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18:00
same
If I have this: ideone.com/kH18a. How would I access Out's public members from In? Would I store a pointer to it and then access it using that (I would acquire a pointer to it by passing it into In's constructor when making it inside Out)?
@Tuntuni Either store the pointer or pass it to whatever member function of In that needs it.
@LucDanton Just what I thought. :) Thanks.
He's jumping!!!
Ell
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i thought he wouldnt undo his seatbelt at first
He has 10 mins to get down. :o
They said he'll be breaking the sound barrier.
What a ride
Ell
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yea
18:08
Aaaaaaaaand
Boom
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feels like hes gonna pass out?
@Ell Idk. Seems like it.
Ell
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can't really understand him
1
Q: What is the C++ memory layout of objects/structs etc?

user997112In C++ I presume the C++ standard has nothing to do with how data members are arranged within a class, in terms of memory layout? Would I be right in thinking this is down to the compiler in question? I'm very interested in learning how objects and other C++ entities (structs etc) are represente...

Yea.
Ell
Ell
18:12
visor is foggin up
I wonder how it feels to be falling like that ..
Ell
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yeah
Must be scary.
-1
A: What is the C++ memory layout of objects/structs etc?

Prototype StarkThe first thing to know is there is a difference between HEAP allocated objects and STACK allocated objects. On stack, the structure block is represented as a consecutive array of bytes with a padding(compiler dependent, you can align the structure elements at word, short and byte boundaries). ...

