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15:00
@AndyProwl it's not arguing for the sake of arguing
yes, it is
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz interesting blog post comonad.com/reader/2015/categories-of-structures-in-haskell
a fair bit flew over my head, though.
it's arguing for the sake of being toxic.
I don't really have anything against LRiO but the comments are very aggressive for no reason.
no gpu? can still play Uplink
oh i used to play uplink ages ago
15:09
hmm
Unreal Tournament
that was a great game
I'm kinda looking forward to the next one, cuz i heard they were great but i never really got to play them. I was more of a Quake guy back then.
I wasn't at all, when it was released
Quake was pretty crap
UT was better
AFAICS the guys at iD never actually made good games, they were just marginally technologically ahead
@AndyProwl @Veritas Excuse my sloppy meta-humor.
idk, I had quite a bit of fun playing Quake 3 Arena
15:16
@Jeremy not excused
Doom mods are nice
@Veritas That wasn't a request, that was an order.
I like Doom a lot.
Clojure Programming reads so much better than Programming Clojure.
Programming Clojure sounds like implementing the compiler
Ven
Ven
15:24
Seems like it's missing an in
also fuck clojure
what's wrong with clojure?
your mother in bed
Am I missing something or there's no way to implement the algorithm that checks if a binary tree is size balanced (balanced on the number of nodes) without making it return a pair of booleans and integers at some point?
It's so ugly.
sigh i knew I would get such a response..
Recursively.
Like the algorithm always has the signature: std::pair<std::size_t, bool> is_balanced(Node* root);
Ven
Ven
15:27
@Veritas it's ugly
@Jefffrey Recursively doesn't work naturally here because whether or not a BST is balanced is not a property of whether the subtrees are balanced.
Sure it is
user2872568
Hello. I have a little trouble. I have a
std::string s = "[0,0]
and i need get this numbers like
int i = s.[1];
int j = s.[3];
But operator[] returns char&
you can have a BST which is not balanced even though both subtrees of the root are balanced.
balanced BSTs are not recursive data structures
Ven
Ven
@Warezovvv sure does!
15:29
I don't know what definition you have about balance there.
user2872568
@milleniumbug I can't use boost. Need poor C++ (but will in future ;))
@Warezovvv Try a book.
I'm talking about size balanced (for each node, the number of nodes on the left should differ of at most one from the number of nodes on the right).
right.
15:31
If one subtree is not balanced on the bottom of the original tree, then the whole tree is not balanced.
but the subtrees can be balanced and then the whole tree is still not balanced.
so the property is not directly recursive.
which is why the recursive version is ugly.
I see
just write a helper and thene xpose it using a wrapper
So it should just check on the first node?
And count the size of the two subnodes and be done?
nah
you still need to know if the two subtrees are balanced I think
but you then need to do an additional size check to know if the result (i.e., the whole tree starting from the current node) is balanced.
15:33
Yeah sure.
That's why I said std::pair<std::size_t, bool>.
yep.
which is pretty much what you're gonna be stuck with because the notion of "balanced" inherently requires both those pieces of information.
You get that pair for each branch, and then you do an end on the booleans and on std::abs(size_left - size_right) < 1.
you could also use optional<std::size_t>, since you don't need to know the length of unbalanced subtrees.
Otherwise you can call size and balanced separated on each tree and each node, but that sounds like a waste.
Right
What's the other algorithm which would be cleaner that you were thinking about?
what other cleaner algorithm?
15:36
4 mins ago, by Puppy
which is why the recursive version is ugly.
it seems very clean to me as is
I guess I read too much into that
I'm pretty sure that any iterative version would suffer from the exact same problem
also I realized that a few other designs I had in mind would not actually solve the problem (/whoops)
so what I'm saying is, it's inherent to the property of "balanced" and cannot be fixed.
