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22:00
@BartekBanachewicz bullet is being exported to C, so you can expect to see gross C API intermingling with your nice C++.
@BartekBanachewicz What? No
Or, well, those post is from 2007 from Eric.
@BartekBanachewicz It's the same...
References are non-owning too
They probably have full C API by now.
22:00
Except storing references automatically makes the type uncopyable and maybe unmoveable too
I don't really know what to do at this point.
Or maybe unassignable
Unsomething
References are annoying. =[
@CatPlusPlus Copyable, movable, unassignable.
Well let it store fucking shared_ptrs then
22:01
references are great!
Yeah there's little point using reference data members
@BartekBanachewicz What for?
@ThePhD references are what make us better than the others.
If it doesn't own the thing, then it doesn't own it
@ThePhD Everyone is annoying if you misuse it.
References are great for passing things through functions.
22:01
@CatPlusPlus I disagree: whenever you can: use a reference instead of a pointer
@CatPlusPlus so I won't have to store 5 objects that are actually one.
Otherwise, they're kinda... just... lame.
@Mysticial Oh so tempting: "The main thing that makes it hard is the fact that PHP destroys your mind, so by the time you gain enough experience to finish your grand vision, you'll probably need help to use the bathroom, not to mention doing anything that requires real thought."
@Berzerker Well that's not enough information to help you. Good luck.
@BartekBanachewicz Make a wrapper
22:02
@JerryCoffin A bit close to home? :P
references cannot be null and cannot be re-assigned!
@CatPlusPlus that's seems like the only idea I have now
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ??
@Walter Doesn't apply to data members stop doing things without thinking about them
0
Q: Don't understand the output when using Unions in c++

chhenningI don't quite understand the output of the following code union foo { int a; double b; }; int main() { foo f; f.b = 12.0; cout << f.b << endl; f.a = 69; cout << f.b << endl; cout << f.a << endl; return 0; } Why does it print 12 12 69 The seco...

22:02
@Walter dude this is the C++ room
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Ow.
^^ Can we get someone authoritative to say whether or not type-punning via union is legal?
UNIONS!!!
<333
@Mysticial It's punishable by death.
@BartekBanachewicz so?
22:03
@Mysticial It's UB by standard
@Berzerker I don't understand that question.
@Walter Everybody knows how references work. I assume that's what he means.
@Mysticial It's UB.
@Walter we are supposed to know these things
GCC guarantees it'll work afair
22:03
@ThePhD die.
0
Q: union for uint32_t and uint8_t[4] undefined behavior?

moooeeeepIn the comments of this answer it is said that it would be undefined behavior to split up an integer into their bytes using a union like follows. The code given at that place is similar though not identical to this, please give a note if have I changed undefined-behavior-relevant aspects of the c...

@LightnessRacesinOrbit I suppose "anyone game" means "anyone up for the challenge".
> [C++03: 9.5/1]: In a union, at most one of the data members can be active at any time, that is, the value of at most one of the data members can be stored in a union at any time.
there are many things you know and still don't do them right, aren't there?
(There are some exceptions that follow)
22:04
@Walter example being?
smoking
@FredOverflow I agree. The question I did not understand was "??".
@chhenning, There should be a member of the union that stores the last type. That's about the best you can hope for. — chris 14 secs ago
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Like for PoD types. <3
I love how 90% of minicraft code are wrappers
@Walter I don't smoke.
22:04
YES THAT WILL WORK
hanging out on lounge<c++>
@Walter point taken.
still, when it comes to C++...
@Walter How can you screw up smoking?
@Mysticial Probably not -- I'm not sure I could still find it, but there was once a thread on that in comp.std.c that ran for weeks. It culminated in about half a dozen committee members saying things like: "well, it should be, anyway."
@ThePhD POD types that share a common initial sequence, only, and you can only inspect that common initial sequence in this manner. So that still doesn't allow type-punning.
@FredOverflow I suppose you could put the wrong end in your mouth. That'd do it.
22:05
lol
Alright, so, it was good.
The only times unions have failed me utterly is on 32 / 64 bit boundaries.
I was storing 2 enums in 1 64-bit enumeration.
It almost worked perfectly.
Almost.