That's a funny answer.
Ell
Ell
lol @ them getting wind direction wrong
18:16
He's almost down.
Haha, ya.
W0000T, he's down!
FUCK
HE DIT IT
I wanted to see a massive splatter
Ya. :D
Hahahaha.
@DeadCicada Evil! :D
Hello, World!
@DeadCicada Who's splattering? Oh...the guy that's jumping from 20 miles up or something?
lol 20 miles
@Code-Guru Eh, wasn't really paying attention .. Just wanted to see the actual jump. xD
18:19
@DeadCicada You're a cruel person.
err...whatever it is...
how high is he going?
or did he go rather?
Opps .. Edited my 'post'. LOL ..
Ell
Ell
@DeadCicada I wanted to see that too :3
You're all cruel.
@EtiennedeMartel Unfortunately. :(
18:21
Nah. I just wanted a new gif in my collection.
@DeadCicada Got to have priorities.
Did they just make a mix?
No. It was all prerecorded.
Just like when they "went to the moon".
18:24
@Feeds durr. auto-drive-by mode. I removed the tag "c++-faq tag is reserved for faq items that have high quality reference answers"
@DeadCicada Trollin' trollin'
Allday errday
@DeadCicada Wasn't that an early Speilburg production?
Alien prequel.
Ell
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hmm youtube 500 error
18:26
@Ell They're on to you
@DeadCicada Do you mean Alien pre-prequel? Isn't Promethius supposed to be the prequel?
I has the 502 error on yourage
Back online now
Off to make some food, cya
Ell
Ell
now I have 502
Yep, same here.
I seem to remember something about class objects always being laid out so no padding precedes the first member. Is that only for standard-layout types, or all class types?
18:30
wow, I think youtube has finally found it's limits
Ell
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now I have 500 again
something about monkeys.
looking through the standard for it now, but haven't found it yet
Ell
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let's ditch youtube and go to vimeo!
@DeadCicada see what I mean, compulsive troll
oh, how come we are Gallery mode?
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18:32
We are gallery mode? o.O
oh, apparently not
@Ell We were a few hours ago.
seems we were
@Ell or maybe youboob?
@thecoshman How come you always say that?
18:40
@sehe if anything it is only the second time I have said. And both times it was because I saw the room as in such mode
seems chat is good at telling clients when gallery mode is turned on, but crap at letting them know when it is turned off again
So did Felix break Mach 1? Is it official yet?
@thecoshman That's remarkable enough, right
@Chimera waiting for the press release
@sehe did I say it was?
@thecoshman ? lost me
That was quite a view when he was standing up getting ready to jump.
18:43
If I have a static function inside a class (which has to be static only because of its signature - it is a WNDPROC actually; can't pass anything else) and I know I'll only be creating one instance of the object, what would be a good way of accessing it? Storing 'this' into a static pointer, initializing it in the constructor and then accessing the object over this? Is this a good practice?
What would you suggest?
Make a free function dispatch and store the object pointer in user window data.
The windows are not mine. I don't know what data could be inside.
In dispatch function unpack the pointer and dispatch to the member function that handles messages.
SetWindowLongPtr
18:45
Yes, but I don't know if the program is already using it. I'm subclassing the windows.
I believe you are referring to what I have come to know as 'thunking'
Well, a) don't use WinAPI b) you're SOL hth.
That's not really thunking.
@CatPlusPlus b) ? "you're SOL hth"?
Thunking is generating dispatch code.
Plus, I have to use WinAPI.
18:46
huh, so is thunking the accepted turn for such magic?
Ell
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Would someone convert an ogg to an mp3 for me?
@Tuntuni Create a static map using the HWND as key?
So you get a normal function pointer to a generated piece of executable code that does magic.
@Tuntuni read up that link I just posted, it will let you use class memeber function (not a silly static function) as the function you pass to windows
Thunk can have this value hardcoded inside, so it just dispatches directly and poof.
18:47
Looks like he may not have hit Mach 1
Well I'm only going to have 1 instance of the object at any given moment. Can't I rely on that static variable (containing 'this')?
It's terrible code.
@Tuntuni sounds disgustingly like a singleton to me
Ya. :(
Ugh. I've been trying for days to convert this global variable mess into some kind of OO thing.
Maybe the structure of the class itself isn't good ..
Ugh
Well, the above is the way, if you can't do it, out of luck.
18:54
when it comes to wrapping up lame old OS APIs with their stupid 'global ALL the things' attitudes, it's best to just accept how crap it is, and let that shit stay global, not that can really hide it any wy
Yeah, I think I'll just have to accept it. :/
@daknøk double seconds = std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::nanoseconds>(elapsed).count()*1.0e-9;
@Tuntuni sure, that should be safe enough, as long as you don't accidentally violate that constraint. :) It's not pretty, but neither is the API you're working around
@sehe auto seconds surly?
@jalf Yes. :)
18:57
@thecoshman WHY!?
@jalf Indeed.
@sehe 'auto ALL the things' obviously
@thecoshman Well, you get to do your hobby, java developer :)
Apr 27 at 12:29, by class daknok_t
Does anybody know how I can convert an std::chrono::duration<std::chrono::high_resolution_clock> to a floating point number in seconds? Should I use std::chrono::duration_cast?
^ was in response to that
@sehe hay! Dealing with Java is not a life style choice!
I just wanted to make my code more organised since I have around 4-5 extern variables, lots of defines, etc.) so I thought OOP would do it but it is probably not the best for this kind of thing.
18:59
@thecoshman Oh no? What is it then :)
@sehe bread and butter
@Tuntuni OOP is not the answer to all life's problems
@thecoshman True.
Well, that is a lifestyle choice, Diogenes!
@thecoshman And auto is not a win in every situation.
@sehe true, I could choose to be homeless
Does anyone know why you can do const char a[] = "asdf"; but you cannot do const char a[] = "asdf"; const char b[] = a;?
19:02
@sehe I should find you that article about obsuficating (sp?) code for job security
@bobobobo It's not about should or shouldn't optimize. You should optimize if your profiler tells you. But you should optimize based on what the profiler tells you, instead of 'blanket assumptions' (X is better than Y) — sehe 5 secs ago
@thecoshman Don't tell me. I read it everyday. I have a job
@sehe captain obvious :P
@SethCarnegie because the dimension cannot be induced from the initializer. You might be allowed with both constexpr, maybe. Don't count on it, though
@thecoshman You haven't read the comment thread, clearly
@sehe why can it not be induced? It knows that a is a const char[5], no?
deduced, rather
@SethCarnegie because compilers suck :P
19:05
@SethCarnegie well, I figure you don't like the 'the standard says so' style of answering :) Apparently, since const char b[42] = { 0 } is valid too, it is deemed unclear enough
@EtiennedeMartel wut?
@sehe Also, it's not because the size can't be deduced, because const char a[] = "asdf"; const char b[5] = a; doesn't work either
@sehe Vintage Mario.
I'm just wondering, is there just a special case for string literals? That's annoying
19:07
@SethCarnegie I don't think you can assign an array.
@SethCarnegie ideone.com/0ZHx0
6
A: Default copy behavior with array of objects

seheArrays in C++ are well behaved for all first class objects, including user defined types (no matter whether they are POD/non-trivially constructible). #include <cstdio> struct Object { Object() { puts("Object"); } Object(Object const&) { puts("copy"); } ~...