@TonyTheLion hey, you think whilst I'm there you can help me sort out my boarding pass for the return flight, I don't think I'll be able to do it before hand (stupid tight window)
I don't think that Tony thinks
;p
15:39
@thecoshman what do you need help with?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit: Look, just give up and buy printed copy of standard for everybody with C++ tag on stackoverflow. Then you'll never have to request citation from standard again. Much faster and more efficient than talking about it. — SigTerm 22 mins ago
@TonyTheLion access to a compooter and printer
@thecoshman yea sure
@Griwes Did Lightness's comment get deleted? I'm sure there's one missing.
Yes.
2 hours ago, by milleniumbug
@Griwes: Buy your own like the rest of us. If you quote a draft, and don't have the real standard, how do you know the content matches a real standard? (The only exception is an FDIS.) It's ludicrous to pretend that I make this argument because "the content is of no relevance to me". — Lightness Races in Orbit 45 secs ago
This one.
15:43
amusing that he jumped on me for making a "the rest of us" generalization after he did the very same thing.
Later edited to include this:
2 hours ago, by Filip Roséen - refp
> Congratulations on accruing sympathy upvotes from your silly chatroom friends, though.
lol
I happened to think that it was time for the Steam Summer Sale soon
had a quick Google
details supposedly linked- posted less than 2 hours ago
christiantoday.com
yeah I just noticed that.
I would like to know what is the use for doing this — Ed Heal 25 mins ago
@EdHeal to generate karma on stackoverflow, of course — Matt McNabb 22 mins ago
lol
15:45
the whole website is about Catholic idiocy and then randomly Steam Summer Sale
@TonyTheLion cool beans
I have like $60 in my steam account.
I'm ready!
Finals week ends right before the summer sale starts too, for me.
Ell
Ell
man I'm so bored
GLEW's CMakeLists don't work for Windows.
Now only of there was another up to date OpenGL extension loader.
Ell
Ell
16:02
@Nooble It is not difficult to link it
Use GLEW
there is also glbinding
@Nooble use glloadgen?
@Ell Yeah, I can manually compile the library, but I'm trying to make CMake compile my dependencies for me.
@Borgleader Interesting.
@fredoverflow lol
I just use glload. dump the files into project, exclude c, linux and osx files, done :p
Ell
Ell
@Nooble cmake does that?
16:17
@Ell I think so, with External Project Add or something.
16:59
@Nooble My PC won't be in usable condition when it starts
user1804599
oops
user1804599
Oh wait these gnomes are peaceful. Awesome.
but kdes are preparing for war
Ell
Ell
I'm so frickin' bored
user1804599
> "How dare you break my door?"
> The watchman throws a dagger!
user1804599
17:09
oops
leaving merge sort aside, at least I got matrix addition right LOL
> Duration (parallel) with input size 10000x10000: 289 ms
Duration (serial) with input size 10000x10000: 541 ms
Speedup: 1.8719
I'm the master of parallel computing
user1804599
Fuck I died.
2
recursive parallel algorithms are somewhat tricky to get right in that you may spawn more threads than cpus
I just kept spawning more threads for my mergesort until I hit the limit imposed
after that it went serial on those specific threads
it's still tricky as you have to commit a specific analogy of threads for each recursive call.
17:15
i.e. if we're not at the limit, spawn a new thread to do the left branch, same for right branch, otherwise do usual serial stuff
Ell
Ell
lovely planet is suce a good game
> suce
user1804599
kitten y u kill peaceful gnome
kittens gonna kitt
@AlexM. Terrible plan. You should use a threadpool instead.
17:19
that would take more time
let me write something fast
nah
spawning a thread is not free
but more importantly
no I meant
what happens if I have N lists and I try to merge sort them all in parallel?
I need to finish this in an hour or so to not be very much behind with studying
17:20
each individual merge_sort call would spawn X threads.
so yo'd end up with a fucking shitload of threads.
ah ok
Doomed driver, wider than a mile..
you?
@MartinJames hehehe, wider
I'm gonna read more about this after I'm done because I realized my solution sucks
@Puppy Nah. Theme tune to 'Break fast at T.if->anny.
