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00:00
tell me its broken
It was
@Borgleader hotfix
Also I think I should become an information security professional - the only solution they come up with when your PC seems to be infected is: reinstall your machine ... I knew to reinstall an infected machine 15 years ago, do I need them to tell me that?
00:17
reminds me of dentists - advice for a lot of tooth problems is: get rid of the tooth!
@Borgleader :D
00:47
@sehe lol AshergLangton is stirring the bees nest again it seems.
snow floof /cc @Borgleader @ElimGarak @TonyTheLion @ThePhD @набиячлэвэлиь
Oh, he da man that tags all his twitpics with 8 different news networks?
@sehe uh... idk, i followed him cuz you retweeted him a few times. and hes kinda funny
also he keeps retweeting this Craig r. Brittain dude, thats always hilarious
00:51
@Borgleader :D
@Borgleader oh. Don't remember that. Right now looks like he's not a lot of fun. But I don't see what "mild snark" triggered this
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader does this not hurt the human? :V
@Ell not when theyre just playing no
@Borgleader :O
Ell
Ell
do people use plugins for this chat? if so which?
00:59
@jaggedSpire I just found this
@Borgleader :)
01:15
@Nican happy birthday
Well then. xD
Thanks. <3
Made good on your promise for now :)
I know. I am already wondering what I am going to type for you.
Okay. After getting rid of the partial spin-wait. It looks like my thread pool is sigh... beating the Windows thread pool?
At least on Win7. I'll need to retest on Win8 or Win10 since they have a better thread pool.
10 mins ago, by Nican
Well then. xD
Thanks. <3
You already did
01:26
@Mysticial violence is never the solution
@sehe I am writing 150 words+ for everyone...
@Mysticial well tuned code always beats general purpose machinery
@Nican o.O Oh my. I hope no one else catches on
@sehe I would just write one for the whole lounge, with a big middle finger. :D
@sehe True. But don't forget that I'm a beginner at this. :)
This is only the second time I've ever tried to dive right into raw ugly threaded programming.
@Mysticial Is it possible that its faster in your case, but not all cases?
also, maybe you got bugs and shit idk
01:29
@Borgleader I'm pretty damn sure that's the case.
If you threw a million tasks at the same time into my pool, you'll end up with a million threads.
TBB has a thread pool i think, have you compared with that one?
I've not looked at the TBB one. But I already have the Cilk Plus one integrated in.
The Cilk Plus one has too much overhead. It's slower than simply spawning a new thread for every task.
My primary motivation for writing this thread pool is to see if I can make Linux not suck as hard compared to Windows.
And it looks like it worked out.
I've read the description for Cilk, it seems to overlap with TBB
I certainly didn't expect to actually beat the Windows thread pool (at least for my test cases).
I haven't even implemented the random walking yet. I finally found it in the profiler, but waaaaaay down near the bottom.
random walking?
01:35
5 hours ago, by Mysticial
Right now, it will walk the entire set before it creates a new thread. A better idea is to walk up them randomly and give up after N failures.
The sequential walking implies an O(N^2) overhead factor if you simultaneously fire N tasks.
ITT, writing portable code might slow your program down ...
Built this from treated pine sleepers and Merbau decking planks
that's another way of saying it's built from scratch
and yes, my new house is almost done now, giving 2-3 weeks to fix a few small issues, it should be ready for final inspection and hopefully I will get it rented out in Feb ...
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial when you say "windows thread pool", is this some code you wrote on windows or does windows provide some kind of api?
01:44
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper so you're building it but not living in it?
@Mysticial What does that even mean
Linux (or at least POSIX) doesn't have a built-in thread pool like Windows does. So the only options are to:
- Spawn a thread for every task.
- Use Cilk Plus
Both options are pretty shitty.
Or use std::async, which is the cherry on top of the cupcake of shit.
so it's mostly "lack of feature X" rather than "suck hard"
2/10 made me reply
More than that. Spawning threads seems to have more overhead in Linux than in Windows.
You can see it that way
OTOH you can say that creating a process is much cheaper on Linux than Windows
two sides of the same coin really
01:53
So it basically boiled down to this:
- Linux was stuck with thread spawning
- Windows had the luxury of a really efficient built-in thread pool.