@EtiennedeMartel it's not assignment, it's initialisation
@SethCarnegie Perhaps. Let me think/check
@EtiennedeMartel initialization
@sehe But it doesn't work with char? ideone.com/h7lVm
@SethCarnegie Yeah I was just checking. Unexpected to me
19:11
Arrays are non copyable but member arrays are copied.
Yes, but we were talking about initialising an array
which apparently works with user-defined types but not for primitive types?
Initializing from a value of the same type is also known as copying.
4 mins ago, by sehe
@SethCarnegie http://ideone.com/0ZHx0
@LucDanton oh
^ @LucDanton non member array. The trick seems to be that the element type needs to have a user-defined default constructor. According to gcc 4.6.2
19:13
@LucDanton the original question was this:
11 mins ago, by Seth Carnegie
Does anyone know why you can do const char a[] = "asdf"; but you cannot do const char a[] = "asdf"; const char b[] = a;?
Because there is no difference in type between a and "asdf" I thought.
@SethCarnegie The answer is that arrays are non copyable. Initializing from a string literal is an explicit exception.
So I was wondering if it is a special case, and why, because it seems needless
@LucDanton that's nice. The snippet ideone.com/0ZHx0 doesn't compile on clang :) It's likely a gcc bug/leniency
@sehe Ya. I wonder why I haven't hit that in my own code.
Because it makes sense for it to be allowed, IMO
Or you mean, you'd notice when compiling across gcc/clang
@Mysticial something for you maybe? http://stackoverflow.com/q/12885160/85371
I don't have windows not motivation :)
19:17
@SethCarnegie The bizarre rules that govern arrays were motivated by a fear of 'accidentally' writing code with costly (at the time) operations. The rule against non-copyable 'fits' well with the fact that e.g. void f(T[42]); really means void f(T*);: can't copy that parameter.
Here's a nice little question: do you know what 'MZ' stands for ;)? - the DOS signature at the beginning of every PE. No gooling! ;D
Come to think of it, you probably have to explicit declare the variable with array type to hit that bug. Not something I often do.
@LucDanton hmm makes sense, thanks
And I guess C++11 didn't want to break compatibility and a slew of other things
Can't break int main(int argc, char* argv[]) for one.
@Tuntuni What's the use of posing a trivial non question followed by the answer? Ah. I get it: "you're so good"
19:21
@sehe Wut? No .. I asked what does it stand for, i.e. what does MZ actually mean.
"What's the use of [asking that]" is a valid question/retort.
@LucDanton Yeah, and then you'd have to make T[] be a pointer and T[X] be a copied array which would be weird
But anyway, thanks
@Tuntuni The initials of a Polish (?) guy that co-developed MSDOS 1.0 Something like Miarck Zawinulski :)
@sehe Indeed. :) Mark Zbikowski is his name.
@Tuntuni Ah. I wasn't far off :)
19:28
;)
@Tuntuni Everybody knows that. Now, your turn (no google): the letter LZW stand for?
@sehe No idea. o.O
Mmm. Lempel-Ziv-Welch (not checked the zpelling). It's the zip/unzip compression algorithm IIRC (also used everywhere else)
@sehe Nice. ;) To be honest, never heard of it. =o
Lempel–Ziv–Welch (LZW) is a universal lossless data compression algorithm created by Abraham Lempel, Jacob Ziv, and Terry Welch. It was published by Welch in 1984 as an improved implementation of the LZ78 algorithm published by Lempel and Ziv in 1978. The algorithm is simple to implement, and has the potential for very high throughput in hardware implementations. Algorithm The scenario described by Welch's 1984 paper encodes sequences of 8-bit data as fixed-length 12-bit codes. The codes from 0 to 255 represent 1-character sequences consisting of the corresponding 8-bit charac...
19:30
Yup.
Hah. I got it right :)
@sehe thanks. Not sure if I still need that though. Also, chat highlights that username in green, although I didn’t get pinged.
@daknøk I figured. So the usual /don't fall asleep now/that would be a waste of time/ refrain doesn't plink you either, then? I suppose it is with replies to very old messages
No, you respond to my old account which doesn’t exist anymore.
19:34
@daknøk oh nice. Tells you that chat javascript looks at usernames instead of ids
Yes.
@daknøk "OOP is the most terrible invention ever, ..." - why?
Because he likes to rant
It sucks. I have never had any joy in using it.
And FP is fun. And IP is fun.
And OOP is not fun.
=o, why so?
@sehe Haha. :D
19:36
Code becomes terribly complex and unmaintainable.
Due to so much state and dependencies.
Really? I thought that was supposed to be solved by OOP.
Hm. Strange. I have never used it that much so I can't still tell. We'll see.
OOP is all about state.
OOP has it's place, as do FP and IP and everything except Java and PHP, but none of them are the be all and end all. They are just one of the tools
IP would be?
In computer science, imperative programming is a programming paradigm that describes computation in terms of statements that change a program state. In much the same way that imperative mood in natural languages expresses commands to take action, imperative programs define sequences of commands for the computer to perform. The term is used in opposition to declarative programming, which expresses what the program should accomplish without prescribing how to do it in terms of sequences of actions to be taken. Functional and logic programming are examples of a more declarative approach. ...
