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19:28
@Borgleader Vampire of the day:
i try but i cant its very confusing please i need help — Hitman Duth 11 hours ago
@alariva Everyone know if you have green text, it's secure, but if there's red text, it's hackers. — Morgan Thrapp 1 hour ago
19:50
Finally.
After aeons of print statements.
let int_format_str = L.build_global_stringptr "%d\n" "fmt" context_builder;;
The offending code.
But this follows exactly what the docs tell me to do.
... Ooh.
I can't just have that as a prelude.
I need to make sure I'm pointed at the end of the entire module...?
.... Thanks for telling me that, LLVM?
@thecoshman Have you seen the Kotlin Night in London Recordings?
Goddamn: Questions like this make it more and more difficult for me to not post something inflammatory whenever the OP even mentions "Turbo C++".
-7
Q: Code works correctly in some compilers, but does not work correctly in others

spyk3iartistI made a code about producing fixtures for football teams. It is working in some online compilers like Ideone, cph.sh but doesn't work in Code chef's compiler and Turbo C++. Is there any reason why this could happen? Because I'm allowed to make my project in Turbo C++ only. (BTW I can add in the ...

Well, what are you gonna do, Turbo C++ is a mandatory subject in India or something.
20:12
@Mysticial Hahahaha, he should just take up botany.
Depends on how you want to approach it:
Option 1: Educate them.
Option 2: Build a Wall!!! Deport all Turbo C++ questions back to the closed/deleted questions list. They are bad, out-of-date, steal our bandwidth. And *some* of them are good.
> Because I'm allowed to make my project in Turbo C++ only.
There is no God.
120 km/h winds expected this weekend. Best time ever to inaugurate the new cable car.
@fredoverflow When I learned that I was damn near shocked.
Truly, when politicians don't have the right information and make a decision.
That's the downfall of humanity.
Maybe Indian politicians secretly hate C++.
Uh, I'm doing pretty much nothing once again.
20:26
@Mysticial build a wall around india indeed
and then throw them copies of gcc randomly
@milleniumbug Oh, that's even more alt-right than Trump. Instead of building a wall to keep them out. You build a wall to keep them "where they belong"! ahahaha. Okay, just to be clear for anyone seeing this out of context. This is intended to be a programming joke, not a political joke. This is not an endorsement of building walls to target anybody of a particular nationality or racial group.
We should build huge walls to keep titans out.
@milleniumbug Visual Studio would work as well. As many problems as it has, it's still better than Turbo C++.
Oh, hey.
@Ven I was able to fix that guy's issue without compiling or pulling his code at all.
It's really easy to spot once you fix the formatting of his stuff and don't look at his humongous stack-trace dumps. :B
> It will be more good if the Indian collages start to install modern Compilers like VC++, Codeblocks, Orwell Dev C++, clang etc.
20:32
@Mysticial hehe necessary disclaimer in case meta will be on to us :)
things like VC++ and Turbo C++ are tinted ... with extra library classes
it's no longer pure C++ any more
I got the ember query param thing to work
:') feels like winning a battle I shouldn't have fought
at least now I know (TM)
20:54
^ @Mysticial would you agree with this?
Esp the "free" part.
> Why? Because branches can be predicted, and when they are predicted they
basically go away. They go away on many levels, too. Not just the branch
itself, but the _conditional_ for the branch goes away as far as the
critical path of code is concerned: the CPU still has to calculate it and
check it, but from a performance angle it "doesn't exist any more",
because it's not holding anything else up (well, you want to do it in
_some_ reasonable time, but the point stands..)
@StackedCrooked I do actually - for the most part. I've done a bunch of benchmarks and yes, a predicted branch is faster than a cmov as far as Haswell goes. But I disagree with him that a predicted branch is free since you still need to decode the instruction.
Note that processors after Haswell have faster cmovs. But I don't know if it's as fast as a predicted branch.