Oh hey it's horror story time
The storage was fine, but the 64-bit registers didn't write the values correctly.
@FredOverflow Instructions unclear, compile error. Not enough paper. (people compiling in 1973 will understand =)
22:07
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Close to home? Probably -- I suspect programming does make us think...differently from most "normal" people (regardless of the exact language we use).
Why can't I using inside a class?
What kind of using ?
6
A: Is type-punning through a union unspecified in C99, and has it become specified in C11?

ouahThe behavior of type punning with union changed from C89 to C99. The behavior in C99 is the same as C11. As Wug noted in his answer, type punning is allowed in C99 / C11. An unspecified value that could be a trap is read when the union members are of different size. The footnote was added in C9...

Because your compiler sucks?
^^ Does C++11 say the same thing?
22:07
class { using std::shared_ptr; }; <- legal?
If it's using namespace, then it's terrible.
Yes. I mean, it says the same thing as it's always said, more or less.
Ell
Ell
Hi guys
@BartekBanachewicz Not allowed.
@BartekBanachewicz And what would that do
Ell
Ell
22:08
Have no fear, I'm back from le pub!
Same as using namespace in a class.
@CatPlusPlus class { using std::shared_ptr; shared_ptr<T> V; };
@BartekBanachewicz You can.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit You totally cannot. D:
Yeah not legal
22:08
@LightnessRacesinOrbit so is it legal or not? now show quote
@ThePhD You can use using. Just not like that.
Not that kind of scope
Oh, sure. Be pedantic about it.
struct A { void foo(); }; struct B { using A::foo; void foo(int); };
I wish everyone had a pedantic flag that I could just turn off at will.
22:09
I'm not really being pedantic. He asked whether you can use using and the answer is fucking plainly "yes". Contradicting your incorrect answer of "no" is not being pedantic!
@ThePhD Ahaha you still haven't learned
You can do using x = blah blah; like Tomalak said
I didn't but you're right
@ThePhD It's called ignoring
The new alias thingymajig
22:10
Those annoying levels of pedantry are never helpful anyway
Protip: don't make public sermons about text you can't read
I said no to his use case. I don't think I was being incorrect or ambigious. :c
I thought this is the c++ room ... you know that using namespace_name::something is not legal inside class scope
@CatPlusPlus English declensions: My pedantry is helpful. Your pedantry is annoying. His pedantry is asinine.
22:12
@Walter I didn't, so I asked.
@ThePhD I was replying only to the question "Why can't I using inside a class?" There was no use case at that time
@LucDanton thx
Oh. Well hokay. :c
Indeed you "totally cannot" do the thing he then posted, as you pointed out
@Walter ?
22:13
@LucDanton ??
You can use qualified ids. Be more specific.
My combo! Too slow.
@LucDanton You mean... more pedantic... right?!
@LucDanton I was earlier reprimanded with "this is the c++ room" for making some factual statements about references in c++ ...
22:14
@LucDanton Cos you can't be specific without being pedantic, in 2013.
@Walter I was reprimanded with "this is not 'the C++ room'" the other day. You'll get used to it.
@Walter You suck
Yeah when we were talking about data members and why using references there is a bad idea
=[
I have a reference as a data member right now.
@LucDanton why do you start this non-sense?
22:15
q_q I hate myself.
@ThePhD Why?
@ThePhD High five
@FredOverflow why not?
@Walter Reference members rarely achieve what the class author intended.
It was for this class I made. I needed to have a reference to a container at construction time.
I was using a pointer, but then I was like "well... I could store a reference, right?"
So I did.
IT SEEMED HARMLESS AT THE TIME C++ DIDN'T TELL ME I WAS DOING ANYTHING WRONG IT WASN'T MY FAULT ;~;
22:17
@FredOverflow what do you think the author's intend? and why don't then get it?
I store references all the time! Wait, no I don't
You lose the ability to assign.
If you use lambda with capture [&], then the closure class stores a reference ... I bet most you use that
Ask <insert demographic here> people why you should prefer references over pointers, and they'll tell you "because references can't be null". I then shoot them in the face with a gun.
@FredOverflow that's the whole point!
