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Xeo
Xeo
17:00
@LucDanton And just f(0) does?
Super secret sauce only for hardcore people.
@Xeo Yes.
@ecatmur will compile cause std::shared_ptr<int>(0) is valid. But it is only possible if shared_ptr's ctor is not explicit.
Xeo
Xeo
null-pointer constant conversion to nullptr
and from there to std::shared_ptr
Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww.
Xeo
Xeo
17:00
something like that, is my guess
std::nullptr_t p = 0; is accepted.
They're not done yet, and they're already putting extensions in? In -std=c++11 mode?
The constructor from nullptr_t is template <class D> shared_ptr(nullptr_t p, D d)
@R.MartinhoFernandes > A null pointer constant of integral type can be converted to a prvalue of type std::nullptr_t.
lol
The D has to be there.
17:02
Are there issues when passing shared_ptrs across ABI boundaries?
sbi
sbi
And @tsondergaard from Medical Insight sends his entire C++ Dev-Team to the conf! btw. they have open positions: http://medical-insight.com
@LucDanton Oh where is that?
Xeo
Xeo
@ecatmur I for sure think that there's another ctor that only accepts nullptr_t
@R.MartinhoFernandes Pointer conversions.
-> std::nullptr_t p = move(0) ???
Xeo
Xeo
17:03
@LucDanton I win. \o/
@Xeo Oh, you're right, it's at the end. constexpr shared_ptr(nullptr_t) : shared_ptr() { }
My bad.
The constructor taking only std::nullptr_t is listed way at the end of the synopsis IIRC.
that implementation havent made ctor's explicit
@IDWMaster yes, unless the both sides of the ABI were compiled at the same time by the same machine/compiler/settings/everything.
but in boost it is always explicit as I see
Xeo
Xeo
17:03
So, who's gonna ask why f(0) compiles as a question now? I want some rep for my answer. :3
What about f(42 - 42).
Xeo
Xeo
try it xD
Should compile :(
@MooingDuck So it is better to return raw pointers rather than shared_ptrs in the library?
I'm so not touching that.
17:04
That could be causing the leak?
@Xeo No need to. Although I already did tbh.
Xeo
Xeo
Same with f(X{}.n); with struct X{ int n; };
They should be shot.
Xeo
Xeo
that was the weird null-pointer constant example from Chancler Carruth on GN IIRC
17:05
@IDWMaster if you can't control both sides, then yes. Though you can make a client-side header-only wrapper to immediately re-wrap them.
@MooingDuck OK
So this could could be causing the leak when passed through ABI boundary
shared_ptr<ITexture2D> CreateTexture2D(int width, int height) {
		NativeTexture2D* md = FastAlloc(utils,NativeTexture2D);
		md->internalTexture = FastAlloc(utils,Texture2D,(width,height,Renderer->device,Renderer->context));
		md->renderer = Renderer;
		shared_ptr<NativeTexture2D> retval(md,destructobject);
		return retval;
	}
Just have to return ITexture2D* rather than shared_ptr<ITexture2D>
Xeo
Xeo
So? Anybody going to ask that as a question?
Why don't you just compile both with the same options?
@Xeo Ask and answer yourself. Even more rep.
Xeo
Xeo
If not, I'll just steal that question and the rep :P
Ask what question?
17:08
@IDWMaster leak is less likely than simply crashing left and right, but possible.
Which question; the one about ABI boundaries and shared pointers?
@IDWMaster what kind of library is your project? A dll?
Xeo
Xeo
construction from 0 and shared_ptr
@MooingDuck Yes
Xeo
Xeo
17:10
heh
@IDWMaster yeah, dlls mess up a lot of things in C++ unless both sides are compiled togeather.
Xeo
Xeo
Gimme a headstart by copy-pasting the question text so I can prepare an answer :P
@MooingDuck In what ways do they mess things up?
@IDWMaster you know about std::allocator? The default allocator?
@MooingDuck What about it?
17:11
@IDWMaster The DLL can have a different one than the main project, which means things allocated in the DLL can't alwyas be deallocated in the other project, and vice versa. Passing dynamic structures back and forth becomes hard.
5
Q: Memory allocation and deallocation across dll boundaries

AlanI understand that memory allocations made in one dll then subsequently free'd in another can cause all sort of problems, especially regarding the CRT. These sorts of problems are especially problematic when it comes to exporting STL containers. We've experienced these sorts of problems before (...