19:37
What I do in C.
Something like procedural programming?
Oh.
@daknøk OOP doesn't absolutely require state (beyond identity, but any non-value type has an identity, so the same goes in IP/FP). I agree, this would be highly unrealistic OOP code...
Oh wait. I’m confused now.
Oh I think I mean procedural programming.
@Tuntuni I think that's about right.
19:38
I mean like.
IP and PP seem very much the same
@daknøk You like mean (FTFY)
Functions and structs, but not modifying any values outside of your function, at least not too much.
Difficult to explain.
The testing framework is flawed. Your parameters have multiplications and divisions. Those will almost certainly take up the majority of the run-time. Secondly, you're populating new vectors in each iteration using the union hack. Constructing a SIMD vector using a union hack is very expensive if you use the result immediately. (by immediately, I mean within 20+ cycles) — Mysticial 3 mins ago
@Mysticial aha. Insightful as expected ^
indeed, I find all these programming paradigms are very much like music genres, people get far too hung up on them
19:40
Or too little (hung up)
At least C++ supplies you with enough rope to get hung up on
Also, with OOP I mean that you use crap like inheritance and interfaces and factories everywhere.
Not things like std::vector or std::function, which are fine to me.
Or a class that manages a resource.
@daknøk In fact, that'd be Interface Oriented Programming (I think I saw that before)
But I can’t stand things like parser or lexer classes, controllers, managers.
@sehe Whatever, I just call it “functions and data structures”.
FDS :D
Haha
@daknøk I agree with the sentiment. Though I think your summary accidentally reversed it. Functions+data structures would be 'good', Interface orientation, 'not-so-good' in your system, right?
19:44
@daknøk they don't have to though
serutcurts atad dna snoitcnuf?
@daknøk sƃuıɯɐɹƃoɹd pǝʇuǝıɹo ǝɔɐɟɹǝʇuı
@sehe what do you mean exactly by “interface orientation”?
3 mins ago, by daknøk
Also, with OOP I mean that you use crap like inheritance and interfaces and factories everywhere.
^ incidentally, that was the message replied to
Oh I mean interfaces as in Java.
class Foo implements Bar
19:45
@daknøk Me too. Or C#
oh well Java is lame
I don’t quite like such interfaces.
@daknøk Nah. Should be com.example.phony.application.layer.sublayer.interfaces.IBar (obviously, <troll/>)
If you implement those functions, fine. No need to explicitly state you do.
I don’t like too much layering.
KISS.
@daknøk cough So, you'd hate to see Concepts in c++2x then. cough
19:47
@daknøk well, it is handy for polymorphic stuff, but I hate the lack of multiple inheritance in Java. I like it when an interface can come with a generic implementation
Actually, concepts would not require explicit declaration, just explicit verification. Fair enough
I don’t quite like polymorphism for classes. You call a function, but you have no idea what it does since it may have any implementation depending on the type of *this.
@thecoshman cough I have a feeling you just made that a whole lot worse. Let's hope @daknøk doesn't rage quit over that, right now
It’s nice for type erasure in implementation details, though.
Such as in std::function.
@daknøk I am not going to sit here and defend the merits of polymorphism to you. Not only is it one of the coolest sounding things we have, but it damn handy. "I don't care what you are, I just care that you can do this"
19:50
This is an exaggeration of what I mean by OOP: code.google.com/p/fizzbuzz/source/browse.
Do you know any up-to-date overview of the exception guarantees provided by the C++ STL?
@daknøk what a mess
    static void Main()
    {
        FizzBuzzLogic logic = new FizzBuzzLogic();
        IRunnable fizzBuzzProcess = logic.CreateFizzBuzzProcess(System.Console.Out);
        fizzBuzzProcess.Run();
    }
:D
that looks live Java threads to me
@robert That's an awesomely broad question. Any particular class/algorithm in mind?
20:00
@sehe Containers, for instance.
But, well, I'm asking for an overview. I don't know if such a thing exists. :> At least Stroustrup has some overview for containers, but it is unclear if it is up-to-date given C++11.
It probably is accurate even for C++11...
Do static analysis on your Standard Library implementation! :D
@robert This seems like a terrific Stack Overflow question, if you care for a little rep. Be sure to actually link to the stroustrup overview you seem to be referring to....
@robert I don't think so. std::move changes the ball game quite profoundly. I mean, if your element has a noexcept move operator, it will get used in moving the container as well as in reorganizing elements.
@robert Then you could give that a bounty asking for update
@robert By the way: this refers to n3376 which is post standard C++11, even:
4
A: Where can I find all the exception guarantees for the Standard Containers and Algorithms?