I often read "branches are evil" in high-perf texts. I wonder if there's any other overhead to branches that I'm unaware of.
In order to correctly predict a branch, you usually need to have a history for it.
And it takes time to build up that history. During that time, it won't be 100% accurate.
And if you have too many branches, you'll run out of history buffers.
So I prefer cmovs for the really simple stuff even if I know it's predictable.
21:01
In networking talk I attended a year ago the chief engineer for the Intel DPDK project talked about branches. He says "branches kill performance". He seemed to be mostly concerned about a 16-byte alignment requirement for branch targets.
@Mysticial That also.
@StackedCrooked That's generally solved by the compiler by padding nops into the code. But nops aren't free either. They still need to be decoded.
But it is part of the reason why processors optimize nop performance.
that has got to be one of the silliest things I have ever heard.
they seriously optimize... nop performance?
@StackedCrooked Oh, that's from 2007. Yeah cmovs sucked back then. They are much better now.
@Puppy Yeah. Not just the 90 NOP, but the multi-byte nops as well.
21:05
wouldn't it be better to just not require them in the first place?
Agner tested it and said something like, "NOPs are very fast. XX processor can run 4 NOP/cycle at any length."
Here's the 16-byte stuff. (Which I don't really understand.)
seems kinda dumb to nop as fast as you can to get to the next instruction instead of just not having the nop at all and going immediately to the next instruction
@Puppy It's not always possible to align without nops. In some cases you can use redundant prefixes or alternate encodings of surrounding instructions to align a particular instruction. But I believe that's an NP-complete problem.
@Mysticial I think that I was probably referring to why alignment is a problem in the first place.
21:08
@Puppy Probably the same thing as why data alignment matters.
I mean, surely it's true that the processor has a cache line size and fitting in a round number of instructions in that size might be more efficient, but I imagine that the instruction stream is only a single stream per thread so the processor shouldn't have toooo much trouble prefetching it
@Mysticial I don't get that either.
The branch misalignment penalties are on the order of 1 cycle. I wouldn't call that "too much trouble'.
@Puppy When data crosses a boundary, you need to fetch both sizes and then do some combining logic.
> Hybrid operating room for cardiovascular surgery at Gemelli Hospital in Rome
that's straight outta Deus Ex
Even if the combining logic is fast (and it is nowadays), the fact remains that you're touching two lanes instead of one. So it puts pressure on the back-end of the load/store unit.
@Mysticial I thought that the proc just fetched cache lines as the smallest granularity.
and the smaller loads/stores are just to/from registers, effectively
so the rest of the proc can just hit cache directly
@Puppy Even when it's in the cache, it's not an all-to-all routing.
I suppose Intel engineers zoom too much :)
Anything that doesn't "line-up" needs to be shifted. Anything that doesn't "line-up" -and crosses certain boundaries (such as a cacheline or page) result in 2 loads and combining logic.
no, wait, that still doesn't explain it
if you're on a boundary, you got here because the previous instruction ended, so you must already have the first part
so you don't need to issue another load
21:17
let expressions were the worst invention OCaml could have ever made.
@Puppy It's the target of the branch, not the source. IIRC
Because if you fuck up a let expression partially, you can end up with chaining let expression that literally is a valid parse from now until the end of your fucking program and the OCaml compiler will only give you an error at the VERY end of your source file with "Syntax error: Line {LastLine}, Character 0-0".
@Puppy Also, even though you have already loaded something in a previous instruction or cycle, you still need logic to forward it to the next thing that still requires it. That logic is non-trivial.
Which is absolutely fucking ridiculous. If you're going to have such an absolutely bat-shit insane way to have one miplaced let chain for the rest of eternity and change the entire scope and meaning of your program, you should have a reporting error that tells you were the unmatched let or the other ruining shit started in the first place.
The instruction execution path is pretty heavily optimized. So they do that already. I believe it's handled by the decoder and the uop cache. But that's not the case for data loads.