22:19
We were talking about this in chat. It seems that C++11 retains the same wording as this from C99 and C11. Wouldn't that run against the purely UB? Or did we misinterpret something? — Mysticial 4 mins ago
@Walter No it's not
^^ Can someone confirm or deny (the correctness) of my comment.
@Mysticial I can confirm that you wrote that comment.
@ThePhD stop whining, noob.
@Mysticial Would you like me to go ahead and do that now?
bah
22:19
@LightnessRacesinOrbit lol
@LightnessRacesinOrbit it's a point, then
@Mysticial I'm not sure who it's referring to as "we", but it's at least mostly correct.
Everytime I tweak a base class...
Everything recompiles. q_q
@Mysticial To clarify, I meant that C++11 is the same as C++03 in that respect.
22:21
@ThePhD let's put everything in large .cpp file
it's the fastest and easiest way
@BartekBanachewicz It built in 20 seconds or less.
Instead of 6+ minutes. :c
@LucDanton Wait, so C++11, C++03, and C11 all have that phrase that allows type-punning?
@ThePhD buy a better workstation
@JerryCoffin By "we" I was implying Luc since he said it was the same.
22:21
@Walter There are better ways for making types unassignable
And more common than reference data members
@Mysticial No.
@CatPlusPlus in which sense better?
	for (i=m_dynamicsWorld->getNumCollisionObjects()-1; i>=0 ;i--)
	{
		btCollisionObject* obj = m_dynamicsWorld->getCollisionObjectArray()[i];
		btRigidBody* body = btRigidBody::upcast(obj);
		if (body && body->getMotionState())
		{
			delete body->getMotionState();
		}
		m_dynamicsWorld->removeCollisionObject( obj );
		delete obj;
	}
@CatPlusPlus surely not simpler
In the sense of not being reference data members
22:22
enjoy.
@LucDanton So type-punning is legal in C99 (TR2) and C11. But still UB in C++03 and C++11. Is that what you're saying?
T& operator=(const T&) = delete;
@CatPlusPlus Or private!
@ThePhD that isn't the same, and Cat's better
22:23
Yes it's simpler and clearer
@BartekBanachewicz And doesn't work with MSVC. q_q
@LucDanton You're responding to me right?
Just forget that reference data members exist
They're not that useful
@ThePhD MSVC sucks and everyone knows that so what was the point agin?
@CatPlusPlus are you saying A is better than B in the sense that it's not B?
22:24
Just saying you could make it private too. :c
2 days ago, by Lightness Races in Orbit
the lounge descends
@Xeo Yay; you got it :D
@Mysticial Ya
@LucDanton ok, thx.
Okay, pray tell why reference data members would be better for making types unassignable
@CatPlusPlus as I said: every lambda with [&] capture ...
22:24
@ThePhD I just said it's inferior to =delete. And you started with an IDE discussion
@Walter Is irrelevant to this
@Walter I simply wouldn't bother
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah, as in "it's a work around that accomplishes the same task".
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus Because they make the type inherently unassignable? Or what's the issue here?
Internal representation of unnameable types is not interesting and not relevant to coding practices
@Xeo By side effect
22:25
@CatPlusPlus you seem to have some near-religious opinion here ...
@ThePhD you noted it yourself : it's a workaround. Use boost for workarounds.
Not intent
@Walter What
Though, private has its disadvantages.
Is there fundamentalism also in programming???
If you use it with a reference data member, you have to initialize that data member. =[
22:26
Oh fuck off
Wait, people drop reference members in classes with the goal of making them unassignable?
Allegedly.
Which means you can't just leave it empty. D:
tl;dr 'you suck'
2
22:26
Seems so.
Deleting assignment operator is the way to make type unassignable — it's clear, it's simple, it's recognisable on sight
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD With C++, you're always at fault.
If you think that reference data members are used for the same thing then bwahaha you're horrible
@Walter Is it done by people?
22:27
for short-lived objects which need to keep information, references are ideal. As in lambda closures
It's funny mentioning near-religious opinions after spouting "use references without thinking about why you're using references"
Shut up about lambdas jesus they're not relevant
lalalalalalalala
@Walter that's totally not the point, is it?
@CatPlusPlus I never spouted that ...
... Wow.
