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08:00
And apparently I'm still drunk
oh gawd
You gotta work today?
Fuck everything I'm going to sleep
Is std::function<bool(const T&,const T&)> already typedef'ed somewhere in the stdlib? I need a shorter notation... (can typedef it myself but prefer to use what's there already)
why would that be typedef'd
08:07
I just thought it might be, since it's used so frequently (for comparisons)
nm - using template aliases, it's cheaper than I thought...
08:28
morning all
wait... there is still that mumble server?
yes
we made quite good use of it on Saturday evening
it was quite hilarious
I like the only thing that comes out of chat and lasts more then two hours is another way to chat
> We once had a guy working for us who tried to swat a wasp with a sledge hammer, the wasp flew on his face so he hit himself in the face with a sledge hammer them tried to sue the company for not telling him swatting wasps with a giant fucking hammer was a dumbass thing to do in health and safety talks. He lost the case and the wasp got away.
lol
@TonyTheLion He should have hit the nest :P
08:34
Btw, he hit himself in the face with a sledge hammer?
@StackedCrooked that's what the story says.
From this reddit thread
It's on the Internet so I guess it's true.
well, I didn't make any claims with regards to that
I just posted it because I thought it was funny
I grow tired of reddit
08:36
oh
too mang of the threads are filled with crap so stupid, it's no longer funny
when your work doesn't satisfy, then Reddit seems to be a good alternative :P
danger fap
I need to work out how to ssh to my dedicated server from work... it seems to enjoy blocking the ports here... or perhaps see if I can remote mount a folder... with my RPi sitting in the middle
08:41
HTTPS
that may not be blocked
what do you mean?
so you could tunnel your SSH through HTTPS or some such thing
@thecoshman be careful about doing that kind of thing if it's against company policy (no matter how stupid the policy might seem to be)... ...just because they pay us, they legally can screw with us (up to a point)
also what @kfmfe04 says
if it's against company policy, don't do it
what do you guys think about the answers here? stackoverflow.com/questions/14371695/…
08:56
well... I've not read that it is against policy :P
Xeo
Xeo
Mornin'
@TonyTheLion I think this is the best one :D
Xeo
Xeo
@Mysticial: Nice, Guru badge on the lambda answer. :)
user142019
09:09
fuck!
user142019
also hi
hmm...
I am sshed to a server via a middle man... how can I pull a file from the end server to my local machine, with out storing it on the middle man?
I guess I could set up ftp... but I don't wanna
Ell
Ell
Wooooo no school!
user142019
http-parser y u assertion failure.
user142019
09:23
Oh forgot to initialize the parser.
user142019
C Y U NO RAII.
Xeo
Xeo
@Zoidberg, Y U C?!
user142019
Great it works now!
user142019
I'm so happy.
user142019
:P
user142019
09:26
@Xeo http-parser is a C library.
user142019
I couldn't find a C++ equivalent.
Xeo
Xeo
<regex> :D
user142019
HTTP is a bitch to parse.
user142019
TME. :P
@Zoidberg ¬_¬ perhaps you are starting to see why C sucks great big donkey balls
user142019
09:30
No C is awesome.
@Zoidberg ¬_¬ I bet you couldn't
user142019
Let's see how many memory leaks I have. xD
user142019
Hurray no leaks!
Ell
Ell
Java > C
user142019
No.
user142019
09:32
Anything > Java
user142019
At least C is interesting and fun.
user142019
Java isn't.
Ell
Ell
Java is fun!
user142019
No.
user142019
Java is boring as fuck.
Ell
Ell
09:33
Well its a matter of opinion
user142019
It is, but still. If you like Java, you're wrong.
@Ell lol
Ell
Ell
:'( ...is there a cure?
user142019
Haskell.
Ell
Ell
Are there any side effects? ;)
09:35
@Ell Yeah, it makes you cool ;)
2
user142019
Only in the IO monad.
user142019
Man.
user142019
I have meeting in nine minutes.
Ell
Ell
Go to it :o
user142019
I have to wait for the other participant, you fool.
user142019
09:37
C y u no lambdas.
Ell
Ell
Oh :P
@Zoidberg "See why you know lambdas"?
user142019
I need to set eight callbacks.
user142019
I want lambdas. :<
user142019
unsigned short status_code; /* responses only */
unsigned char method;       /* requests only */
user142019
09:40
http-parser Y U NO UNION
user142019
SUCH A WASTE OF SPACE
Ell
Ell
Lol
Ell
Ell
Does anyone here torrent? If so how long do you seed?