Data loads are almost always aligned. And there are less guarantees about them being sequential. So such an optimization is less likely to benefit anything.
21:22
@Mysticial Oh, well, if it's the target that makes a lot more sense.
@Mysticial and the instructions take up precious space in the instruction pipeline
user1804599
Hi.
@Puppy For smaller loops, there's no penalty for misalignment at all. Since the entire loop fits into the uop cache, there's no need to read the original code.
21:38
SEGMENTATION FAULT.
S E G M E N T A T I O N F A U L T
Someone kill me.
6 hours ago, by rightfold
> A segmentation fault can have many causes, the best thing to do when you have a segmentation fault is debug it to find out what's causing it.
lololololol
.... My god.
.... my GOD, it's there.
yeah
looks like some numpty screwed up their basic blocks
Listen
It's not segfaulting anymore, okay? ;~;
21:50
lol
merriment
hmm
how did that IR even pass verification?
your only return is unreachable
I didn't verify it.
one babystep at a time, geez.
babystep #1: always apply verification unless you want even more random segfaults
I think something is wrong with your code. I suggest you try to fix it.
3
Did you take lessons in helpfulness from Navi
user1804599
Mysticial went full Clippy.
user1804599
@Puppy lol being able to represent invalid states.
23 hours ago, by sehe
@ThePhD cowboy_cast<ThePhD> :)
Ven
Ven
Can so stop with this spam shit on the mod election
Can they realize I give no fucks about who's gonna "moderate" that shitshow because it's gonna be madara and all, all over again
but what would turnout be if they didn't spam you
Personally I do have a preference on who will bend us over the metaphorical table
not much of one but eh
22:08
Yup me too. I hardly recognize anyone there, but I can vote on the intersection of (peeps I recognize) and (pitches I value)
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial damn, you really know you're head deep in the lowlevel mud when you think about the speed of your decoder...
aren't mod positions for one year only?
and is it too early to start theorizing who is going to get tossed at us in the ritual new-mod hazing?
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial walls are useful st times
@jaggedSpire i'm being pessimistic and saying they'll like php, basically
It's not Mada-RAD.
@Ven but php is a beautiful language
(beautiful like the fire off the wreckage of a coal train)
Ven
Ven
Only the catface is beautiful :3
22:19
Oh, how beauteous is the Catface :3
all hail
may it reign eternal
Ven
Ven
It shall. It shall...
hrm
I think it might be about time to head back to the mechanic's
but they still haven't called me to say my car is done :\
right
toodle-oo
@sehe I'm me and I'll bark
This goddamn idiot.
I give him code that takes things by values to specifically avoid the problem he's having
And then he goes and changes my code and gives me a bug report later for the lines of code he changed from the original.
God fucking damnit.
He has such a reference / pointer fetish.
It's like he can't trust anything taken by-value.
22:44
@Puppy you have my vote
(quickly checks nominations are closed in election phase)
@ThePhD You're cute when you act like you're surprised about this. Didn't you know about this from SO?
@sehe Uh. No?
@ThePhD I bet he knows how to right slow code. Becoz ~~purformance~~
22:46
@ThePhD Oh. I don't know how you missed that bit of trivia about the average programmer
I only got to 1K points once, and that was answering menial questions and doing nothing of significant rapport for a little bit.
> #Disclaimer: This Stream may upset those who believe in a #Propaganda or #Conspiracy Theory such as Flat-earth (Flat Earth Society), Please make an effort to share a constrictive comment about your beliefs on #live chat.
@wilx Too many repeats for me (every 91 minutes for 91 minutes or so IIRC)
@wilx spaaaaaaaaaaaace
user1804599
user1804599
22:50
Look at my CSS, my CSS is amazing.
@rightfold You are amazing.
user1804599
:3
My crêpe was amazing *-*
Your spelling is a bit odd, though.
user1804599
23:00
Fun playlist.
she said her crap was amazing star hyphen star
@sehe How so?