17:23
I'm gonna start here
> Merge sort parallelizes well due to use of the divide-and-conquer method. Several parallel variants are discussed in the third edition of Cormen, Leiserson, Rivest, and Stein's Introduction to Algorithms.
I was singing it in the club after winning both card games. Not sure why.
because before I can worry about threadpools I have to worry about how the thing works lol
user1804599
I was an illiterate atheist valkyrie.
user1804599
Awesome.
@AlexM. You can alloc a space the same size as the initial data,. split up recursely until L1-size, quciksort then merge teh bits on teh way back up by moving betwween buuffer bits. Summat like that.
17:29
@MartinJames You don't need to merge back if you quicksort.
@Puppy Nah - only quicksort the L1-size bits, in parallel.
Fuck me, I'm ratted.
3
it's clear that you're ratted but I would rather not fuck you
@MartinJames That's still not really a parallel merge sort, though, surely, because it still retains the worst-case behaviour of quicksort.
@Puppy S'OK, you're let off that bit
@AlexM. I would do things a bit differently. I'd start by creating a pool of as many threads as I was going to use. Then, I'd have a thread-safe queue to submit tasks to that thread pool. So, what you'd do would be to start by submitting one task to the thread pool to sort the entire array. One thread would pick up that task, split the array in half, push sorting one half back onto the queue for some other thread to carry out. It'd then continue with sorting the other half on its own.
If that half was large enough, it would split it in half and submit the other half to the queue as well. The point at which it would continue and just finish the sorting of a partition serially would be based on partition size, not the number of threads.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, needs some things, the things that signal task completion. The things..
Wot are those things?
17:35
futures
I'm looking for a radio alarm clock where I can specify the alarm time for every day of the week independently, but I cant find one that's reasonably priced and not and ipod/iphone dock.
@Borgleader Try the actual phone itself.
Can't start processing the next big till smaller bits sorted, so need things.
radio alarm clocks are so 90's
@Puppy my phone isnt loud enough
17:36
turn up the volume?
Leave your PC on for the night
@Borgleader Dock station, power amp and big speakrs
plug speakers into phone
What are the things?
@CatPlusPlus make scheduled task for rrerr.net at 8:00 :v
17:38
I duno why I' posting in this state
I hope im gonna pass all of the stuffs tomorrow otherwise everything else barely makes sense anymore :<
@MartinJames Because if you did anything else right now (except pass out), your state might cause real harm?
@Veritas what
I'm gonna look at it a bit later
I feel a bit ofdd..
I bed
17:42
It's not late, though
@nabijaczleweli It's not late where?
here's one of the many strange questions I find myself asking
@JerryCoffin Here in GMT+2, it's 7:43pm
is an error a constant expression.
Martin is in GMT
17:44
@Puppy An error isn't necessarily an expression (constant or otherwise).
arguably, but it's more convenient to represent expressions with errors in them as actual expressions with an unknown type
then I don't have to special-case not creating 99999 derived errors from uses of that expression
ah the flag was -O0 for some reason
@Xeo kitty #2 ?
Xeo
Xeo
ye
She has really shiny fur.
17:50
oh the shinies
well that explains everything
how many cats do you want to have
Xeo
Xeo
2
I bought a dishwasher!
@Veritas -O3 drops it to 684, almost 6.5 times faster. Optimization, yo.
Ell
Ell
I washed a dishbuyer!
3
17:52
No srsly
Finally did it
@Ell You washed @BartekBanachewicz?
the difference between the parallel and the normal version is also smaller with optimizations
probably because the parallel version is harder to optimize
@BartekBanachewicz was it difficult exchanging money for goods?
18:02
@Borgleader lol, who's the two liers :P
I have to write this document where I explain the algorithm and I fill it up with semi-obvious things in many words to fill up space lol
@BartekBanachewicz congrats on getting married
fuck
some nugget changed his comment to not include <br> anymore.
now my snarky response is meaningless.