On robotics
@Zoidberg "Y U NO UNUON U Y" - there, FT palindrome FY
2
@Ell Only very seedy torrents
user142019
09:45
fuuuuck
user142019
The meeting appears to be tomorrow.
user142019
I came to school for nothing. xD
fuuuuckcuuuuf - FTFYA
@Zoidberg In this weather! You should get a medal. Aaaand ac calendar
user142019
@sehe I have an agenda.
user142019
It says Monday 10:45.
09:46
A hidden agenda
user142019
It even notified me yesterday.
Y U NO STAR MY SPLENDID PALINDROME?
Ell
Ell
I would if I wasn't mobile
user142019
Because you used a hyphen rather than an em dash.
Ell
Ell
Someone star it for a minute
user142019
09:47
Maybe I can go to Selexyz Donner to get a book.
"Doctor! I think I'm mobile!".
@Zoidberg Y U NO JUST SAY SO IN TIME?
user142019
I can't help you're typographically deficient.
@Ell There
@Zoidberg challenged
@Zoidberg wHAT, THEY STILL EXIST?
user142019
@sehe is your code compiling?
user142019
@sehe yES!
Ell
Ell
09:49
Starred :D
user142019
When I get back home I can do two things:
1. I can work on Mine#. (C#)
2. I can work on the project for school that has to be done before friday. (Java)
Ell
Ell
I had some donner meat the other day. I do wonder what they put in those things
user142019
Guess what I'll do when I get back home.
user142019
@Ell meat.
Ell
Ell
I'm not so sure about that :P
09:51
@Zoidberg Yes. And I'm robocopying sourcesafe repo. And I'm rsyncing it to my SSD. And I'm replying to my mail. And to you
user142019
@sehe Ah that's why you're not working.
@Zoidberg Do the java
user142019
ALSO HAHAHHAHAA SOURCESAFE.
user142019
It safely deletes your code using dd.
@Zoidberg Exactly. My boss understands. He can practically read this as I type it
@Zoidberg You are mean
@Zoidberg It's a lot like Vigil, in that respect
user142019
09:52
@sehe I know; I mean it.
user142019
Also I have the constant feeling I'm at work since I use the same deo as the one I used back when I still had a job.
@Zoidberg -/-\-/-\-/-\-/-\-/-\-/-\-/-\-/-\- caveman
Oh. aha. Fixed
user142019
No, it's not interesting. You have backslashes.
user142019
@sehe how do I search the entire document in Vim?
user142019
I tried :%s/foo but it substitutes "foo" for "".
09:54
/foo
user142019
Ah thanks.
ugh, Java software... :/
user142019
lol Java
user142019
The J in Java is for "junk".
Ell
Ell
<3 java
09:55
@sehe your boss is in the lounge?
Yeah, we use jenkins as our build server... :(
Ell
Ell
Ooh sorry, that's my syndrome playing up :/
@Zoidberg Entire: se wrapscan, match Error /foo/ (no navigation, just highlight), :g/foo/, :g//p# (with linenumbers)
and it's crapping out on me with nullpointerexceptions and absurdly long stack traces
Also: :/foo/,/bar/norm VU (uppercase the line containing bar after the next match for foo
user142019
09:56
@Zoidberg replace / with ? to reverse searchdirections
user142019
(Yes, I made things purple/blue. I hate orange.)
@Zoidberg You're getting overly autistic now
user142019
@sehe awesome.
user142019
@sehe ?
09:57
Flagging your own non-inflammatory posts
user142019
No, Ell's post.
Ell
Ell
Haha the <3 java?
user142019
Of course.
user142019
Java is a great threat against humanity.
user142019
I'd love to see bugs in Java cause banks to go bankrupt.
user142019
09:59
Does Oracle have any products that don't suck?
Ell
Ell
Could a bank sue for that?
10
Q: Why doesnt this operator usage in the trailing return type compile?

Johannes Schaub - litbI was trying to reuse the return type of an operator in my trailing return type of another function, but unfortunately clang did not accept it struct A { int operator[](int); auto at(int i) -> decltype((*this)[i]); }; Clang say that my class does not have a operator[]. Gcc did accept my...