Some people have some crazy amount of time on there hands:
22:28
Who says lambda closures store references? Not the standard.
zone-archive.com/tmp/hype_train.html (Uh. There's a person with shells on their mostly-naked tits: NSFW?)
There you go.
Find an actual argument next time.
I remembered why I hate talking about programming
I wanna be Crow Plus Plus
22:29
@Borgleader ?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit My reaction exactly.
It is well-drawn, though?
user142019
// The first thing that the deferred script is going to do is to close the "Saving"
// popup, but we need it to be up for at least a second, so sit here in a fucking
// busy-loop. See note at start of function, re: bus.
while( Sys_Milliseconds() < startOfFunction + 1000 ) {
    // Do nothing. Yes, nothing.
}
Sort of.
> [C++11: 5.1.2/3]: [..] An implementation shall not add members of rvalue reference type to the closure type. [..]
user142019
22:31
Jedi Academy's programmers are bad.
@ThePhD The game itself looks great
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Are you implying that her most-naked tits are asymmetrical?
So, no, lambda closures do not store references.
Thanks.
@Zoidberg isnt that game 15 yrs old? like you
@Borgleader It's a game? :O
user142019
22:31
@Borgleader isn't that irrelevant?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Funny, I've never paid much attention to that fact.
@ThePhD Skullgirls? Yeah
user142019
NO SCOTT
user142019
DONT LEAVE US
user142019
WE LOVE YOU
22:32
Also fuck the world
World's an asshole
@Zoidberg It isn't, I just take every chance I get to tease you about your age. It makes me feel superior.
@Borgleader Looks weird.
@Walter: Did you see?
void (&f)() = [] {}; [f] { return f; };
> The closure type associated with a lambda-expression has a deleted (8.4.3) default constructor and a deleted copy assignment operator.
Now shut the fuck up about lambdas.
22:33
/me high-fives @R.MartinhoFernandes
@R.MartinhoFernandes I actually never liked that about plain lambdas.
It's almost like deleting copy assignment operator was a way to indicate the type is unassignable
I wish I could default-construct basic lambdas. =[
22:34
hah
however, deleting the copy assignment op requires that you "own" the type and make the change for all instances of it ever. having a reference member of any type makes just that instance (and its parent object) unassignable. the two approaches are not interchangable.
@R.MartinhoFernandes what language ... well those are deleted to allow reference members ...
@ThePhD How can you default-construct something you can't name
Of course not. They do different things and have different purposes.
@CatPlusPlus auto f = [] {}; decltype(f) g;
@Walter I don't even.
22:36
@CatPlusPlus What @LucDanton said!
@CatPlusPlus By naming it first.
Well Robot BUT DOES COBOL ALLOW IT
Really, I wanted it for like, the most basic of lambdas (like ones that are essentially just function pointers).
Yeah yeah I know about that shut up
Okay. :c
22:37
@ThePhD What for though?
@Walter FTR, the language of the text is English, and the language the text is about is C++. Hope that is good enough for you.
@R.MartinhoFernandes splendid understanding then
It's for when you'd want to do something like have a lambda inside of a function, rather than passing it in.
Which, even when saying it, sounds silly.
It's really just for the small micro-optimzation "If you don't have to store it, don't bother storing it".
@Walter And if it wasn't clear, that excerpt even applies to lambdas without reference members.
E.g. default-construct the lambda and use it in the function everytime rather than store a single function object and keep it on the object's state.
22:39
I agree with Nicol on this.
And what does default-constructed lambda give you
Besides unusable thing
@R.MartinhoFernandes was clear. Of course, you cannot have different rules here depending on the capture
What?
If you think there are different rules, quote the rules yourself.
@CatPlusPlus Um.... I dunno. The ability to not have to store it if you don't want to?
@ThePhD And that gives you... what?
22:41
> [C++11: 9.2/3]: Walter is probably wrong. [..]
oh-em-gee
@LightnessRacesinOrbit getting him to the dark side?
@CatPlusPlus I don't know! It just seems nice sometimes.
what shall a default-constructed lambda be? Is it not the same as a lambda with an empty capture?
Like for the property<> class I wrote, to have no overhead unless the property needs a special lambda.
