@Mikhail If you don't see it, you aren't looking. First of all, even assuming they simply incorporated Clang's code into CL, that's still more than they did on CL from about 1997 through 2002 or so. Second, they're clearly putting (for one example) a lot of work into the library that they didn't used to.
@AndreasPapadopoulos I am traveling back home passing Shenzhen and will stay there for half a day on 10th Oct, want meet up? The rest of the journey is a bit far or not enough time
@Griwes strncmp is for times that it may be NUL-terminated. That is, a NUL does terminate the string, but if you don't find a NUL before N characters you stop there. If it's strictly "length of N" (even if that might contain some zero-bytes), you want to use memcmp instead.
@Ven Look, look! The whole band is out of step, except for my son!
@Griwes Of course, my blaming GAS for most of the evils of the world may stem from its usually meaning on photography web sites (Gear Acquisition Syndrome).
@JerryCoffin I actually haven't written any Code except for the C++ code that happens to be C compatible (which is almost none of it). I have been maintaining some C-style stuff the last few weeks though.
@набиячлэвэли We just need somebody with cant as their user name to turn this into a whole conversation: `Can't. Plink a mod". "Can't plink a mod." "Cant, plink a mod."
I came across this "question" in review:
At first I thought this was just yet another review audit because the question is so obviously spam. So I proceeded to flag it as such. Turns out it wasn't an audit.
However the question wasn't deleted as spam. Instead it was put on hold by a moderator...
@Puppy Years ago saw a column advocating something similar. When filling out a software license, fill out your name as "everyone" and your location as "the whole wide world", so when it starts up, the splash screen will say: "This software is licensed to everyone at the whole wide world".
@R.MartinhoFernandes what's your opinion on github.com/tahonermann/text_view? I like it, but I don't like it's sitting on the bleeding edge so much that it will take years to be viable for mainstream, I fear
Context: I was writing a program in which the user has to enter 2 numbers, but they cannot be 0 for the computation. Knowing that, I had to check user input so it isn't 0.
I currently have 2 methods to do the above. Here they are below:
Method 1
int i = 1;
if (i != 0)
{
//....
}
Method ...
@sehe GCC generates two branches. It checks the first part. Returns if it's true, then it checks the second part. The problem is that the nature of code is that it's unpredictable which side is zero. But it's predictable whether either side is zero.
@sehe Chained boolean expressions don't compile that well on x86 as you need to convert flag bits into normal registers. GCC knows that so it decided to split the branch into two because perfect prediction is faster than boolean arithmetic.
@sehe I tried like a dozen different things include something similar to that. None of it worked. Actually a switch is multiple branches, so it wouldn't worked either.
I ended up doing a double-wide multiplication. Because a multiplication will return zero if either number is zero.
@sehe It was very hard to believe when I saw it. A 64 x 64 -> 128-bit multiply followed by an bitwise OR of the two halves was faster than any sort of boolean logic.
But numbers are numbers. They don't lie. And Agner's latency tables somewhat explains it.
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@CaptainGiraffe To be honest, I think it meant more to the others on the team than it did to me. They'd all looked at the old code, and decided that job was fearfully complex. I'd glanced at the code enough to decide I'd rather rewrite than patch it up, but mostly looked through the spec and thought it was simple enough that I fully expected it to work quickly and easily. A few others (who probably should have known better) were downright amazed though.
I only get those rare hallelujahs when I'm writing my own code. But I do remember once in a parser (I think it was plain xml) I used three or four gotos to make the parsing a lot more readable. I linked Dijkstras "Letter to the Editors" as a pdf to that file =)
Question.:
Write a piece of code which outputs return ‘*’ with probability 4/7 and return ‘#’ with probability 2/7 and return ‘@’ with probability 1/7???
How you will solve this problem??
https://www.facebook.com/groups/610372552482766/632805130239508/?ref=notif¬if_t=group_activity¬...
@CaptainGiraffe That too. To me, the big gain was simply that something was (more or less) permanently fixed, so I could move on to other things. This is part of why I find programming a good fit: when I fix something, I like to think of it as fixed forever.
@jaggedSpire It appears to be self-answered, so he actually did at least make some attempt at writing some code.
@JerryCoffin We do differ there=) If I fix something I do expect to find another bug, showing me similar symptoms, making me wonder if the first fix was a fix at all.
@CaptainGiraffe If the first didn't work, it's not really a fix. I'm bothered more by doing the same thing again. Like in my old house, when I replaced some plumbing, the replacement was when "new". At least at first, it really bothered me when I had to replace the same thing ~10 years later.
@JerryCoffin it looks like about a minute between the question and the answer post. Makes it pretty ambiguous if it's a bad attempt at a self-answer that they failed to do right from the question post page, or a response to the comments
I followed the arrow. I was surprised you held an edit of that kind of post in any regard. That was why I was curious if you'd linked it correctly. Yeah that was a trainwreck. You can't stop a trainwreck with or without facebook links.
@CaptainGiraffe So what? It takes 3 seconds to remove a potential spammy link. It's a no-brainer. It takes a lot longer to think about whether the post has enough merit to even .. yada yada yada.
If I had to weigh my contributions like that, I'd never do a thing.