awkward variable names with _Capital
@ledonter i.sstatic.net/CZ8wa.png "Note that normal variable evaluation with ${} applies"
Yes I understand the meaning
Of the whole idea
I don't understand the meaning of that specific sentence
However I guess nevermind
I somehow understand it now I think and it doesn't matter much anyway
Hey guys, does someone know why this SFINAE doesn't work?
template <size_t size, std::enable_if_t<(size > 1), bool> = false>
class Vector { ... }

Gives me bunch of errors in basically every method in the class
(Works without the SFINAE though)
nwp
nwp
18:40
SFINAE on a class? Looks like it doesn't hit any SFINAE contexts.
@SirHeadshot could you provide examples of code that works/doesn't? I'm sure I can help, just curious :D
@nwp Oh well, i never knew it doesn't work on classes.. that's pretty sad, i feel dumb now :D Just wanted to try something out
@SirHeadshot your usage of enable_if_t is plain wrong. You should have a typename argument which defaults to enable_if_t.
@ledonter seems like that's impossible at all, but my intention was to prevent my vector class to be constructed with if the size is 1 or 0
nwp
nwp
Use static_assert.
18:48
I don't understand this :( I mean
http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/28e43b7e8c8e4631
@EuriPinhollow I just recently learned about it and saw it like that:

template <size_t rSize, std::enable_if_t<(rSize > size), bool> = false>
constexpr Vector(const Vector<rSize>& vec) {
std::copy(vec.data.begin(), vec.data.begin() + size, data.begin());
}

I'm glad if you could teach me on that if there are better ways
This compiles fine, if I change it to Vector<1> it doesn't compile
What is the issue then?
@ledonter I am not sure, it doesn't work for me at all and basically seems to destroy the whole Syntax that the compiler doesn't recognize the class anymore..
I am using Visual Studio 2017 with the newest std available for that
nwp
nwp
@ledonter The "Not An Error" part of SFINAE is not doing what it is supposed to do.
@ledonter std::enable_if_t<(size > 1), bool> do you understand that?
I mean: size > 1
18:53
@nwp ... ok, so it doesn't work like a 'canonical SFINAE' should, but still it works, right?
@SirHeadshot ok, I was underinformed, your way of using SFINAE works. Now be gentle and paste MCVE to coliru or anywhere else if you want any further help.
@ledonter As @nwp has already metioned, sometimes it's better to use static_assert :)
nwp
nwp
@ledonter I would consider it working if you can add another definition with std::enable_if_t<(size <= 1), bool> and the correct definition is selected without errors.
@nwp yup that would fix the problem
.... what I definitely not understand here is
std::enable_if_t<(size > 1), bool> = false
I haven't read about enable_if/sfinae/templates much so questions may seem vague, but maybe someone would still help :D
I mean
std::enable_if_t<(size > 1), bool>
this is a type name, correct?
nwp
nwp
19:00
Sometimes, depending on the condition size>1.
If that evaluates to true you get the type bool, otherwise you are supposed to get a substitution failure which makes the compiler ignore that template for the specific instantiation.
Well yeah I understand that..
so the whole construction is somewhat like
template <typename T, int = 0>....
this 'int = 0' construct seems unnatural to me
as anonymous template params overall do..
nwp
nwp
Well yeah, the point is to trigger SFINAE. You don't actually care about the result.
Well I guess I understand it now... still needs a bit more meditation to get comfortable with though :)
nwp
nwp
It's just convoluted syntax for if (size > 1) class Vector{...} else class Vector{...};, which is what is actually meant.
To me the most complicated syntactical part of enable_if and friends is those anonymous params
like take 2 top examples from cppref

template <typename Integer,
typename = std::enable_if_t<std::is_integral<Integer>::value>
>
T(Integer) : m_type(int_t) {}
Anonymous template type param

template<class T, std::enable_if_t<T::value1, int> = 0>
void func() {} // #1
Anonymous non-type one