'bout time
user142019
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> ''AS IS'' AND ANY
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL <COPYRIGHT HOLDER> BE LIABLE FOR ANY
DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND
user142019
@Ell :)
user142019
@FredOverflow why do people always spell it "CLang"?
user142019
10:01
It's called "clang".
user142019
And sometimes "Clang".
Xeo
Xeo
It's called Clang and is spoken "klang".
user142019
clang WOBSITE Y U USE BOTH "clang" and "Clang" INTERCHANGEABLY.
Xeo
Xeo
Aka, CLang and pronouncing it "see-lang" is wrong.
@Zoidberg Maybe they think it stands for "C Language"? :)
Xeo
Xeo
10:02
@FredOverflow Doesn't help that it says "C language family front-end"
> clang -- a front-end for the whole family!
user142019
Is there any difference in clock cycles between instructions that use constants as operands and instructions that use registers as operands?
Probably not, but I guess it heavily depends on the architecture.
Ell
Ell
Incest - a game for all the family! Youngest player goes first.
4
Xeo
Xeo
Clang should be right, this isn't available at the point of declaration of the member function, it's only available inside a member function. (§9.3.2/1 "In the body of a non-static (9.3) member function, the keyword this is a prvalue expression [...]"). — Xeo 1 min ago
user142019
10:05
As in, ADD %eax, $5 vs ADD %eax, %foo in a tight loop, where %foo holds 5.
@Ell Sweet. Too late for the holiday season now, though
user142019
@FredOverflow I'm going to benchmark it. I have a cool idea for a library.
Oh. Okay, there you go @Ell
@Zoidberg I would guess the only difference is that the instructions themselves might take up different amounts of memory, and that could be bad for caching, yada yada yada.
user784668
@sehe Takes gazillion years to build.
10:06
@Fanael I can directly contradict that without any scruples
user142019
How do you benchmark C code?
user142019
Using clock()?
user784668
@FredOverflow Also register pressure. Immediate means you have one more register to play with, and that's GREAT on register-starved architectures like IA-32.
@Zoidberg You use a stopwatch. Nah. Just use callgrind!
user784668
@Zoidberg You don't.
user142019
10:09
@Fanael T_T
@Fanael Remember the days of self-modifying code to save registers? :)
user784668
@FredOverflow Yeah. It's a heinous idea now, though. It flushes all the caches that are even remotely related to the modified code.
@Zoidberg I always use timeGetTime on Windows, it has ms resolution. That stands for milliseconds, not Microsoft :)
user142019
I use Linux. :P
You could use Wine ;)
user142019
10:10
lol
But yeah, I guess clock() is fine unless you need very high resolution.
What is the value of CLOCKS_PER_SEC on your system?
user784668
I use measure-command for benchmarking.
user142019
@FredOverflow let me check. (I wish I had a C REPL.)
user142019
What's the type of CLOCKS_PER_SEC?
user784668
@Zoidberg geordi
10:13
double x = CLOCKS_PER_SEC;
prinf("%f\n", x);
@Zoidberg I don't know the type, but this should do it :)
user784668
@Zoidberg Who cares? Use C++ to determine the value.
Cheater ;)
user142019
@FredOverflow 1000000.000000
user784668
@Zoidberg Good enough.
user142019
K thanks.
10:14
Wow. I only ever had 18.2 or something on my systems :)
user784668
@Zoidberg Also, that's the value mandated by POSIX.
user142019
Hmm.
user784668
@FredOverflow Windows has 1000.
user142019
Now I need to actually write the benchmark.
user142019
Can I just do that using a loop that loop a billion gazillion times?
user784668
10:14
@Zoidberg Yes.
user142019
Cool.
user784668
@Zoidberg What are you trying to benchmark, anyway?
@FredOverflow the ms resolution was rejected by the UN
clock_t before = clock();
function_to_measure();
clock_t after = clock();
printf("%f\n", (after - before) / CLOCKS_PER_SEC);
@Zoidberg There you go ;)
user142019
@Fanael difference between x += y where y is always 5 versus x += 5.
