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Xeo
Xeo
10:00
The thing is, I'm not getting all the callbacks I registered. :|
lol, Russia says they'll accept an asylum request from Snowden.
Wait, that's not funny, is it?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Snowden?
@thecoshman Dude that outed PRISM.
oh, that chap
Hasn't he gone mysteriously missing? I'd wager he's in Bagram by now.
10:02
or in bags
Dunno. I think he didn't quite plan this out properly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes 1) blow whistle 2) hide 3) regret doing things in this order
"I'll go to this place with an extradiction agreement with the US, get in a hotel, expose one of the most powerful entities in the world, expose myself as the guy exposing said entity, and then... something".
I can kinda of understand the "expose myself" step as a way to use the media attention as some kind of protection. I mean, if his family suffers "an accident", well... no one will buy it as an accident. What I don't get is Hong Kong.
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh, when you where where saying allowing multiple items to be deleted via one request was 'bad', where you saying that in a joking way? or is there some serious reason why it should not be done that way?
He also gets bragging rights, but those are not particularly useful in a coffin.
@thecoshman No, I was just saying that the "post temporary transaction thingy, modify it, then delete it afterwards" idea was not REST-y.
@TheForestAndtheTrees Anyway, it seems he did check out of the hotel, so if anything happened it was afterwards.
According to him, said hotel was a few blocks from some CIA office thingy, so, yeah.
user1182183
10:17
and microsoft is up again?
Very smart.
@GamErix Up with what?
user1182183
@R.MartinhoFernandes starboard ? ;o
user1182183
oh I get the joke..
@R.MartinhoFernandes agreed. But requirement is that multiple deletes need to be an option, AFAIK, doing it with JSON listing all the items to delete is a viable option in a DELETE request, it would have to be done as a series of DELETEs on individual items
You all are fathermuckers, even you haven't bothered to write the codes! @MarkGarcia — Subhadeep Dey 3 mins ago
^ Ouch!
Welcome to the cruel world of Stack Overflow !
I'll not flag.
come on people, pile more downvotes on this
@MarkGarcia well, it's already closed :P
@thecoshman Aw. At least I had fun. :)
im thinking about D book, so does anybody know if D has smthing like
STL, no chance im learning lang without STL magic :D
huh... I thought there was a way to see starred posts ordered by star count
@R.MartinhoFernandes does it have transform ?
cant find it
maybe this auto squares = map!"a * a"(iota(10));
i like the expressivenes with ! :P (i know it is a template syntax)
but it sounds like map it dammit!
@R.MartinhoFernandes how goes journal?
@R.MartinhoFernandes tnx, if you met andrei tell him that you are the reason why i bought his book :P
Why would I meet Andrei?
@thecoshman I'll get back to it soon. I have been using up all of my free time lately.
10:42
@R.MartinhoFernandes not on the journal :O
I did a few minor things that I don't deem worth taking a picture of.
hi, is there a way to convert assembly code to c?
@R.MartinhoFernandes iron the pages :P
@Infested yes and no
some kind of a built in cmd, or a free tool for it]
@Infested sort of, with the hex-rays decompiler.
10:46
you can sort of work out what C code could have produced a certain sequence of assembly
@Infested lol no
but it is not a one to one mapping
12
Q: Opensource C/C++ decompiler

Jakub ArnoldDuplicate of http://stackoverflow.com/questions/193896/whats-a-good-c-decompiler and http://stackoverflow.com/questions/205059/is-there-a-c-decompiler taken together. Does somebody know any opensource C/C++ decompiler? I don't want to use any commercial solution like IDA Pro.

i need it for a code written on linux, with respecting sys calls
@thecoshman Dude, I moved a week ago and I haven't even seen all of my roommates.
Actually, that sounds kinda bad.
10:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes and?
@Infested you need to learn to use Google my son
@thecoshman Well, I've been busy.
i did
and i did say, either a built in cmd, or a free tool
@Infested we are not Google
ida and hexrays arent free
@R.MartinhoFernandes and?
10:50
@thecoshman And no fucking time for the journal :|
i didnt say youre google, i just know you probably know this stuff, so i thought you could help me
@R.MartinhoFernandes and?
SCNR
@Infested why exactly do you want to decompile?
i already have it decompiled, its in assembly; i want to convert it to c.