@AlexM. try a graph or two
yea I made a nice diagram
it looks pretty among text
personally I would graphed execution time vs input size and maybe threadcount
18:11
I also added tables
yeah the tables are for the execution time thing
maybe I should make some graphs, you're right
those are prettier
@AlexM. just wondering, what performance increase are you looking at?
nothing
I just want a passing grade lol
you don't have a performance increase but you expect to pass ? :p
nvm, I thought he said "what performance increase are you looking for"
> 1000
5ms
1ms
10000
29ms
22ms
100000
1215ms
1190ms
input size, serial, parallel
I think my implementation is basically this
procedure mergesort(A, lo, hi):
    if lo+1 < hi:  /* if two or more elements */
        mid = ⌊(lo + hi) / 2⌋
        fork mergesort(A, lo, mid)
        mergesort(A, mid, hi)
        join
        merge(A, lo, mid, hi)
looks like spawning of too many threads
18:15
like wikipedia shows
but in java
@Veritas no, it's just too little done in parallel
since I don't do it like puppy and jerry said
a few levels in it just goes serial again
the higher the input size the lower the speedup because of it
you don't need more than a few levels in since you would have like, 8 threads or something already and that's all you can process in parallel.
the problem is that you're doing too much stuff serially, sure, like merging.
yep merging is done serially
I would be interested to see if you do better simply forking both mergesort recursion calls instead of one.
and also based on that code I'd say that you're stopping forking way too late.
you want to stop forking after like, 8-16 threads at most.
forking both is a waste
one thread only responsible for spawning threads and doing no work until those are done
probably
18:21
merging is ok done serially
I'd probably bet more on overforking than underforking here
meh it's ok
too bad I don't know what the prof is like
but I guess as long as I explain the shit I wrote here it's fine
here cleaned it up a bit http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/fa3866e25fc75386
more than x3 increase in performance.
that's not meaningful being written in a completely different language and library and idiom
probably I didn't know Alex's language requirements.
18:27
11 mins ago, by Alex M.
but in java
yea but that's after I wrote the original
in any case what I'm saying is that serially doing merge is fine
it's probably too many threads spawned
I thought about saying "I'm doing this in java btw" but I didn't think it made much of a difference anyway
i.e. I'm not looking at your solution as an alternative to mine in my situation
welp
just committed an improvement to Wide.
@Puppy So, I've been pondering this week on the llvm examples, and I was wondering, does it make sense to traverse my ast with both an RValue and an LValue functor? I dislike having a hack for the assign operator where i get the AllocaInst from the symbol table (like what they do)
@Borgleader No, it does not.
well
18:33
@AlexM. That wasn't my intention. It's just that better benchmarks == better marks especially when performance is the reason mergesort is paralleled.
this really depends on the semantics of the language you're attempting to implement.
user1804599
> You carefully open the bag... It develops a huge set of teeth and bites you!
so I guess I'm assuming something in the general area of C++/Wide
semantically its close to C++ yes (and Wide I would assume)
@rightfold what's that?
18:34
ok
then I would definitely say that you do not need to traverse the AST like that.
and you need a facility for name lookup, but you definitely don't want to lookup AllocaInst, you need to look up just some llvm::Value* to store in (and that's assuming no operator overloads etc)
the simplest thing to do is just evaluate both sides of the operator and then emit a store.
well afaict allocainst implicitly converts to Value*
name lookup in assignment is not a special case of regular name lookup.
@Borgleader Yep, but you also want to permit stuff like arr[index] = 5, right?
its just, in their example the "generatecode" of the variable node does a load, which you dont want to do in the case of assign
arr[index] is not going to be an allocainst.
@Borgleader Yep, you need to have associated semantic type information that tells whoever is consuming the value whether or not they need to load it (effectively).
Xeo
Xeo
This is weird. 2 commits ago I added a file, and now git thinks it needs to add the file again. Wtf.
18:37
so you would want T vs T&, approximately.
and the type of a variable is T&.
then for assignment you don't load it, and if you're adding to it, say, you just check if it's T& and if it is, load it first.
