Feb 27, 2017 13:37
Interview question: abs(INT_MIN)==?
 

Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
May 10, 2016 10:04
@sehe thanks; I think I also I was assuming the clock's epoch was UNIX 1970. It is on Linux, but on Windows it seems to be the boot time.
May 10, 2016 09:16
Has anyone noticed anything weird about std::chrono on MSVC, or do I need to ask a question about it? Something about code like this giving utterly bogus results:
std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point pt = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();
s = std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::seconds>(pt.time_since_epoch());
May 19, 2012 07:08
@Pubby, @bamboon, I think there's a module somewhere that lets MATLAB solve general equations. If that fails, there's always WolframAlpha or your brain :P
 
Aug 4, 2015 08:05
@MattMcNabb Well that was a longer delay that I had intended, since it took surprisingly long to work up the examples. But here: pastebin.com/Yj4ZqN6E Can you check me, please?
Aug 4, 2015 06:27
That's okay. We both thought we were right, but only one of us actually was. That means I get to learn something!
Aug 4, 2015 06:26
Alright. Thanks for your help, again.
Aug 4, 2015 06:25
Okay. I'm summarizing everything. Give me a few minutes.
Aug 4, 2015 06:18
Foo&& foo=bar() is the same as Foo const& foo=bar() except for decltype and constness, right?
Aug 4, 2015 06:17
Okay making progress I think; thanks.
Aug 4, 2015 06:16
Gah--that's what I meant.
Aug 4, 2015 06:15
So Foo const& foo=bar() is constructed directly in the callee's stack space?
Aug 4, 2015 06:13
If I go Foo const& foo=bar(), then this binds the return value to the name foo (through which I can't change the Foo). What happens in this case? Copy/Move contruction? Or copy-construction-hope-for-RVO?
Aug 4, 2015 06:11
Now, when I go Foo foo=bar(), that is copy constructing from the return value (but compilers will usually do RVO)
Aug 4, 2015 06:10
So when I go bar() this returns a return value rvalue, right?
Aug 4, 2015 06:09
*different
Aug 4, 2015 06:08
So then how is Foo&& foo=bar() better than Foo foo=bar()?
Aug 4, 2015 06:08
[you had used a, where I used foo; but I think I get it]
Aug 4, 2015 06:06
[hang on]
Aug 4, 2015 06:06
[did not quite parse that last sentence]
Aug 4, 2015 06:05
Okay, o now what model should I used for Foo&& foo=bar()?
Aug 4, 2015 06:03
I think there are a number of cases where copy elision is impossible, but yes, I forgot to mention that it will frequently happen. If Foo does not have a move constructor, the behavior is as I described, yes?
Aug 4, 2015 06:01
#define b a
Aug 4, 2015 06:01
Should I think of them as two different names for the same thing?
Aug 4, 2015 05:59
bar() creates a new Foo object and returns it. Foo a is created by copy construction from the returned value. The returned value is deleted. The memory for a is stack space of the enclosing function.
Aug 4, 2015 05:57
So for Foo a = bar(), I have:
Aug 4, 2015 05:57
What is the mental model I should have when thinking about statements like:
Foo&& a = bar();
Aug 4, 2015 05:55
okay . . . so what's the idea with Foo bar()?
Aug 4, 2015 05:51
call bar()
mov DWORD PTR [ebp-16], eax
Aug 4, 2015 05:51
versus:
Aug 4, 2015 05:51
call bar()
mov DWORD PTR [ebp-20], eax
lea eax, [ebp-20]
mov DWORD PTR [ebp-12], eax
Aug 4, 2015 05:51
Hmm, well GCC seems to agree with you.
int&& foo = bar();
int blah = bar();
Produces
Aug 4, 2015 05:46
the value will only be stored as needed to pass foo into a function or do a computation.
Aug 4, 2015 05:46
for int&& foo=bar(), I think it is similar. There is no copy or move.
Aug 4, 2015 05:46
or move
Aug 4, 2015 05:45
A&& a = A(); I agree there is no copy.
Aug 4, 2015 05:43
If this is mistaken, I would like to know about it.
Aug 4, 2015 05:42
That's why when you go int&& foo=bar();, the compiler can know that you don't expect it to be saved into a variable.
Aug 4, 2015 05:42
In essence, the idea is that it makes explicit that the compiler is not (as much a possible) copying stuff around.
Aug 4, 2015 05:41
My argument and understanding is that && was invented because we wanted move semantics.
Aug 4, 2015 05:41
Matt, I mean you no ill will. I simply want to be clear about this.
Aug 4, 2015 05:40
@MattMcNabb move semantics
Aug 4, 2015 05:40
@MattMcNabb making a reference to a constant only makes sense if you expect a constant to be allocated with (edit: designed-for-supporting) move semantics. There's a completely different (&&) syntax for that because it's a completely different thing.
Aug 4, 2015 05:40
@bl4ck5un as all the answers thus far have said, the two lines mean very different things (and only one of them makes sense). It isn't actively disallowed because C++ was designed to be restrictive; it isn't implemented because it's not something that even makes sense to ask for.
Aug 4, 2015 05:40
@bl4ck5un so . . . you want a "do what I mean" compiler?
 
Oct 20, 2012 03:13
where one edge is the bounding rect is part of the convex hull
Oct 20, 2012 03:13
It's pretty simple: just walk a bounding volume around the n points and see which has the smallest area--that's the optimal bounding rect.
Oct 20, 2012 03:10
@ealeon: the simplest (and reasonably fast) thing I can think of is to make a convex hull, and compute the area of that. If you really need a rectangular bounding volume, you can use the caliper's method on the result.
Oct 20, 2012 03:08
does it need to be axis-aligned?