@Infested no, you have it compiled. you want to decompile it to C. Why?
@Infested "Converting it to C" is called "decompiling".
You need the source code.
that its in assembly doesnt mean its compiled, i could as well written it in assembly in the first place
would you say it would be compiled then?
Doesn't matter. You would still be "decompiling" it to C.
10:55
@MarkGarcia not true, you can decompile assembly to C... or any other language
And now to be evil, "decompiling" also happens to be the same as "compiling".
@thecoshman Of course. And read cryptic function names and analyze the code for decades.
@Infested ¬_¬ assembly is just way of having nice words rather then sequences of numbers. it is the (more or less) raw instructions that are run on your computer. That is what C or C++ are compiled to
@MarkGarcia oh, no one gave the illusion it was easy :P
anyhow, i have the .out file, i used that cmd that disassembles it to assembly
now i want it to be in c
@thecoshman That's why he needs the source code.
10:57
We told you... you need a decompiler.
I also provided a link to a query similar to yours.
Not sure what else you seek.
@MarkGarcia no, he does not. Whilst obsuficated, you can still work with the decompiled code
yes, i can; but i do not wish to do so
it handles threads, clients, servers
You're in for a treat.
10:59
@Infested Is that Microsoft's?
nothing nice to decipher
@Infested still, why
Too many caps on the starboard.
@MarkGarcia no. @thecoshman i need to look athe the code
-7
Q: How to prepare a C++ Program to login with the password after saving it to the Computer

Subhadeep DeyI am new to C++ programming without having any previous experience in programming in any another language. So guys, please help me out! :( I am going to prepare a C++ program that first takes the Name, Username and password (Each character must be replaced by "*" at the same time) from the user...

He's back.
11:00
already tried boomerang
@Infested ... why
it only applies to .exe iinw, but surely not to .out
user142019
Please help me dudes! Don't annoy me! — Subhadeep Dey 18 mins ago
user142019
Who annoys who?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Poor guy cannot take a hint.
user142019
11:01
We need to reintroduce the guillotine.
I won't comment.
@Infested Then start from the exe?
There's not much difference.
Disassembling is pretty much a 1-to-1 mapping.
i dont have an exe i have a .out
SIGH
That's a shouting sigh.
Where the fuck did the .out come from?
thats what i have
@Infested You need the C source code.
its c, not c++
You can just assemble it back in anyway.
look: the original code was written in c on linux with sys calls, handles server/client and threads
It won't change a thing: assembling/disassembling are pretty much an iso.
11:04
Are we in a loop here?
@Infested We know, we don't care.
yiz
yiz
extern c
@yiz lolwut?
8 mins ago, by Infested
anyhow, i have the .out file, i used that cmd that disassembles it to assembly
yiz
yiz
or have I missed half of the conversation again?
11:04
You are not being consistent.
yea i have both
@yiz I say 3/4.
just a sec
Just go back to the start and don't disassemble anything. Feed that to boomerang. There, problem solved.
yiz
yiz
@MarkGarcia seems so
11:06
"I generated a .out from an exe, but now I can't use boomerang because it requires an exe and I have an .out :("
^ pure nonsense
yiz
yiz
that's the thing with newbs ... we can never know whether the person is a troll or just plainy dumb
I admit there are dumb trolls
I'm not sure why I thought slice<0, 1, 2, 1 /* <- attempt to go back */>(r, 42) would be a good idea, where 42 plays the role of a default value to provide.
yiz
yiz
but without knowing the person, an intelligent troll can quite easily disguise trolling in the form of a retarded question
And in Stack Overflow, people don't know how to debug.
what i am given is: client.out server.out
i used objdump -t/-d; strings on both.
the original sources were written on linux in c, using sys calls, handles threads/server/client.
i dont have the original sources.
1)is there a way to easily convert the assembly to c?
2) how do i generate .exe out of .out/assembly code?
there, i think it sums everything i have
11:10
iOS 7 will have EXT_sRGB
now fuck me if it's not important thing.
yiz
yiz
@Infested use makefile
@Infested That almost looks like a sensible question for Stack Overflow. Just a little more effort with layout and formatting and you can post it there. Make sure to mention your environment and what tools you have available, too.
yiz
yiz
if you know the interface/header of server.out
in my real program it must be in main and I have no choice — user2471822 1 min ago
because its a game and I should do several graphics in one moment — user2471822 1 min ago
sigh
yiz
yiz
lol
newb bashing happy hour?