wtf I use the name emplace for two different unrelated things. How did I miss that.
Hmm. I'm compiling both using the same compiler and settings (only difference is one is a DLL; other is a Console Application)
I'm also using my own allocator
@IDWMaster oddly enough, if you're crafty, you can use shared_ptr/unique_ptr to solve those problems.
because malloc is too slow
Seems as though shared_ptr is the SOURCE of the problem
not the solution
@IDWMaster no, what I said was if the two sides aren't compiled by the same compiler and the same settings, you cannot pass any C++ object back and forth.
@IDWMaster if they're the same compiler and settings, you can pass objects, but things allocated in one still have to be allocated in the same one, which unique_ptr/shared_ptr can do.
When prepared, you can post the answer here:
0
Q: Can I assign 0 to a shared_ptr? Why?

R. Martinho FernandesI realized the following compiles fine in GCC 4.7: #include <memory> int main() { std::shared_ptr<int> p; p = 0; } However, there is no assignment operator from int or from int*, and there is no implicit constructor from either int or int* either. There is a constructor fr...

:P
Xeo
Xeo
boo :(
@MooingDuck Why isn't the destructor being called when it goes out of scope though?
It should be
I have both optional<foo> o { emplace(bar, baz, qux) }; and make_invoke(f, a0, val(a1), emplace(a2)) (where emplace(a2) has the meaning of val(std::move(a2)). Any suggestion to fix my name conflict? I'd like to change the latter emplace if possible. (Something short to match ref/val would be nice.)
17:16
@IDWMaster I dunno
@Xeo Hey, I gave you a headstart.
Of about 1 second.
Seems to work just fine when not going through the boundary between the DLL and the EXE
But as soon as I pass the shared_ptr across that boundary..... it's not freeing it.
@LucDanton val(std::move(a2)) is "force pass by value", right?
Yes.
make_invoke(f, shove(a))
@Xeo Btw, I am repcapped, so I'm not making any rep from this.
Well, maybe 2 points for the accept tomorrow.
17:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes Joke's on you I will upvote tomorrow.
@LucDanton Not if I cap first!
Shit, you're probably awake at midnight.
Hello. I got a question about book/resource recommendation. The mods closed my question and said I should ask it here. I am looking for Books/Resources which explain TCP/IP implementation. I only know about:
1) Internetworking with TCP/IP: Vol.II, Design, Implementation, and Internals
2)TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol. 2: The Implementation
but these are quite dated. I am particularly interested in Open source implementations. Any ideas?
sbi
sbi
What do you guys say? Was this a legitimate question, or was I singling out an innocent user and exposing him to potential flash mobs, as Mike seems to believe?
@Bruce TCP isn't part of the C++ standard. That makes it unlikely, though not impossible, that you might get help here.
@sbi Manjot? He was a real troublemaker.
@sbi I don't think the two are mutually exclusive.
sbi
sbi
17:21
After being hammered at for hours by this Mike guy, I don't even know anymore if his POV is grossly over the top or mine.
@sbi: This chat room had the most number of users and most of the implementation code is in C, so I thought I would ask here
@Bruce Use ØMQ.
@sbi Manjot was over the top. Don't bother.
@Radek whats that?
@Bruce What does C have to do with this room?
sbi
sbi
17:22
@R.MartinhoFernandes I am not bothered by the guy this was about, I am bothered by the guy who keeps throwing at me what I consider stupid arguments.
@Radek: I assume all C++ programmers know C also
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Gah, why didn't you specify it in terms of void f(shared_ptr<int>) :P
@sbi I think it would have been a better question if you didn't link to his profile, and kept it psuedo-anonymous.
@Bruce you'd be wrong
sbi
sbi
17:23
@MooingDuck "Mentioning the specific person is important as well because, without examples, it sounds like an imagined problem." — jadarnel27
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, I find it interesting that shared_ptr has no operator=(nullptr_t)
@MooingDuck @Radek There is no room for C
@Bruce Also, what does C++ have to do with this room?
@Bruce yes there is, I'm in it
sbi
sbi
Whoever flagged that, no matter for how short a time, now please hangs his head in shame and goes to read the newbie hints 10 times per day for a week.
17:24
@Bruce Is that another assumption?

