@NathanDrieling Use pastebin or a similar service to host your code. If it's available on github, that works as well. I highly recommend having a small snippet that reproduces the issue rather than just giving all the code at once.
@Aaron3468 well unfortunately I dont really have github. Plus I am almost done with the question.. So I might as well post all the code in order to best reproduce it.
@Telkitty how does one take a screenshot of the IDE like visual studio?
@NathanDrieling You can usually get away with 20-40 lines directly in an SO question. Pastebin is a lifesaver when you want to ask in chat, and that's why I assumed you were asking.
@NathanDrieling Try finding a few stackoverflow questions, looking at how they're asked, their upvotes, and the comments and decide if the code they've included is enough, too much, or too little. It's not a question I can answer for you.
it basically has to do with what I talked about with you yesterday or so. Its about a linked list. I made the list, printed the list, then I am trying to traverse the list and delete bad data, and print the list again.
It's not personal. SO has much higher standards than you're probably acquainted with, so it can be a bit of an adjustment. After all, people come here for quality questions and answers for professionals. Stick around a little while and you'll begin to see that the way the site is has its own perks that don't come from forums/hobby websites. @NathanDrieling
@LuisAverhoff The second one is a reference. It depends on what behaviour you need, although references tend to be quite helpful to avoid copying data everywhere
@Aaron3468 Hey Aaron, I made a question on code review on my implementation of adajency list. It's in C but I would like it if you took a look codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/142444/…
Sample code snippet
const const const int x = 10;
int main()
{}
gets compiled in C but not in C++. Why does it get compiled in C? I thought this would fail in C as well. Never mind.
Which part of the C++ Standard forbids the use of duplicate const and which part of the C standard allows th...
TL;DR: new Mercedes cars will play a noise right before a collision that triggers a muscle reflex that protects your ear against the upcoming loud noise of impact.
I sent a mail to the Clang mailing list 4~5 ago describing the optimization, how failed dramatically at first, and how it ended improving things in the end.
Cockroaches have excellent senses that allow them to seek out food, monitor for predators and survive in a generally hostile world filled with animal predators and human enemies. They do not, however, have ears. Instead of hearing, they rely on a variety of other methods to interact with the world around them.
I think git checks out every svn version available to produce a proper tree, and there are a lot of commits. I gave up after a couple of hours or so when it arrived at commit 100.
@Xeo e.g. template<typename X, typename Y> simple_pair_aggregate(X&&, Y&&) -> simple_pair_aggregate<std::decay_t<X>, std::decay_t<Y>>; gives you make_* behaviour (off the top of my head, not checked)
it should work because the deduction guides are for selecting the template arguments before initialization
@Xeo that’s the idea--I don’t recall proposal discussions but I assume settling on a particular default was too ambitious a shed to paint, so they left it at that
IOW, there's no standard compliant way to left-shift a signed integer that doesn't invoke at least IB. (int)((unsigned)x << bits); is as close at it gets without doing something retarded like a lookup table for multiplication.
@Griwes Many are. Quite a few compiler writers labor under the misapprehension that their primary job is to translate correct input to the best possible output. In reality, 99% of the time a compiler is run, it's to diagnose the problems in bad input. As such, the best possible error messages should be treated as its primary output, and generated code as an almost incidental by-product.
@Adjit No, that's way too specific. What to take away is that anything that causes the flow of execution to conditionally change is subject to a performance penalty due to branch misprediction. This includes if-statements, loop-conditions, switches, ternary operators, short-circuiting boolean logic, calls to function pointers, calls to lambdas, calls to virtual/polymorphic methods, etc... (The last 3 of these aren't related to branch-prediction per se, but the same concept applies in that the processor doesn't "know where to go" next.) — Mysticial4 mins ago
@Mysticial An unconditional call to a normal lambda shouldn't be a problem. By the time it's executing, it's just a normal function call (or not--it has a a better probability than most of being generated inline).
@nwp I don't see anything there unless you're going bounds checking (in which case, it's most reasonable to look at the code for the bounds-checked indexing operator).
I need to optimize some legacy code and am fairly new to C++.
The code does network packet processing in two threads, one thread pushing packets to a FIFO [topupBuffer] and the other thread reading from the queue and sending them out an IP socket [writeToIPOutput]. The legacy code uses std::dequ...
@Mysticial Point is that you're either dealing with conditional code inside the lambda, or else conditional code to pick the lambda to call, or a pointer to a lambda. With any of them, it's the control mechanism that leads up to the lambda invocation that causes the misprediction. The lambda call itself is no different from calling any other overloaded operator().
@nwp Perhaps because it doesn't? Nested that deeply it's likely to lead to some cache misses, but not to branch misprediction (unless, as already noted, one or more of those [] is really an overloaded operator that itself includes some conditional execution).
@JerryCoffin Maybe it is not called branching, but the core problem of having to have finished executing the current operation to be able to continue and thus breaking pipelining persists.
@Mysticial No. It creates an object with an overloaded operator(), which is normally invoked directly. A stateless lambda (one that doesn't capture anything) does also include an operator to convert to a pointer to function, but using it is relatively unusual.
@sehe By the way, Emacs has daemon mode - you can have several clients / frames (GUI window, terminal) attached to single daemon session, all share open files, clipboard ring, global variables and stuff like this. After network drop you can reconnect to daemon and restore frames (even without need for screen/tmux).
@Mysticial I need to look into that more. I would have expected that this comes down to which instructions the compiler chooses to implement branches with, thus it is not my problem, but apparently I'm wrong.
@Griwes There is a reason for this - easy scripting and hacking new features within internal ecosystem - that why it tries to pull different features into internal ecosystem. For instance recently it integrated WebKit:
@doug65536 ...where "sufficient" is usually "any more than 1". Even with the simplistic branch prediction of the original Pentium, a backward jump would be predicted taken on the first iteration.
@doug65536 I'd be interested to hear how you think my statement was incorrect even a tiny fraction of the time (unless you're talking about: "on a CPU so old it doesn't have branch prediction at all").
@Griwes This "philosophy" does not always work well - sometimes one big app is better than many smalls. Even simple commands like ls or find are not completely orthogonal. Well, even tar knows about compression.
@Ell We're in the present, though, and my whole point is that emacs should just be dropped, and alternatives that don't suffer from feature creep and lack of understanding of the single responsibility principle should be used instead.
@Griwes Tmux + Vim is exactly demonstration of fact that one program like Emacs is better - you don't have to integrate Tmux and Vim clipboards, hotkeys, etc - all works just out of box.
So... you're saying its existence is warranted by <historical reason A> and <historical reason B>, and it should be dropped as an obsolete piece of software handling obsolete cases?
@doug65536 First of all, that wouldn't render it incorrect since I said "usually". Second, no I don't think that can happen anyway. In all the designs I know in any detail, the branch prediction data is stored in the I$ right along with the cached instructions.
@JerryCoffin I only meant to express that you can't 100% assume backwards branches are always predicted taken. when intel emails me their HDL, I'll know for sure
@doug65536 The branch prediction mechanism of the Pentium was documented in pretty serious detail, and deviations between the documentation and the implementation (there's at least one pretty well known one) are well known. If there was an exception to this rule, I feel reasonably certain that it'd be fairly well known by now.
just like caches: a waste to make a fully associative cache. better to make imperfect cache and use more space for data and less for address comparison
@Ell Is the webkit thing bundled together with emacs, or do you have to go out of your way to install it? Is it developed in upstream, or as 3rd party?
my understanding was that they use an approximate address for the branches, so it could alias another instruction, but it won't matter, since once it is in a loop that problem fixes itself. maybe I was misinformed