11:12
@yiz No. I'm pretty depressed by these current line of newbs.
"Multi-threading is the trend." "Oooh. I'm going to do it all using threads. Blah blah..."
@yiz i meant that i dont know whats the cmd for making a .exe, but ill google it first
oh also
> The Objective-C programming language has been enhanced to support modules, resulting in faster builds and shorter project indexing times.
Which basically means Clang has modules now.
which basically means C++ could have them too without much work.
Xeo
Xeo
C++ also has them in a limited form
you mean Clang-C++?
Xeo
Xeo
ya
But inofficially
11:22
> Given your experience on this technology, I was wondering if you would be interested in authoring this particular Instant title.
Wat
Spam.
lol, now I see. They're going through everyone that ever answered on and spamming....
@Xeo have you tried using them already?
Xeo
Xeo
nope
@R.MartinhoFernandes um...
In D a sliceable range that is not saveable is a bad citizen, no? auto s = r[0..$]; achieves saving, I would think.
Technically I think a range can be sliceable and not provide $. Kind of a clusterfuck.
@BartekBanachewicz I have no idea what ITK is, but apparently I answered a question vaguely related to it once and got a total of zero upvotes.
11:27
@R.MartinhoFernandes you're experienced :D
anyway, TIL For D3D10/OpenGL 3.x-class hardware, it is possible to avoid performing fixup and use multiple indexed attributes directly. However, be advised that this will likely decrease rendering performance.
I'm thinking the core concept I'm after is that a range may implement popping n elements from either end more efficiently than going about it the naive way. Much like RA iterators have constant-time +=.
@LucDanton D has popBackN and popFrontN, which, IIRC, will just slice on sliceable ranges, instead of popping manually.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes. popBackN is exactly where I'm stuck.
It doesn't work the other way around though. I.e. slices can do more.
user142019
Morning.
If you isolate 'range has constant-time chopping' then I think you can still retrieve the richness of D slices. For instance R has chopping and length -> r[x, $-5] or whatever.
11:32
@EtiennedeMartel oh that's so sweet. BURN DIRECTX AND ITS PSEUDO-C++ HEADERS. Oh wait, that was the other way. OGL IS THE GREATEST THING SINCE FLUSHED TOILET. PONIES. RAINBOWS
Heh, I like 'chopping' for the name of the operation. 'Slicing' is more delicate, 'chopping' is raw!
What's a flushed toilet?
I'll get to implementing that, chop chop!
I should first rename the quirky prev/next to pop_front/pop_back though. Conciseness and nod to iterators be damned, D ranges is where it's at.
Xeo
Xeo
11:34
Debugging: Done. Source of error: My own stupidity.
Or maybe a sandwich first. I'm starving.
Xeo
Xeo
How often does a timer fire if you reset it again and again until the last event?
Once. Doesn't help when it should fire N times, where N is the number of events :|
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's prolly the one you use. I was trying to find the relevant comic, but w/e
@BartekBanachewicz en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flush_toilet. A flushed toilet would be one you flushed down another, I guess.
11:37
no "defiantly" :/
@R.MartinhoFernandes asdasfsadfdsagaa
@R.MartinhoFernandes To put it another way, chopping is probably going to be too primitive to be used as-is, just like toying with += for random-iterators is error-prone. You'd either use a generic pop_[end]_n, like you would use std::advance, or the feature-rich slice which will tell you if the range involved does not provide enough guarantees for the requested traversal to make sense.
Ha. Did someone spot this comment? It got upboated too fast:
@phresnel Well, you know... I'm not new around here. Some people learn either way. I can guarantee you that (a) eager learners will get the important directions from this answer (b) people that don't, won't "get it" from an educational answer either. In short, Stackoverflow isn't for text-book tutoring. It's about volunteering answers to unstuck other programmers/share experience. Feel free to ignore both the question and the answer if it's not your cup of tea. Thank you — not-sehe 4 mins ago
> The website Deutsche Welle ran an interview with Luise Pusch, a leader of feminist linguistics,
WTF that's a thing?
Come on.