LOUNGE(C);

A room to hang out and chat. The primary focus is on the C lan...
@Xeo Doesn't need it.
@Radek: You are a smart person
I know.
Xeo
Xeo
@ecatmur Sure, but still. One less construction
@RadekSlupik: Can you suggest me a book/resource for my problem then?
17:26
@Xeo It's a constexpr ctor.
@Xeo Wait a minute, isn't there an ambiguity here?
I hate trolls. They are annoying, so you plonk them, and when you plonk them the avatar list is fucked up and that is also annoying. There is basically no way to stop trolls.
@Bruce As if I know anything about TCP. I only use ØMQ.
sbi
sbi
> "Curiosity" has found no signs of football, beer or porn, destroying the theory that men are from Mars. -- Ms. Betty Menace — @rickt
@Xeo Strictly a matter of QoI.
@sbi We're just good at hiding it.
17:27
@RadekSlupik: The C room has no active users. The last message posted there was 2 days ago.
Ok, maybe not.
@Bruce Light it up.
Xeo
Xeo
Hm, shouldn't X{}.n be an integral constant expression?
with struct X{ int n; };
@Bruce If there were active users do you think they'd like to be interrupted?
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Who is this "we" and that "it", when spoken by a robot in a discussion about men?
@sbi It likes to play human.
17:28
@DeadMG I just noticed that I have a special case, constant buffers never need multiple elements, should I split that into a separate class?
@sbi "it" is a "football, beer or porn".
sbi
sbi
@Bruce And what makes you think those slackers would hang out here instead? :-/
@sbi now that I've read more of the chain, I believe he is wrong. He's saying you're only accusing him because you think you'd gain something or hurt him, which is just stupid. You're clearly trying to clarify the rules of teh site.
@melak47 Consider it later.
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck "He's saying you're only accusing him..." Wait. Are you implying something here?
17:29
@Xeo Ah no, the copy assignment operator is preferred over the template assignment operators from other types. Good good.
@sbi "we" is us living beings that identify ourselves as male.
@Xeo Apparently taking the synopsis to the letter that leads to ambiguities. Not sure what is going on.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I want to implement a new congestion avoidance algorithm in the Linux Kernel. I don't know shit about the TCP implementation in the kernel. I have asked for help on SO and SF and my question gets deleted every time. This is the first time I am using chat. So can someone please help me.
@sbi uh, no. That wasn't my intent, sorry. Can't words good.
E.g. struct foo { foo(std::nullptr_t); foo& operator=(std::unique_ptr<int>&&); }; allows foo f = nullptr; but f = nullptr; is rejected by GCC.
17:30
@Bruce no, we're here to chat. Go to SO to ask questions.
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mrs. Menace did not write about "males", but about "men". And I don't believe for a single second that you overlooked that.
"Ever(y)body know that the pointers must be freed..." I seriously hope that there are at least a few programmers out there who know that not pointers, but dynamically allocated memory they might refer to, must be freed. Have you tried to learn the language from a book? — sbi 14 mins ago
Pointers are innocent!
Read it. Know it. And leave us alone.
@LucDanton Pointers are indecent!
Xeo
Xeo
17:32
Regarding oddities like 42 - 42 being null pointer constants, that's likely going away, and only a literal 0 will be a valid null pointer constant, in a future version of C++. — hvd 3 mins ago
@Bruce What is your question?