10:15
@Fanael i686 instructions with direct vs. register operands
@Zoidberg In assembly, right? Because high level compiler will optimize.
user142019
Oh yeah fuck. T_T
user142019
Uh.
user142019
I will get y from stdin. :P
@FredOverflow Yup, 65536 ticks in an hour
user142019
10:16
Nah argc.
user784668
@Zoidberg asm volatile("add $5, %[x]" : [x]"+&r"(result)); vs asm volatile("add %[five], %[x], : [x]"+&r"(result) : [five]"r"(5));
user142019
Of course.
@Fanael I like that too. What does measure-command do beyond the standard time builtin?
user784668
@sehe TIL there's time.
Time always has been
user784668
10:19
@sehe No wait, there's no time.
Ell
Ell
And always will
@Fanael where isn't there?
user784668
@sehe Powershell.
@Ell Just a tad slow. You need to work on your mobility issues
@Fanael gah. you brought that upon yourself
user142019
Fuck.
user142019
10:20
I suck at assembly.
user142019
$5 is not a valid operand for movq.
You suck. Don't fuck at the assembly.
user142019
Oh wrong order.
@Zoidberg intel vs whatever again
user784668
@Zoidberg It is.
user142019
10:21
@sehe AT&T
user784668
@Zoidberg Why not use the snippets I gave you?
user142019
Oh. lol
user142019
Didn't notice. :L
@Zoidberg that one
@Zoidberg good morning. have a coffee. And check your agenda for the following months. Perhaps you should double check the closing date for Avans transfer registrations?
user142019
Hmm.
user142019
10:24
I need more resolution.
user142019
Registers: 300000
Constants: 300000
Wait for the next New Year
@Zoidberg Just run it longer. And mebbe if it's so close, run it from a boot loader. And really really just use callgrind
It's made for precisely this kind of instruction profiling. --dump-instructions (and another for analyzing jumps IIRC)
Ell
Ell
What is he benchmarking now?
user142019
lol
user142019
With -O3 it loops infinitely.
user784668
10:27
11 mins ago, by Zoidberg
@Fanael difference between x += y where y is always 5 versus x += 5.
Ell
Ell
Lol
Oh right
How does one clean headphones?
user784668
@Zoidberg That's because you have absolutely no clue what you're doing.
One normally prevents that from happening
user142019
@sehe Thanks. Will try.
user784668
@Ell Wash them.
user142019
10:28
@Fanael I know.
Useful stuff. @Zoidberg perhaps you should take up the Java homework offer anyway
user784668
@Zoidberg Will false.
user142019
?
Ell
Ell
Will catch
Is there a specific name for declaring a struct like so, struct OnReturn { ~OnReturn() { ClrScr(); } } onReturn; that when the method it is declared in returns the ClrScr() method is executed before the method returns?
Ell
Ell
10:30
I wonder how well a Torre t system would where where you could only download what you uploaded
user784668
@ctor Yes, BOOST_SCOPE_EXIT.
i have asked the question now, @fredoverflow
user784668
@ctor Scope guard.
Thanks Fanael
@Ell Will smith
user784668
10:34
@sehe Will Ard Romney.
That's offensive
Will Yomomma
Ell
Ell
White elephants, sitting ducks
void f(char v[])
{
    for(char* p = v; *p != 0; p++)
    {
        std::cout << *p << std::endl;
    }
}
kill it with fire!
38 mins ago, by FredOverflow
10
Q: Why doesnt this operator usage in the trailing return type compile?

Johannes Schaub - litbI was trying to reuse the return type of an operator in my trailing return type of another function, but unfortunately clang did not accept it struct A { int operator[](int); auto at(int i) -> decltype((*this)[i]); }; Clang say that my class does not have a operator[]. Gcc did accept my...

Ell
Ell
10:39
Hey
@Zoidberg Signed overflow maybe?
user142019
Yup.
Aha. Sorry
Ell
Ell
Haha
user142019
10:41
ohh FUCk
user142019
I know why it didn't work.
user142019
clock_t constant_diff = register_end - register_start;
user142019
:^)
Copy/paste error?
Ell
Ell
Im gonna get out of bed now
10:42
@Ell What did the elephant duck for?
But honestly, if you want to know whether adding constants or registers makes a difference, look it up in the CPU manual.
@TonyTheLion Monaing
user142019
@FredOverflow yup xd
@sehe morning
Why are you messing with ?