Nüshu (), is a syllabic script, a simplification of Chinese characters that was used exclusively among women in Jiangyong County in Hunan province of southern China. Language The Nüshu script is used to write a local dialect of Chinese known as Xiangnan Tuhua (湘南土話, 'Southern Hunanese Tuhua') that is spoken by the people of the Xiao and Yongming River region of northern Jiangyong County, Hunan. This dialect, which differs enough from the other parts of Hunan that it is unintelligible to speakers of that dialect, is known to its speakers as "Dong language", and it is only written in the...
11:54
alright fellas?
user142019
Guys I made the mistakes of getting up at 12:00 AM
user142019
Good.
I haven't been able to go to sleep and I have work in 4 hours. =[
user142019
11:58
Good. You deserve it.
q_q what do I dooo.
user142019
Guillotine.
@leftaroundabout: Good point! It's been ages since I last did a change of variables that wasn't an alpha renaming... — yatima2975 2 hours ago
ITT Rightfold is a monster.
user142019
My code wants to fly.
12:01
Oh, uh.
@ThePhD Go to sleep, wake up in three hours.
Guys, Perforce, the version control system, doesn't have any kind of Code Review capabilities.
@rightfold std::fly
user142019
Why do you use Perforce?
Why would it?
Version control is version control.
12:02
@rightfold Cause he is ThePhD
I was just wondering if anyone here uses any specific Code Review tools with Perforce, if at all.
Or just, really, any Code Review tool in general. ._.
user142019
I miss Safari, but when I use Safari, I miss Chrome.
@rightfold use some
@rightfold Make Chromari.
12:04
There's not going to be an Adobe CS7
@rightfold go fap
WTF!!!!!
@GamesBrainiac Erm, what? Yes, there is.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Nope, there isn't. thenextweb.com/insider/2013/05/06/…
Well, it's called Creative Cloud.
user142019
12:05
I want to know what Safari 7 will be like.
Xeo
Xeo
Sometimes, I'm getting confused by clamping logic. :|
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Yea, how the hell am I going to pay $50 a month in Dollars too!
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Teehee
@rightfold We also use Perforce :|
user142019
Oh good old Safari.
user142019
Great.
Xeo
Xeo
12:07
@ThePhD I went and wrote a trigger script that posts automatic reviews to an internal ReviewBoard server.
@GamesBrainiac How were you paying <how much for the whole thing> so far?
Is Perforce still the only versioning engine which can natively handle Binary Files?
Xeo
Xeo
What do you mean, "handle"?
@Xeo See, that's what I was going to do, but I've got a few things hamstringing my legs.
Xeo
Xeo
Setting up Reviewboard was a bitch, and writing the script that checks commits for information was also a bitch
12:08
@R.MartinhoFernandes Nothing. I don't have any American Dollars to pay for it. It simply is not 'sold' in my country.
@Xeo Actually diff the binary files (e.g., not mark the entire binary file as bunk).
@Xeo Oh. Uh. Well then...
@GamesBrainiac So you are complaining that you cannot pirate it anymore? WTF
Xeo
Xeo
And then making that whole thing configurable for certain subfolders / users only, and who gets notified for which review requests...
FWIW, the new pricing model tends to end up cheaper.
I found what void* really points to.
4
12:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm complaining about something that I cannot pay for, even if I wanted to.
@GamesBrainiac And you could not before, as you say. So nothing changed.
but something that has become an industry standard.
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion woah
@R.MartinhoFernandes I guess I'll just be sticking with CS6. I haven't made any money off of it at all, I've just been learning it all this time.
user142019
@TonyTheLion FYI, it's called the CMB cold spot.
12:10
Lol, I started doing some searches of Versioning Engine comparisons. Perforce really masturbates itself with its own articles: perforce.com/sites/default/files/pdf/…
Okay, done with the sammiches. Time to alpha rename prev and next.
@rightfold oh I see.
user142019
(Why didn't they mention that in the image?)
@LucDanton wtf is "alpha rename"?
@rightfold I think it was mentioned in the comment thread.
user142019
@TonyTheLion oh I see.
lol, journalist-class fail.