And just like that, massive performance difference.
>2016
>using CPU threads
laff /cc @Elim
@Mysticial what is it exactly youre optimising?
everyone with half a brain has already moved on from CPUs to GPUs
how do you make the graphics card fit into the socket
use the socket syscall with a larger buffer size
duh
01:54
o
@Mysticial IDG how it follows that you need to do one of these. Pools + queues are as old as the road to Rome and take about 20 lines of code.
@sehe I am building it as a rental property
@sehe I didn't find a suitable one in POSIX, and I didn't want to pull a random one off of Github.
I wonder how you finance the building period. (You're apparently the one who made a lot of money with apps...)
I think I will be living in my parents place and rent both of my properties out :x
01:56
@Mysticial 20 lines can be pulled randomly from your own github (as you're proving today).
Just search my answers for thread_pool :) It's cheesy but you'll get at least 3 simple implementations (boost-asio, stdlib, asio)
@sehe My theory: ThePhD hijacked Mysticial's account
But I will travel quite a bit once the new house is done so it's better to get $450 a week renting it out
credibility: high
I hadn't considered it.
But now you mention it
> Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg ticked off a few of his tips for success: arrive early, stay late, eat lunch at your desk.
Oh, and don’t go to the bathroom so much.
lafffffffffffff
fucking morons
tips for success: intestinal occlusion
02:00
I like
how his advice for success is exactly the opposite from what all of my coworkers have told me ever.
"go to the bathroom often"?
No, go out with the group, work hard during the core hours and go home to get rest after, seek help from your peers when you need it, and always be honest abut the state of your work.
"work hard"
No, work normally
jfc why is everyone so bad at life
@sehe My own github? I don't have a thread pool in my github.
:28215030 ThePriapismD
02:02
:D
@Mysticial youre about to :)
@Mysticial I meant you can write it yourself. No need to pull a random one
@sehe I just did - during this 3-day weekend. Granted, it wasn't 20 lines though. More like 486 including comments.
wth
8 mins ago, by sehe
@Mysticial 20 lines can be pulled randomly from your own github (as you're proving today).
^ I knew you just did. Told you so
02:05
You've spent too long in the US if 486 lines is normal size :)
☑ rekt ☐ not rekt
@Mysticial you've proven you can pull it from your own github by writing a thread pool just today.
Clear as day
I think we have different definitions of "pull from github".
Because I'm still confused.
@Borgleader kek
Ell
Ell
How come you didn't try boost asio?
02:08
yes bby pull from my github
@Ell Eventually I would've resorted to 3rd party libraries if I couldn't solve it another way.
Ell
Ell
Do you prefer to write it yourself always?
Cilk Plus was kind of the exception because it's built into the compiler for both GCC and ICC. And it was literally designed for the workload I was giving it. That turned out to be a disappointment aside from letting you use more than 64 threads on Windows.
Can I bring some type's member typedef as typedefs in another scope?
struct Robert { using value_type = typename std::vector<...>::value_type; } does it get simpler than that?
@Ell To some extent yes. Since that's the personal challenge. But if I have an important task to do, I'll use anything acceptable.
02:13
@AngryLettuce nope (and of course that’s aliasing rather than bringing the value_type member into scope)
Ok, I'll ask just in case, to avoid doing the whole work: I need to wrap a vector as a 1-based container. What's the easiest way?
inb4 boost::offset_vector
1-based container? eww, lol
Yeah well, I didn't design this system
;_;
user406009
@AngryLettuce what's the API you need to support?
user406009
The whole vector API?
02:20
@AngryLettuce wrap a vector? boost::multi_array_ref by the way
@Lalaland I guess
@AngryLettuce what sehe said, private inheritance can get you there fast
@Mysticial I was literally trying to say it would be kinda silly to go to github for a simple thread pool. Like consulting a lawyer before accepting change. I'm more surprised this thing is there (specifically, how would they make it generic, presumably in a C-style API? Where's the control? It could be handy iff you're coding in C maybe)
e.g. now you can actually bring the member type to scope, using base_type::value_type; and so on
Ell
Ell
@Mysticial yeah :) programming is fun
Sometimes at least
02:24
I'm hitting the sacdk
Night all
@LucDanton copy pasta all the way
that is also an alternative
@sehe Is that the danish version of sac
@sehe night
@sehe ah
I didn't sense the sarcasm.