10:44
because silly-zoidberg
Because he lost all purpose arriving at school a day early for a non-existing meeting
ahahahaha
user142019
lol
@sehe A day early? Off-by-one error?
user142019
Yup. xD
10:47
@FredOverflow off by 1572864 obviously
user142019
I'm terrible at benchmarking. (And no, "I'm terrible FTFY." is not funny.)
But it is true.
user784668
const auto& ct = std::use_facet<std::ctype<Char>>(stream.getloc());
user784668
Whoa.
user784668
The first time I used C++ locales ever.
10:48
@Zoidberg You don't need to benchmark single CPU instructions, just look them up. Or use the cycle count intrinsics or whatever they're called.
user784668
@FredOverflow Pipeline.
The Time Stamp Counter (TSC) is a 64-bit register present on all x86 processors since the Pentium. It counts the number of cycles since reset. The instruction RDTSC returns the TSC in EDX:EAX. In x86-64 mode, RDTSC also clears the higher 32 bits of RAX. Its opcode is 0F 31. Pentium competitors such as the Cyrix 6x86 did not always have a TSC and may consider RDTSC an illegal instruction. Cyrix included a Time Stamp Counter in their MII. Use The time stamp counter has, until recently, been an excellent high-resolution, low-overhead way of getting CPU timing information. With the advent of ...
> The instruction RDTSC returns the TSC in EDX:EAX.
user784668
@FredOverflow If you used it this way, you failed at pipeline.
Again, safest way is to just read the manual.
user784668
@FredOverflow rdtscp or cpuid before rdtsc.
user142019
10:52
Ran it ten times.
user142019
X = winner
- = draw
REG CON
 X
 X
     X
     X
 X
 -   -
 X
 X
 X
 X
user142019
xd
Still as meaningless as ever.
No, it improving. Getting more meaningless as there is more output
user784668
@Zoidberg So the register version is one orange faster. Am I supposed to be impressed?
10:54
I like oranges!
user142019
@Fanael do whatever you like.
user142019
@FredOverflow I don't!
Then use a constant.
@Zoidberg Could it be more obvious? It's a CON. It even says so in the column header
user142019
@FredOverflow lol
10:55
@Zoidberg Only the juicy ones
user142019
You know.
user142019
If loading from a register were faster in all cases
user142019
compiler would optimize to that. xd
probably
user142019
If there are enough registers.
user142019
10:56
Ah well.
Hyperlink only answers are bad. You have taken it to a whole new level! This link is broken by design. Could you at least quote the relevant text? — sehe 4 secs ago
user142019
I played with clock. Fun enough.
@Zoidberg is it 'normal' to use macros in Erlang?
or are they met with the same scorn as in C++?
@Zoidberg Java should be like a candy store for you
But I don't see why registers would be faster than constants. If the CPU sees the constant, it knows the value. If it sees the register number, it still has to fetch that value. I'm not saying that has to be slower, but how can it be faster?
10:57
@thecoshman They're probably unrelated? lisp has macros. Boo has macros. They are the shit.
user142019
@thecoshman I think they enforce correct syntax (i.e. you can't have a half-arsed macro like {foo) but I'm not sure.
user784668
@FredOverflow Less decoding, internal caches, flawed benchmark.
user142019
I never use them. I prefer functions.
@Fanael By "less decoding", you mean the instruction is shorter (less bytes)?
user784668
@FredOverflow Yes.
10:58
@Zoidberg perhaps... doesn't read like that to me though... sounds liek a rather simple substitution
@Fanael That would be probably be the only sane reason.
@sehe Lisp macros? Lisp macros are crap.
user784668
@FredOverflow But the last reason I mentioned is the most probable one.
user142019
@thecoshman at least expansion is explicit, unlike in C++.
@sehe I am sure they are, just wondering what the opinions on them where/is/was/are
10:58
Like C macros, they don't know scope.
user142019
The MODULE macro is used very often, though.
user142019
But it's built-in.
Ell
Ell
ugh why does tf2 take ages to validate the files? :O
Lisp macros are only "great" because of people that never used Lisp parroting what Lisp fanatics told them.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, I was sort-of handwaivy implying the improved versions of lisp found in some dialects. Unable to name them, because: bad memory
@R.MartinhoFernandes That's why I said "the shit", not "great" :)
10:59
You should check your English.
@Ell Because: PAY MOAR MONEY
"X is the shit" is an idiom that means "X is great/the best".

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