"OMG huge section of empty space but only detectable from microwave. We cannot publish a bunch of rainbows and call it 'empty space'. Let's get something else that looks like empty space"
> note: declarations in dependent base 'Base' are not found by unqualified lookup
^ that's a cool note, it even goes on to explain that Base::member is the way to call a member
toasters, not even once
... o.0
That's one angry toaster.
user142019
@TonyTheLion Well, that's the same thing. :v
user142019
Xeo
Xeo
12:34
@rightfold What was shown in the image is not the CMB cold spot
Barnard 68 is a molecular cloud, dark absorption nebula or Bok globule, towards the southern constellation Ophiuchus and well within our own galaxy at a distance of about 500 light-years, so close that not a single star can be seen between it and the Sun. American astronomer Edward Emerson Barnard added this nebula to his catalog of dark nebulae in 1919. He published his catalog in 1927, at which stage it included some 350 objects. Because of its opacity, its interior is extremely cold, its temperature being about 16 K (−257 °C). Its mass is about twice that of the Sun and it measure...
It's a wobbly globule!
concepts::RangeWithSize looks dumb compared to ChoppableRange. And hypothetically concepts::SaveableRange (SavableRange?).
> Get to da choppa!
Mandatory.
@rightfold "… the unmistakable imprint of another universe beyond the edge of our own."
@Aboutblank Either that or a measurement error.
12:44
@R.MartinhoFernandes well I find that hard to believe since they've been looking at it at least since before 2007, much more likely that Laura Mersini-Houghton is crazy
Ok, I am in Berlin:) In bar by river. Sunny, hefeweizen, bauern. Good so far!
Hey! You're not allowed to know words I don't :P
Oh, beer type.
@MartinJames Did you see my message about a place?
Oh, my frontback_cache is going to bite me when the time comes for saving ranges. Ah, I suppose I could replace the ephemeral bits by optional. I'll see when I get there.
mawning
@DeadMG ಠ_ಠ
12:57
@StackedCrooked coliru seems dead:
> main.cpp:2:36: fatal error: boost/fusion/adapted.hpp: No such file or directory
from what I can gather, the cost of living in Montreal is actually slightly less then where I am now... so it could be a very realistic option...
5
Q: Login using the Lynx browser

kyle kHow do you login to the sites if you are using a text-browser such as Lynx? I get the error Because JavaScript is disabled, you can only log in by entering your openID URL manually When JavaScript is enabled, I click on the Google icon and it logs me in. But I do not know what an openID URL...

@R.MartinhoFernandes for fuck sake
it workses
@MartinJames K, @sbi says he cannot join us :S New stuff came up on his apartment fight thingy.
13:08
It's a date then!
yiz
yiz
Okey, someone please tell me how this works: you might or might not know I have a few email addresses. Recently a few people who know one email address of mine manage to contact me with another email address which I have never told them before. How do they do that?
yiz
yiz
@LucDanton scary especially when it comes out of a bot like you ...
Should pop_front_n(r, n) behave gracefully if n is negative? The D docs don't document that behaviour.
13:14
Define gracefully?
I'd just ban it as UB.
This is medical file/filename is random for "security" but [...] the header is not even encrypted http://stackoverflow.com/a/17042442/2378523 #privacy #fail
^ I don't even...
Well, pop_front_n(r, n) pops at most however many elements are left. That's graceful.
Mmmh, for that to make sense that would mean chop_front should behave the same. Better fix that.
@yiz You fail? Likely, you've just replied from the with the wrong "from"/"sender"/"reply-to" information. This happens to me.
yiz
yiz
not-sehe, you don't sound like sehe @ all, you sound like someone else who once rage quit because CatPlusPlus decided to quit this chat and became a monk after this chat temporarily became gallery mode.
@yiz For example, @not-sehe is positing things from sehe's SO and twitter. :D
13:17
@Sehe would have explained this better — thecoshman 10 secs ago
yiz
yiz
@not-sehe nope, could not have happened
Not sure how to name the safe/unsafe pairs. D has popFrontN and popFrontExactly.
@yiz o_0
how can you just rule out the possibility of a mistake like that?
@LucDanton IMO, safety here is free, so there's no reason not to offer it (at least, for Wide ranges)
Yes, there is.
13:20
Stopping condition is !empty(r) && (n != 0) vs n != 0.
If you're parsing input or something not popping exactly may mean bad input.
Though you can always have it return the number of elements popped, I guess.
@R.MartinhoFernandes D does that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes But for that, you would not be needing to pop N elements, you would only ever pop one at once.
Tbh I'll scratch that interface. It can't play nice with chop_front in its state.
pop_front_n and I'll need a pop_front_at_most_n or something although I'm not sure what should happen if the range is choppable but without length.