Loki Astarin3376 23.2.1 General container requirements [container.requirements.general] Paragraph 10 Unless otherwise specified (see 23.2.4.1, 23.2.5.1, 23.3.3.4, and 23.3.6.5) all container types defined in this Clause meet the following additional requirements: — if an exception is thrown by an in...

Which draft comes closest to C++11?
20:06
@robert Because none of us can afford to pay the final version...
"This is an early draft" ...
They write this everywhere.
Okay, in my spare time I am going to research the exception guarantees as much as possible.
@fred not sure if you are a unity man, but I found this guide to details how to set up sublime 'properly' for use with it
@robert 3342 IIRC. I have 3337 dated 2012-01-16 here. Here is N3376 which revises N3337: dl.dropbox.com/u/13779444/c%2B%2B-std.pdf. N3376 dates 2012-08-29
Thanks, I already have 3337 and 3376 :-)
Wokay
@robert I looked it up, it was n3242
20:10
I want N1337, not N3337.
@daknøk How about N00B5
I want Ndaknøk.
klootzak
@Tuntuni Ahem.
20:12
@sehe Yes? :)
lul is Dutch for cock.
wut..?
seriously?
Yes.
:D
LOL
I hope that is not a troll. :D let me check that ;)
I’m serious. And klootzak is ballsack, similar to asshole, but Dutch.
20:13
LMFAO.
I had no idea
lololol
well, dick != cock
dick = cock = penis
@Rushil Well, that is really off-topic: it's the quickest way to prevent A from being copied (which would lead to double deletion of A::ar. It's called Rule Of Three or, in C++11 Rule Of Zero instead :) — sehe 25 secs ago
in raw meaning yes, but in practice you would not use them all interchangeably
describing someone as a dick is not quite the same as calling them a cock
20:16
@daknøk :) Some bastard basically copied my answer 4 minutes later and got the accepted answer. Raaarg
Just downvote him.
(Also, worse of course.)
@daknøk Nah. I only do constructive flagging/voting
hmmm... puppy should be back by now surely
Oh well, time to go to bed. :) I will, hopefully, see you guys tomorrow. :)
but yeah, I think the English language has just a few more words for human horn then Dutch :P
20:21
Was a pleasure chatting with you, good night (at least for me ;))!
I seem to have missed a kerfluffle that has happened here.
@Insilico nah, just some twat think he deserves help
@thecoshman That sounds about right.
Ell
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I gave him it too
20:29
I have exactly 42k rep. hawhaw
(No, I don't really care and you can't ruin it)
damn
Ell
Ell
Why can't my android phone play ogg?
Silly thing
Ell
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Ill double check
Better? Check. More elegant? Check. Simplified? erm... — sehe 11 secs ago
20:38
@sehe An alternative to base64 for what?
@Insilico I wasn't there.
Ell
Ell
@sehe ahh corrupt file
@Ell Phew. That was close
@sehe I'm surprised that list only has two people.
@Rapptz Yeah. No one uses the list
20:52
[ATTN] If you want to do things with Kyro, register on the shiny new forums and ping me because now activation requires me to push buttons. (Why are you still reading this GO REGISTER)
7
Ell
Ell
@CatPlusPlus accept me? yeh?
Yeah, yeah, in a sec.
Ell
Ell
okay :)
I might need to do a group for devs and leave the default for people who want to be devs.
guess I'll register too
Ell
Ell
20:57
@CatPlusPlus ta :)
@CatPlusPlus so, I haven't been here too much. What is Kyrostat?
..supposed to be(come)
A space RTS game.
written in haskell?
No, C++.
a game written in Haskell? lol
20:58
Right now it's in disarray and we basically have a forum, Robot's Unicode library, thecoshman's stub platform abstraction library, a build system and a Buildbot.
2D? 3D? somewhere in between?
3D
As I said, disarray. We need to reorganise this shit.

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