Gotta be able to recognize those quickly :)
"if it has a name, it's lvalue"
BTW isn't this wrong?
I mean e.g. *x
Does this have a name / is this a name?
nwp
nwp
19:11
x is a name. *x is some value without a name.
Guess that rule isn't as useful as I thought it was.
An alternative is "if you can take the address of it" which requires you to know that &*x doesn't compile.
If it has a name, it's an lvalue is a valid rule, right? I can't think of any instance where a "thing" with a name isn't an lvalue
But then there are bitfields
So the alternative doesn't work as well :)
@ledonter *x has no name, which the rule-of-thumb says nothing about
nwp
nwp
The rule is valid if you understand that *x isn't a name. Otherwise the rule is useless.
@Justin Well I thought of it as of equivalence
19:14
It's not iff, just if. E.g. I can have a member function returning an lvalue reference
nwp
nwp
@Justin It doesn't? I understood it as "no name therefore rvalue".
Huh, I guess returning a reference lets you take the address of an unnamed object.
@Justin I understand that it's not iff, just would like for it to be iff :) yeah, you got another counter example
nwp
nwp
Unless you bend the understanding of "unnamed object" to exclude references or something.
But "unnamed object" excludes references because an object is a value, right? :P
Whatever it really is, rules-of-thumb aren't strict rules, but are instead heuristics which can be used to identify the correct thing most of the time. There are usually exceptions to rules-of-thumb
nwp
nwp
@Justin Makes sense to me, but I wouldn't expect a beginner to know what C++ considers objects, so it isn't a useful rule for them.
19:27
main.cpp:14:15: error: 'long long long' is too long for GCC
long long long int x;

sorry
19:47
Can we do something like const auto& to make sure that it's a const ref (auto itself can be a const already)?
Yes and for (const auto &elem : list) is a classical way to write a ranged-for
(to my knowledge; I'd be should to know it's not true)
It's not a mindfuck, it's beautiful :)
@ledonter beauty of C++ haha :D love that
BTW gurus, what exactly is 'value' in C++? I mean, I understand most of 'basic.concepts' terms: expressions, objects, names, entitites, types, variables
But what is a 'value'? From value categories that refer to expressions I could conclude that the value is 'something intuitively known' referred to my an expression
Is that so? Frankly I don't think I'm right
Then how to define value in C++?
19:56
@ledonter It's either rvalue or lvalue
but it's expressions that can be r/lvalues
Then value = expression? Seems a bit weird to me
@ledonter generally speaking yes
@ledonter this is another beauty in C++ :)
According to http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/value_category :

"Each C++ expression (an operator with its operands, a literal, a variable name, etc.) is characterized by two independent properties: a type and a value category. Each expression has some non-reference type, and each expression belongs to exactly one of the three primary value categories: prvalue, xvalue, lvalue"
@ledonter If you watch the video a bit longer, it's really mindfuck:
const int* const x;
auto x; // type = const int* (constant pointer to int; not to const int which this may lead to UB)
for safety reasons IMO it's better to add consts/volatiles and refs to autos unless you're using a forwarding reference
20:14
@SzymonMarczak I don't think it's true that they're equal, thus I hope to get so gurus answering :)
@nwp ping
@JerryCoffin ping
@Mgetz ping
@milleniumbug ping
@sehe ping
nwp
nwp
Why are you pinging everyone?
just want to know the answer
I don't think it's too polite to call everyone :)
please don't do that again
20:16
@milleniumbug ok ;d
@SzymonMarczak My values are gluttony and laziness.
> An expression is a sequence of operators and operands that specifies a computation.
An expression can result in a value and can cause side effects.
@ledonter It's a non-normative note in [expr], but so far the best one I can find
Since the terms "lvalue" and "rvalue" apply to expressions, you could say they are confusing and should be instead named "lexpression" or "rexpression"
But I'll say that naming is not the most confusing thing about C++, so I have no advice than to accept this and move on
20:33
17 mins ago, by milleniumbug
please don't do that again
+1
20:43
I know that definition for an expression, yeah
I'm looking for the one for 'value'
Is there one?

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