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6:00 PM
@That No???? WAY???
 
13 messages moved to bin
 
user1804599
-1 troll
 
:(
 
11 messages moved to bin
 
We are not very welcoming to new people
 
6:06 PM
That was hardly the problem here. Actually the dual bin works out quite fine.
bbl. flattening their kids in their night containers
 
Wasn't that Cicada?
 
Yes. @that wasn't Cicada
 
I mean, low rep acquired only through edits + immediate troll. Well.
 
Never had American BBQ, but it sounds like it can't be bad.
 
6:14 PM
Looks tasty :o
I just half-assedly pasted some code to use a node_allocator in my merge insertion sort, and it actually made everything faster. That's pretty cool :D
Fuck it, it's GPL-licensed -_-
 
@Morwenn what isn't?
 
@Isaac Every that's licensed under a permissive license for example.
 
The best things about licenses is that there are so many of them
Explore your inner lawyer :D
 
6:33 PM
@Morwenn Isn't the point of GPL that it's permissive?
 
no.
the exact point of GPL is that it's immensely restrictive.
MIT/BSD licences are permissive.
 
^ that
 
@milleniumbug Sounds like a class next to the yoga room.
 
user1804599
Can you prohibit GitHub from hosting your code, then put it on GitHub and sue GitHub?
 
I thought all ('open source') licenses were essentially the same as gpl... maybe I should do more research... though personally I just use some variation of CC
 
6:35 PM
:D
 
@Zoidberg Wow, you might be on to something.
 
@Isaac good job
 
@Isaac Nope. There's two major brands of open source licence- copyleft like GPL, and not shitty, like MIT.
actually I don't know anybody who was stupid enough to make a GPL-like licence, just a few minor derivatives like LGPL and I've heard of AGPL?
 
tbh, if your goal is to be non-usable in non-GPL software, GPL achieves that goal nicely
 
user1804599
So in this system you can allocate vans to employees, and deallocate when they're done with them.
 
6:37 PM
yes, that's just a dumb and stupid goal
 
user1804599
So I thought of this API: POST /vans/1/allocation/ with employee ID in request body allocates the van, and DELETE /vans/1/allocation/ deallocates it.
 
people do stupid things all the time vOv
 
sure, but that doesn't make them less dumb or shitty
 
user1804599
And you can query which employee a van is allocated to with GET /vans/1/allocation/. It'll return 404 if the van isn't allocated to anyone.
 
user1804599
This is great.
 
6:40 PM
@Morwenn I don't remember Cicada ever doing that pattern
 
@Zoidberg I'm sorry but I have to ask, why are you allocating/reallocating 'vans' via HTTP? (I am assuming by 'van' you mean the automobile)
 
@sehe I remember something about editing stuff until there was enough rep to chat.
 
@Isaac ???
 
@StackedCrooked It sounds like I'd eat it when it's done by those cooks
 
user1804599
@Isaac Automobiles are used by various people. The software must track who is using it at the moment.
 
6:41 PM
ok, nevermind
 
@Morwenn Well. Yeah. But that's 20 rep
 
@sehe I would too :o
 
@Zoidberg I understand that, i'ts just strange to be using HTTP considering there's no 'hypertext' involved.
 
@milleniumbug: hi
 
user1804599
HTTP is just a request/reply messaging protocol.
 
6:42 PM
@Isaac REST is a thing
 
user1804599
And it seems to be the only one that is well-supported by everything.
 
@milleniumbug A dumb thing.
and its implementation in HTTP is an even dumber thing.
 
@Zoidberg hmm I'd just invent my own protocol and send it over TCP. Note: I'm quite ignorant when it comes tto network/web related stuff.
 
user1804599
Wasted time.
 
user1804599
You have to spend time designing and implementing that (usually over and over again because different programming languages), and debugging that without millions of excellent existing tools.
 
6:44 PM
@milleniumbug: what happens when I use - sign in standard C library function like scanf()? Why ideone.com/s9pYXZ isn't working as expected?
 
user1804599
You also don't get upgrades for free, such as the recent upgrade to HTTP 2.
 
user1804599
You have to do that yourself.
 
user1804599
With existing protocols and implementations it's just a matter of updating the software.
 
@milleniumbug: this seems to be UB in my opinion.
 
But if you're just using it for allocating vehicles to employees it would be rather simple...
 
6:45 PM
Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
 
user1804599
No, it's still a waste of time even if that would be the only thing this system would do (it's not).
 
user1804599
Writing applications that respond to HTTP requests is so easy an aborted baby could do it.
 