@R.MartinhoFernandes He obviously doesn't have one. There was no question mark in that statement.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: I am looking for Books/Resources which explain TCP/IP implementation in the kernel
> Does destructor run just before object is destroyed or just before it?
2
17:33
Kernel docs might have some.
It's crazy idea but hey.
I suggest there's an error in that sentence.
@Xeo What, is 42 - 42 actually a valid null pointer constant according to the Standard?
2 hours ago, by Drise
@EtiennedeMartel I got flagged once before for telling a dude to go masturbate into a sock, since he wouldn't leave us alone.
OP replies with "Edited the question. Please reply"
Don't make me tell you off.
17:34
I check the question and it still reads "Does destructor run just before object is destroyed or just before it?"
@DeadMG It's an integral constant expression with value 0.
How should I proceed? </rhetorical>
@R.MartinhoFernandes Link it in chat, of course.
I'm sure this could be abused horribly in Hell++
I recommend food. In fact brb cooking
Xeo
Xeo
17:35
@DeadMG What @ecatmur says
> C is often described, with a mixture of fondness and disdain varying according to the speaker, as “a language that combines all the elegance and power of assembly language with all the readability and maintainability of assembly language”
9
@DeadMG As is a bunch of other nonsense, yes.
@DeadMG Erm, what for?
by creating an ICE which is 0 but will almost certainly invoke bad behaviour when defined as NULL
It's already hellish as is.
I mean, imagine #define NULL 5, 0 for example.
17:35
Doesn't work for int* p = NULL;.
@DeadMG Needs parens for safety. You suck at macros.
Well okay, parens.
Xeo
Xeo
struct X{ int n; }; #define NULL X{}.n
@Drise ok I am leaving
or #define NULL 5 ^ 5. surprise operator precedence, bitch
17:36
@EtiennedeMartel Assembly has less UB.
@DeadMG Oh wait, that's... actually not forbidden, AFAICS.
@Xeo run-time value, sorry.
Is there some place in the standard that says standard macros must be "safe"?
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Thanks for chiming in. I had already given up on the guy.
Xeo
Xeo
@ecatmur Theoretically, X is a literal type and n is a prvalue of value 0, and an integral constant expression
17:38
@sbi probably for the best. You've said what you have to say and he won't listen. I figured I'd point out that I at least, agree with you.
Xeo
Xeo
Something like that was explained by Chandler Carruth at GN2012
Though GCC 4.7 and Clang 3.1 reject it :(
So I think I'm missing something
Even with a constexpr X():n(){} ctor
@sbi Seems to me like this guy has some personal grudge against you.
@Xeo oh, nice.
@sbi, rereading that question, why did GraceNote put a link to her mostly unused gamedev profile as "full disclosure"?
@EtiennedeMartel I think I'd made myself the bigger target..
17:41
oooooh, all her rep there is from edits :D
sbi
sbi
@MooingDuck Her editing, however, was helpful, rather than stupid.
@DeadMG That's sooooooo evil.
@Drise Yeah, but you always come off as being seriously pissed about everything.
I honestly can't find anything that forbids that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Imagine like, int* p = ...; if (p != NULL)
Xeo
Xeo
17:43
@DeadMG error! :3
@EtiennedeMartel Do I really? I'm really a calm dude. I hate being angry. Degrades your personality, and the longer you're angry, the more permanent the damage is.
@DeadMG why not &&?, oh right, one would have to be a zero with that
cout << "Enter the accountID: ";
vector<Account>::istream_iterator< Account > inputID( cin );
0
Q: C++ user-defined vector not working with STL algorithms?