Almost half of the 486 lines is the data structure that holds the ThreadWorker objects.
03:10
@sehe There, sent you a message on twatter.
03:23
@Mr.kbok What is this magic.
I'm so confused.
@sehe Nighty night.
Also, OpenGL has me confuzzed.
@ThePhD Same.
hmm... Suppose I am writing this function:
std::map<char, int (* const)(int, int)> GetOperationsMap();
How can I specify that this map cannot be changed?
If I write const auto blabla = GetOperationsMap(), I will not be able to call functions from that map.
If I write auto blabla = GetOperationsMap(), I can call modifiers functions for map.
maybe I'm doing smth wrong...
@SashaMN use find
@SashaMN What do you mean by "cannot be changed"?
03:39
[]
@Nooble cannot be modified
hmm. Looks like I have to do copies of the pointer locally when I want to call the function
failed
did you #include <pointer>
(don’t come complaining when your program blows up because a lookup failed)
@LucDanton wow how did you do that without <pointer>
@AngryLettuce the -> is doing the pointing
03:44
I see
Nice trick
Is it a macro?
@SashaMN incidentally I don’t recommend storing const objects in containers for a variety of boring and silly technical reasons. on the other hand, it’s also not recommended to have e.g. struct foo { const bar b; }; for very practical reasons so there’s an obvious parallel here
@LucDanton It works with find(), thanks)
I think slowly :(
04:19
finally I understood that operator [] sometimes calls constructor.
:28215489 good
0
Q: What is the front-end equivalent of microservices?

MicroFrontEndWe've done a good job of breaking our back-end services into discrete, independent microservices. However, our front-end is still marching toward monolith. Is the microservice equivalent for front-ends a practice that also exists?

the cancer is metastasizing
@AngryLettuce Nice stargazer.
05:03
sssh
Work hard - on the things worth your effort ...
06:08
So warm ... whole 30 degrees ...
06:27
morning
Hi every one.
I want little help can any one help?
Jan 6 at 22:54, by sbi
Welcome to the Lounge. Have a seat, watch a bit, and read the rules before you post yourself.
@TonyTheLion To download file from server i use curl and address something like that localhost/server1.xml. But if i want to download that file which entry is inside the server1.xml. So the directory path is like what?
You didn't read the rules, did you?
Please post your question on Stack Overflow
Also, how would anyone here know what the directory is?
Look on the server
hey tony
06:35
@TonyTheLion Here in the UK, I cannot post myself: there's a 30kg limit.
@MartinJames hahah
lose some weight
@nick sup bby
hows the HK?
nm
how are you liking your job?
06:36
is pretty good
really long hours though
oh, how come?
@TonyTheLion Usually pulls down and to the left.
@TonyTheLion need to deliver
@nick ah yea, makes sense
if we can't ship we can't raise moolah and i would lose my erection and that would be terrible
06:41
oh wow
so the pressure is on
sounds intense
kudos to you, for a) moving halfway across the world to get a job b) working hard to keep said job :) :D
and with this, I'm off.
buhbye for now
@MartinJames lol
@TonyTheLion sleep tite
@TonyTheLion nn babe
T thing() { T const blah = buttes(); return blah; } does the const disable RVO
jaysus I have to try
no it doesn't
yay
I thought it did.
apparently it doesn't, even on the return type
p cool
07:03
sickada pls a reference letter
tell them how good I am in bed
@nick I'm sure the bed likes it when you're inside of it
@nick You should not be asking other Loungers to lie for you:(
@nick letter&
here you go
07:21
@MartinJames but you could ask them to lay(lie) with you?
I've found a function that writes to a uint8_t*, but I am worried that an unknown quantity for memory allocation may be required.
silly question but, if I increment the address for a variable, will it get more memory?
@edition if you are using a c style array, you need to allocate memory for it first ... Usually with malloc
@TelkittytheWebDeveloper yes I know that
@edition think very carefully about what you asked
07:36
no, it won't get more memory.