Fair enough, I just often find it easier to invent my own things then to understand & use existing ones (when things are simple of course)
 
user1804599
apt-get install php, or require 'sinatra', or import "net/http"
 
Actually I have used HTTP before, it was overly difficult (but was probably the API's fault)
 
6:48 PM
@milleniumbug: what you think?
 
2 messages moved to bin
 
@Isaac You'll get over that with experience.
 
user1804599
> what si wrong?
 
user1804599
No, señor. Es muy bueno conmigo.
 
@Morwenn thinking about it you may be on to something. In combination with the cadence of "Hiiiiiiiii" by certain individuals
 
6:51 PM
@Zoidberg ¿Que es?
 
user1804599
qu'est-ce que c'est
 
@Isaac It's in the bin now
 
@sehe I read the bin...
 
Ok
 
@Zoidberg donc votre trilingue ?
 
user1804599
6:53 PM
Ik heb trek in een banaan met jus en een hamburger met paardenworst en jus d'orange.
 
je hebt me verloren...
 
@Zoidberg is french
 
@Zoidberg ew
 
user1804599
@sehe ? :(
 
@Isaac derp
@Zoidberg just. griezelen
 
user1804599
6:56 PM
@sehe it's from here youtu.be/YSpu6l3Lbss?t=13s
 
@sehe what did I do wrong?
 
The language :)
 
I got confused, it appeared he was speaking Spanish, then French and then Dutch...
 
he does that
 
@Isaac So. You thought you'd rape french :)
 
6:59 PM
Thank god for Google Translator :)
 
Which doesn't exist
But you correctly capitalized the three Deities in that sentence
 
Well than thank god for my illusions :)
 
user1804599
The God Delusion
 
@Zoidberg Pretty lol
 
Just replacing the normal allocator by a list node pool allocator.
Not bad :)
 
7:04 PM
@Morwenn still alive ?
 
Always.
 
<3
 
argh that one result where it's worse
 
@Morwenn whirlpool allocator
 
user1804599
7:21 PM
Van allocator.
 
Ell
src/input_dispatcher.c++:18:20: error: must use 'class' tag to refer to type 'window' in this scope
                reinterpret_cast<window*>(glfwGetWindowUserPointer(window))->key(key, scancode, action, mods);
I have never seen this before o.O
using reinterpret_cast<class window*>(...); fixes it ofc but
I have never seen this still :V
ohhhhhhhh
I failed to read the next message :3
 
there's a type window and a variable name named window
 
user1804599
7:41 PM
Evanescence is great.
 
Agreed
 
@Ell maybe there's another identifier named window in scope
 
glfwGetWindowUserPointer(window <--------- IT'S RIGHT HERE)
 
Ell
haha
yeah I never saw it first time round
 
Strange that the language doesn't hide the 'window' type when the 'window' variable is declared...
 
7:45 PM
Surprise, it does exactly that
 
user1804599
Why do people mourn about deaths of people they don't know?
 
user1804599
Maybe the people who died were assholes. How could you tell?
 
Ell
I wonder how I can convert a UTF-32 codepoint to a glib::ustring
 
Ven
@Zoidberg being an asshole doesn't equate to deserving death
 
7:46 PM
also, I can't use reinterpret_cast<class T*> when T is a typedef
 
Ell
oops I haven't googled yet
 
user1804599
Sufficient amounts of assholeness do. :D
 
@Zoidberg one of 4 reasons I'd say, the person will no longer be able to do what they were doing whilst alive, the person was a really good person and especially didn't deserver to die, they died in a horrible way that was bad, or their just crazy.
 
user1804599
I wish I could control Spotify on my pc through my iPhone. Is that possible without connecting them with a cable?
 
@Ell Glib::convert("\uXXXXXX", "utf-8", "utf-8") ? dunno
 
7:49 PM
@milleniumbug if it does that then how does 'class window' work, shouldn't 'window' refer to the variable that's in scope?
 
@Isaac It does, that's why you can't use window as a type
and you have to use elaborated name (class window) instead, if you mean the type
 
user1804599
Apparently it is possible but the manual doesn't say how to configure it.
 
@milleniumbug right... sorry I've never seen 'class' used in this context, I've seen 'struct' used in a similar way in C, so I guess it must just be backwards compatibility stuff.. seems stupid to me
 
well, it is stupid
it's a language where you can't infer from usage whether something should be a type or not
 
@milleniumbug actually I agree completely with that, I just think it's stupid declaring a variable with the same name as a type (that's why all my types start with capital letters, and variables don't)
also wouldn't ::somenamespace::window work as well?
 