Xeo
Xeo
okay, I deleted an unrelated folder, and now it noticed. grmlgrmlgrml
@Puppy oh i see, so I need to add that information in the semantic analysis pass right after parsing?
@Veritas let me read it more carefully to see where it differs from mine
conceptually I mean
@Borgleader Well, currently, Wide lazily evaluates pretty much all of the semantic tree, rather than strictly using it as a "pass" kind of thing.
but that's more a detail of how your specific analyzer needs to work.
technically, I'm not FORCED to use java
I was forced to use it for the first lab but the final thing (sorting) can be done in any language
I just wanted to combine both in one project to make carrying it to college easier
18:39
in general, the most basic unit of a semantic expression is a semantic type, plus llvm::Value*.
then you look at the type and interpret the value based on that.
@AlexM. The only difference is that I stop after the thread count goes to zero. (Then I call the normal merge function so that it won't have to check for the thread count unnecessarily.)
you also do insertion sort when the number of elements in the thing is <= some #
I just do the classic merge sort
i.e. spitting until I get things of one element in length and then combine going up
heya
@AlexM. indeed but that's also done in the normal merge sort so it /shouldn't/ affect the end results that much.
in Kaleidoscope they basically don't do it like that because there's only the one type and you can't assign shit (except when they hack it in)
but as you can tell that's not really how it should be done
18:43
@Puppy right, thats an optimization i guess. Ok thanks, I'll add a semantic analysis pass before code generation, I thought I could get away with it until I added more features.
you need a semantic analyzer.
@Puppy yeah their "symbol table" is also a huge hack, the way they clear it when they start parsing a function
only very, very trivial languages can get away without one.
well atm it is very trivial :P
in fact, even just traversing your AST and building up LLVM values is technically an extremely primitive analyzer.
18:45
I'm assuming in Wide you dont need forward declarations?
indeed you do not.
if you have the whole parse tree available when analyzing, you can just look up in the parse tree from anywhere in analysis.
How many passes does it take to gather up all the information (since some stuff might refer to other things declared after) ?I tried to work it out and I thought 2 might be enough?
hmm
in Wide, it takes at least four passes plus opt passes.
lexing, parsing, analysis, and then LLVM code emission pass.
and some analysis functions can involve visiting the semantic tree more than once.
you only need to finish lex and parse pass before starting analysis.
So in your analysis if you encounter an identifier that isnt known you visit the tree again to find it?
no
you collect up the identifiers as you go along.
from everywhere.
for example, in Wide, the AST for a module is a hash table.
I insert every function I encounter into the hash table.
then by the time analysis comes, the hash table is built and ready to go, so all the functions are in that table already.
therefore I very directly do not give one single shit what order functions are done in because all the functions are collected up during the parse phase.
the analyzer doesn't even know what the order is and it's not recorded in the AST.
local variables are different obviously, since they do have to be defined before use and such things
18:50
@AlexM. Hmm apparently commenting out the insertion sort below 100 elements reduces the performance difference to a bit less than x2. The small performance boost from insertion sort stacks compared to the normal version and so without it the performance difference is smaller.
yea I was going to benchmark to see just how much of a difference insertion sort makes
in fact
once you have one AST for more than one file, then the very idea of "order" does not make sense, since declarations between files don't have an order.
@Puppy Right, that makes sense. I'll start working on working out what needs to be loaded and what isnt, and then I'll modify my boost::visitor to workwith that.
@Puppy hmm didnt think of that, I'm still in a single file mindset.
Wide's AST is merged after parsing
so when you have several Wide files, each one is parsed in parallel, and then the resulting ASTs are merged into one prior to analysis.
You merge the ASTs? I was under the impression that only the symbol table would need merging
18:55
well, in Wide, the symbol table is the AST, more or less.
for some types of things like UDTs, functions, etc, then merging them just means sharing the entries between more than one table.
things that contain or basically just are symbol tables need merging though

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