S. MooreThis banking project requires the creation of 2 classes (Account and BankSys) which are then driven by main. Account holds all the user input account information of which MUST be stored in a vector which exists in BankSys. I have to be able to add, delete, output to file, etc... My main problem...

@Xeo Why an error?
Xeo
Xeo
@Prætorian bleh, MVP
17:44
@Xeo MVP?
@Drise Yeah. When a noob comes on, it's almost as if you're ready to gouge his eyes.
Xeo
Xeo
most-vexing parse, would apply IIRC
ah. wait
nvm
@R.MartinhoFernandes (p != 5) ^ 5 if I remember precedence correctly
and p != 5 is an error
@EtiennedeMartel Most of the time they do deserve it though, you must admit. Most of the time they ask very very stupid things...
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel You know, the first thing I did after I realized that was to go and check the age of his SO profile. He's been a user for longer than me, though, so he wouldn't be a sockpuppet of the banned guy. I still suspect the other guy, though.
@Prætorian whoa
17:45
@Xeo Wrong plink
Xeo
Xeo
I may have gone totally nuts by now, though
@Prætorian Thanks for the hint
Jul 14 at 5:58, by Domagoj Pandža
Hello. C write I. Me no know English but good programmer very.
@Xeo That's actually very true. I hadn't considered that.
@sbi Tip: don't discuss anything with PHP developers, especially certified ones.
what about #define NULL 5, 0.
17:46
That just gets on my nerves, things like that.
foo(NULL, ...)
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG int* p = NULL; // error
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus I hadn't even looked at his tags. :-o
hmm
He's got Zend badges in profile description.
17:47
I guess it's trickier to put the theoretical flexibility afforded here to malicious use.
@Drise Yeah that seems a bit harsh.
Just the "leave us alone" part. The rest was perfect.
@Drise you've been much more agitated since she left. It's pretty significant.
hell
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG Put parens in.
@MooingDuck Wow. I didn't even realize...
17:48
#define NULL (malloc(5), 0)
2
Oh dear.
@DeadMG, you are an incredibly evil person.
Xeo
Xeo
Meh, thanks to that sucker I won't even get enlightened :(
@MooingDuck Wait, what?
void f() { throw std::runtime_error(); } #define NULL (f(), 0)
@EtiennedeMartel last two or three weeks, he's been a lot more... touchy?
17:50
@MooingDuck Hmmm. I guess it's time to get drunk!
Don't jump on newbies unless they're actually annoying.
@DeadMG if(rand()<100)
@EtiennedeMartel My fiance left for Germany for a solid year on the 26th.
@MooingDuck Can't, then it's not ICE.#
@Drise Phew. I thought it was worse than that. Like that she left for good.
17:50
@DeadMG Inside f().
@EtiennedeMartel Well, it's just about the same. I'm going to have to dump nearly $1k to fly out there at Christmas time.
@DeadMG does void f(){rand()<100?throw std::runtime_error():return void;} compile?
Xeo
Xeo
anyways, dinner.
@MooingDuck WTF with return void;?
@MooingDuck No.
17:51
@CatPlusPlus Good point.
throw is a statement, not expression.
@Drise You're saying that like it's a waste of money.
sbi
sbi
@CatPlusPlus It seems my tunnel view syndrome made me not see that.
@CatPlusPlus I'll try.
return, too.
17:52
@EtiennedeMartel It's not a trivial sum.. Plus I have to pay 3.5K for school, and $350 a month for rent..
@DeadMG there are certain ways to return a void, but that isn't one of them :(
@sbi I guess age is taking its toll.
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus You can use it inside the conditional operator.
@DeadMG return void() should be OK though.
@Xeo So what? NULL is still valid.
17:52
@Drise Hey, sometimes, you gotta make some sacrifices.
@ecatmur I think the return has to be outside
@Xeo That's stupid, but okay. You can't use return, though, right?
@Drise Just check yo' self! :-)
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus aye
The fact that your puny code can't handle a manly definition of NULL is irrelevant.
That's what Hell++ is about.
17:52
@MooingDuck oh, yeah. Still.
I’ve just acquired a bag of ketchup-flavoured crisps.
They are tasty.
@DeadMG Not constant.
@sehe do you know Looijen?
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus Btw, throw is an expression.
It is?
What for.
Xeo
Xeo
17:54
83
Q: In C++, if throw is an expression, what is its type?

anonI picked this up in one of my brief forays to reddit: http://www.smallshire.org.uk/sufficientlysmall/2009/07/31/in-c-throw-is-an-expression/ Basically, the author points out that in C++: throw "error" is an expression. This is actually fairly clearly spelt out in the C++ Standard, both in th...

@CatPlusPlus so it can be put in ?:
@CatPlusPlus a throw expression.
@RadekSlupik No shit.
But throw never “returns”.
@MooingDuck Wonderful use case.
@EtiennedeMartel I got that album a few years ago :)
2008 or so.
@CatPlusPlus comes in handy
@StackedCrooked Yeah, I figured, since you like Canadian indie rock so much.
Can you actually construct a void value?
Xeo
Xeo
17:56
void(), X(answer);
@CatPlusPlus Probably not directly but OK through template.
@CatPlusPlus apperently
@MooingDuck Give up, without a constexpr f, it's not valid!
Can you do anything with it?
@CatPlusPlus apperently I can return it
Xeo
Xeo
17:56
Make operator, behave the way you want
I know the workaround, yes.
What I'm saying is C++ sucks.
@Xeo Is there really an operator,?
And I'm tireeed.
Xeo
Xeo
sure
@Drise Yes.
Xeo
Xeo
17:57
You can even overload it
@Drise don't use it
Oh, so void f(){return rand()<100?throw std::runtime_error(),void():void();}?
It's better than operator&.
Xeo
Xeo
vector<int> v; v += 1,2,3,4,5; abuses that
@ecatmur no, you only need the second void(). The function compiled in teh code I linked.
17:58
@MooingDuck aah, need to read that link.
Would it be possible to overload operator, to have a Python-like syntax for make_tuple?
@StackedCrooked They're releasing a new album soon, by the way.
@CatPlusPlus no wait, I can't, I overlooked an error
Not that it would be a good idea.
@Xeo Wait, += on a vector == push_back?
17:59
@EtiennedeMartel Cool.
All this C++ talk.

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