I'm just surprised that I can add data to a pointer variable for unallocated memory without causing errors.
@edition now’s a good time to learn about undefined behavior
user1804599
08:08
¡Coño!
08:25
@edition There are 10^lots of SO dups re. writing out-of-bounds and not getting any error notification. One pops up evey day or so.
@edition you probably end up writing in the small string buffer that is statically allocated in the string object.
IOW it works by accident
just like you were born by accident
it's fun to analyze UB that accidentally works
no because then you have the UB zealots shouting "it's UB!!!!!!!!!!!1"
I think I just need to add a cname alias to get my website up.
Why can't I access route 53 on mobile
Im always busy when I'm at home
tbh C++ does have the most diverse syntax I've seen in a language
@StackedCrooked IRTA "when u r ignorant & dont know shit u r liek 'wow im dumb af' lmao"
user1804599
@StackedCrooked If the syntax is wrong then it is not C++ code.
user1804599
It may be like C++ code, but it isn't C++ code.
Help
I have a class in 7 hours and I can't sleep.
08:42
Stay awake for 7 more hours then sleep in class.
Now, to decide whether twitter fails to show me the DM that it notified about, or the internal server error(s) lead to a false notification in the first place
user1804599
Twitter is broken.
user1804599
I cannot retweet.
hmm.. can't construct a vector of move-only elements vía initializer_list? auto xv = vector<X>{X(), X(), X()};
@StackedCrooked the formulation makes me doubt the author's capacity for languages in general, but he does have a little bit of a point
user1804599
08:45
> mayuso added defunkt to mayuso/JavaDataMining 30 minutes ago
mayuso added torvalds to mayuso/JavaDataMining 31 minutes ago
user1804599
what is wrong with people
@MadameElyse Dat is omdat je reetweet
user1804599
why are people such morons
Because Jesus Linus loves all morons equally
@ThePhD apply redbull onto yourself?
user1804599
08:46
At first it was morons only adding torvalds.
user1804599
Now they start adding GitHub staff too.
@ArneMertz yes, it’s a limitation of std::initializer_list which only provides const access to its elements (i.e. std::initializer_list<T>::reference is T const& and e.g. begin() returns T const*)
Luc's answer is better anyways.
49
Q: initializer_list and move semantics

fredoverflowAm I allowed to move elements out of a std::initializer_list<T>? #include <initializer_list> #include <utility> template<typename T> void foo(std::initializer_list<T> list) { for (auto it = list.begin(); it != list.end(); ++it) { bar(std::move(*it)); // kosher? } } Since...

user1804599
The secret to maintainable code is high-quality code.
5
08:48
TLS/SSL stuff is really hard.
I guess I'm just gonna have to leave it to a library.
@LucDanton meh
Even just connecting as a client that doesn't need to authenticate is rough.
The secret to high-quality code is no code at all.
@ArneMertz stupid 'workaround' that no-one should ever use, if you can call it that
don’t think I’ve come up with something so embarrassingly stupid in quite a while
> Use nullptr instead of NULL
> Posted On January 15 2016
for fuck sake people, C++11 is FOUR AND A HALF fucking years old and you still post this kind of bullshit might as well go full retard and blog how "you should consider moving from 16 bits to 32 bits" or what do I know, "connect your house to the public sewage system", morons
08:55
@LucDanton why is it stupid (except for rowing against the stream)?
@sehe well, embarrassing for C++ I suppose
Clearly we need another lambda tutorial blogpost to truly drive the point across.
@LucDanton ah
it’s all so kludgy
08:56
"C++11 nullptr considered harmful"
You accidentally dropped an extraneous keyword in there ("nullptr")
Also all these shitty blogposts about how SSE IS THE FUTURE
> designed by Intel and introduced in 1999 in their Pentium III series processors
@MadameElyse The secret to oneliners is arbitrary definitions for the constituent parts of the claim
Because yes we need more vector power to run all your javascript bullshit
ughhhhhhhhhh I hate everything
@AngryLettuce It's almost like saying "Hoomans are the future of evolution" right
08:59
Settle down there feline.
@AngryLettuce Did you eat cat
I'm ready to bet 64 bits processor will be a big hit in the future!

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