Yes, obviously, the capture is what's important here
22:43
@ThePhD That's nonsense: note that storing a default constructed object uses about exactly not more not less really truly the same amount not an inch more of storage.
woot woot, yesterday's Visual Studio 2012 update brings...wait for it...a blue theme!
Just reading that thread of comments Alf and Konrad left, damn, Alf's touchy.
@melak47 BLUE! Yaaay
@DomagojPandža That's hardly new. However, linky?
You could maybe complain about them being empty types or not, but that is a different issue.
22:44
This makes more sense than any discussion today: youtube.com/watch?v=TNLKhkAa5II
@KonradRudolph: anyone can see that you're lying. just stop. it is untrue that i've said what you attribute to me, and you don't quote for the good reason that you know it is a pure lie. — Cheers and hth. - Alf 2 hours ago
> [C++11: 5.1.2/19]: The closure type associated with a lambda-expression has a deleted (8.4.3) default constructor. [..]
@Walter ^ So, there is no such thing.
Aaand it's still not closed
:stackoverflow:
1 more vote
Ell
Ell
Is anyron mumbling?
22:47
Uh
I forgot
how to write returns on lambdas.
My brain... just kind of emptied itself.
user142019
INTERCALate :: [a] -> [[a]] -> [a]
user142019
Mind blown.
22:50
@DomagojPandža Try unsafe for life. What the fuck are you posting that here for?
@CatPlusPlus Thanks.
Yeah that's neither funny or anything
As I've said... I don't even...
You felt an urge to share that thing?
You're a bad person.
22:51
Cannot be unseen, make others feel it, too. :$
I don't want to give any ideas.
Erm. I think @Alf is complaining about the lack of C++11 support in MSVC in a rather roundabout way, and also in very much the wrong place. I cannot understand his comments in any other way. — sehe 26 secs ago
22:52
Still SHOUTING AT ME
Oh gawd someone did it.
user142019
Who the fuck flags binned stuff.
I flagged some comments there are unconstructive/off topic
@melak47 That's hte ugliest shit I've ever seen.
22:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes Predictable
@Zoidberg binflagfags
WHAT THE FUCK WAS THAT GIF
3
@ThePhD hey, at least it's not boring C++11 features...
@Mysticial Amirite?
@melak47 =[
@DomagojPandža From now on. I take your warnings seriously.
22:54
@melak47 still ugly though
I usually place Very unsafe for work, brain and/or life. But this one seared an image into my brain. Who makes that shit, really?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit quite
Who goes through the effort of animating that crap?
@DomagojPandža Someone who knows that someone like you will share it regardless.
Coliru command input will now resize dynamically when inserting a newline. Weird?
22:55
Someone who thinks this is funny I guess?
@StackedCrooked You've stacked the windows, but the windows are not crooked. Can you make the windows crooked?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Well, if sharing is his intent, then he should just post a cat video. Or babies. Or cats on babies.
@DomagojPandža no u
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Does a sparkling stroutrup image thrown in count?
@StackedCrooked Sure!
user142019
22:57
3588 RPM fans WTF.
@CatPlusPlus @R.MartinhoFernandes Uh, this si what I was talking about before; property in this example takes up more space than it needs to because it's not default-constructible: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/…
user142019
I shutdown Skype and it goes back to 2000.
user142019
T_T
@sehe Yeah, pretty much, he went on a rant which involved accusations of lying, ad hominem, counter ad hominem etc. And on topics totally unrelated to the question at hand.
@DomagojPandža I read the whole thing :|
22:58
@ThePhD How would default-constructibility affect size?
(hint: it does not)
Not even his answer. I don't know, he's weird sometimes.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit The quote only specifies rvalue references.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, I meant I don't have to store it if the function object is default-constructible.
@DeadMG don't ruin this with logic
22:59
You don't have to store it if the function object is stateless.
default-constructible in this case means I don't have to actually store the state of the FO, because I'm taking default-constructibility to mean "Stateless"
^ Yes, that.
You cannot test statelessness in the C++ type system, so give up.
Oh.
True enough I guess. :c
@DeadMG the main problem is that I accidentally s/rvalue/lvalue/ in my mind
std::is_empty lawl

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