Pun. Look above
@AlexM. Damn you u_u
user1804599
Punnenkoek.
23:01
@Morwenn :>
Mine was too cryptic again :(
Everytime I read something like this I'm secretly relieved I'm not alone.
As I get older it has been getting easier to deal with incapacity to produce names/recognize people. I just make it very clear I have this problem and don't try to hide it. I repeat names ad nauseam to new people I meet (and want to try to remember the names of)
I'm used to speaking to people without knowing their names.
However there is a fragile line. At a certain point people will start to mock (I'm also bad with dates and places, and this makes me double-check or mess up on occasion. Just tonight I got ridiculed for it.
@Morwenn I think everyone is.
It gets problematic when it affects names of people close
I actually don't even think it's a memory issue. It's more of a retrieval/association issue for me.
at least you'll never forget I'm the pizza guy
... right?
It happens. I speak every week or so with some guy I worked with in 2014 and I still don't know his name.
@AlexM. Where's my pizza?
23:08
@Morwenn here
or maybeee
you prefer
this
a personal favorite of mine
sweetcorn on pizza MMMMM
so amazing so tasty
sweetcorn never really tastes of anything
no wonder you can't taste it if you use your tongue to spew such heresy
also what on earth are those big black things? they look like olives but about ten times the size
@AlexM. To be frank, I already ate, so I wouldn't like to eat any of those right now.
yea the olives were huge I don't really eat them
I like the flavor they leave on it
23:11
that’s because they are on a µpizza
but standalone olives I don't eat
I also like potatoes fried in olive oil
because of the olive taste
but standalone olives I don't eat
@AlexM. Erm. I sometimes do a search to confirm. There are about 4 or 5 names in that "batch" of new loungers that indeed muddle together (I think this actually happened once, and you might remember it)
Shower thought: I might be good at searching because I need lots of repetition to get trivia to stick
"Unbound value List.fold"
Thanks OCaml, I didn't want a standard library anyways. .-.
apparently my phone is being a derp
welp
the mechanic called multiple times
and I didn't get any of them
23:30
@sehe My workplace has blocked this as pornographic.
Teehee. The girl animation character is wearing a very short skirt, indeed
I guess pornography answers is relativity quite a bit. But I doubt it's related to speed.
Although retardation is also called "being slow" - so there's that.
The skirt gets shorter with Lorentz contraction?
So fuckin' clooooose.
I want to be done with Hello World...
@CaptainGiraffe I haven't noticed that
@ThePhD the "entry_point:" block looks fishy. :P
23:35
@Griwes Yeah, it's wrong.
I need to attach it instead to entry.
@CaptainGiraffe Choo-choo mtf
@sehe Now I'm satisfied.
I'm so falling asleep ._.
@sehe I hear the moonlight sonata starting at 8:10
Bye :)
23:38
@CaptainGiraffe correct. How does your proxy block the vid, but not the sound?!
@Morwenn nn
@Morwenn Toodles!
Ugh.
I need to rewrite the whole AST grammar too.
I also think I'm going to make a new application rather than work in this one
to figure out exactly how I want to structure namespace stuff.
Frankly, rather than nested string maps what I'm instead going to do is glue together fully qualified names.
So instead of "lib" : { "math": { cos, sin }, print, dump, ... }
It's just going to be a flat list
lib.math.cos : cos
lib.math.sin : sin
lib.print : printf
lib.dump : dumpf
That'll make organizing all this shebang a lot easier, until I implement a more efficient search structure than in this stupid functional weirdness.
@sehe I'm not at work right now.
:34139304 why remove that? NSA logs everything
23:54
@ThePhD Ya need to fix ya basic blocks
I have a funny feeling LLVM likes to just pick the one you've created first as the entry point, or something
user1804599
Just figured out how to prove demorgan's laws.
user1804599
brute force :P
that is absolutely the best way

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