@DeadMG Erm, no. Some formats have padding and shit that you just want to skip.
13:26
pretty sure that would be lexing
template<
    typename Range
    , typename Offset
    , DisableIf<
        concepts::ChoppableRange<Range, Offset>
    >...
    , Requires<
        concepts::Range<Range>
    >...
>
void pop_front_n(Range& range, Offset offset);
Shit takes too much screen space. Suggestions?
user1182183
and today I realise that I only spent 900 rep on bounties, meh
user1182183
not that bad
@LucDanton You don't have immutable ranges and functions that return new ranges?
and also I'm not seeing the benefit of SFINAEing out this overload if you don't have other overloads
Only non-mutable operation on a range is empty.
@DeadMG I'll assume you're being daft on purpose.
13:28
@DeadMG There's one more overload with an optimisation for choppable ranges.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Thank you.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Fold the DisableIf and Requires?
(i.e., make them one line each)
I find it much less readable but the operations are so banal that I don't care. Going to put Range and Offset on the same lines as well.
@LucDanton I usually put all ordinary template parameters on the same line, and then all the trailing hacks on separate lines.
@Luc Is there a reason your indices are not typelists of integral_constants? I mean, why not share algorithms?
I use typelists rarely and indices often. I did use ToIndices<typename SomeIndices::ToList::tail> yesterday or so though, so I can in fact seamlessly go from indices to lists and back.
13:35
posted on June 11, 2013 by Charles, STL

In part 9, STL digs into lambdas and other expressions. Lambdas are very useful and you've know doubt been enjoying them in your modern C++ programming. As you can imagine, STL will go deep and teach you things about lambdas that you may not know. You'll also learn a lot about order of precedence and associativity for expressions in only the way Stephan can teach you (thorough

> you've know doubt been
Ugh
@R.MartinhoFernandes As in indices being an alias, which would still remain deducible, to list<Int<N>...> or something?
I could try that. Gimme a sec.
Xeo
Xeo
@Feeds Yay
13:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes The Offset member alias is very useful (but also very specific) for slices, so let me disable the TUs that depend on that first.
Xeo
Xeo
@Xeo, I'm not sure why, but Clang seems to optimise away the whole line. I have to assign it to a variable - int creation[] = {0, (expr, 0)...};. — Mark Ingram 26 mins ago
Huh.
Aw, variant depends on tuple slices. I really like the variant unit tests for stressing the compiler out :(
Xeo
Xeo
I'm pretty sure Clang isn't allowed to optimize that away.
Well, if side-effects, then obviously not.
Clang's borked.
Xeo
Xeo
Did you just test it?
Also, if Clang really does that, it must either be really old or really new, because when I played around with that, I didn't have any problems
13:47
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ya that works. Now to compute offset indices via a separate metafunction...
Xeo
Xeo
Uhm.... TIL: Flash renders the 2D stage... in software on the CPU.
And the 3D stage through the GPU
$ clang++ -xc++ -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ -Wall -Wextra -pedantic - <<END
> #include <iostream>
>
> template <int... I>
> void f() {
>     using swallow = int[];
>     swallow{0, ((std::cout << I), 0)... };
> }
> int main() {
>     f<1,2,3,4,5,6>();
> }
> END
<stdin>:6:5: warning: expression result unused [-Wunused-value]
    swallow{0, ((std::cout << I), 0)... };
    ^      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
<stdin>:9:5: note: in instantiation of function template specialization 'f<1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6>' requested here
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, so Clang does warn if you don't do (void)swallow{ ... };
Btw, you forgot -O3
I noticed.
Same results.
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Xeo
k
Wait, his answer indicates that he tried something different
It almost looks like he did [](...){}(swallow{ ... }) or something
13:56
That looks ugly as fuck.
But it still works fine.
Xeo
Xeo
hm
Well, it certainly should. Whatever.
Bash history and heredocs don't seem to play well together.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I'm baffled. I thought I could run your nicely provided example easily, but the flags I have to pass differ a little.
@LucDanton What do you have to change?
tl;dr went down the rabbit hole to see if I could understand wth was happening
@R.MartinhoFernandes -lsupc++
13:59
Oh.
I had that for a while in Arch.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton That should be statically linked to libc++
On Gentoo everything just works.

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