7:55 PM
probably, dunno, depends on scope
if the type is in global namespace, sure
 
@Isaac it’s also how you declare friends, i.e. friend class window;
 
@LucDanton not friend window? (sorry I have never used friend)
 
@Isaac I know that was extended to support typedef-names (e.g. friend TemplateParameter;) but I don’t recall if that also works for just any type
declarations are also used for explicit specializations e.g. template<> class basic_string<char>;
ditto instantiations
 
user1804599
 
just tested,
class A { };
class B { friend A; };
It worked. (you don't need to use `friend class A`)
 
8:02 PM
 
Random opinion question, if I have types like so:
struct A { static int a; };
struct B : A { };
Should &B::a == &A::a ? I tested it in C++, but it seams counterintuitive and odd in my opinion...
 
 
@Isaac The problem here is that you're asking a question the result of which you shouldn't ever care about.
 
@Isaac yes, that’s the C++11 and later relaxation
 
@Puppy actually I do care, it matters in how I implement inheritance in my language/compiler
 
8:10 PM
@Isaac The problem here is implementing static mutable variables in the first place.
protip: don't.
 
@Puppy it's easy... and why not? Their extremely useful, and are used in tons of languages.
 
they're an extremely useful tool if you want to colossally fuck everything up.
 
useful? no, not really
 
the fact that they're used in tons of languages merely highlights how many people will take stupid shortcuts because they can't be arsed to do it properly, and how many resulting programs are utterly fucked up.
 
welp, i replaced the dart sdk i got through a 3rd party installer with the "recommended" one you get through chocolatey, still got the ntdll crash. sigh
 
8:12 PM
popularity is far from a measurement of quality.
 
Ven
@milleniumbug yes
@Borgleader y u dart
 
@Ven i wanted to try it, well i wanted to try and embed it in a c++ program
 
in fact I am almost inclined to suggest that static things simply should not exist at all.
 
but i just crash miserably
 
not sure what I'd do about some of the use cases that are not terrible, though.
1 message moved to bin
 
8:14 PM
they're mostly annoying. you have to define them, they're subject to static initialization order fiasco
 
use pastebin for code dumps plix.
 
wtf is last_value, seems retarded
 
like this?
http://pastebin.com/U8McfVB6
 
yup better
 
yes
and the answer is, that's bad and wrong.
 
8:15 PM
@milleniumbug it's the value of the most recently constructed object...
@Puppy how is it 'wrong'?
 
dumb usage of static confirmed
 
simple
 
firstly, how would you possibly create multiple instances of that class concurrently?
answer: you can't because it's fucked up.
secondly, how would you unit test that class?
see above.
thirdly, how the fuck would you ever ensure that the class's behaviour is remotely sane? Every instance has different values
it's just a trivial convenience in exchange for which you have fucked up several critical properties of your program.
 
I don't get the third point
 
8:19 PM
@Puppy firstly, '++value' is probably atomic, if it isn't a simple lock will do (in which case I'd move the assignment to the body of the constructor itself), secondly in this case what in the world would you need a unit test for?, thirdly not all instances are different, just use the copy constructor
 
++value is absolutely not atomic.
 
"probably atomic" way to go
"what in the world would you need a unit test for" way to go
"just use the copy constructor" irrelevant
 
@Puppy it's one instruction in x86 (INC)
 
that... does not make it atomic.
 
@Puppy in a single processor configuration it should right?
 
8:21 PM
yeah, because 1-core machines are so much of the market right now
 
@Isaac language semantics and processor semantics are different
 
and... even if it did, you're assuming a massive amount about the compiler's implementation details that are not even remotely assumable
not to mention, you know, other platforms.
 
:29730509I mean for this type it's ridiculous to unit test, sure for other types, but considering the simplicity it's easy to test just be reading the code
 
okay I'm out
 
that is the voice of a man who's never had to do any serious maintenance of anything
 
8:22 PM
@Puppy maybe it isn't, I did say 'probably'
 
"probably" isn't good enough.
 
have a nice sleep on fluffy puff
 
at all.
also
did I mention that it's undefined behaviour, so your compiler has the right to optimize your program to nothing at all?
 
Ahh well my compiler isn't designed to be run in parallel so I don't really care
@Puppy it can only do that if it can prove that the program WILL ALWAYS run two constructor calls in parallel
 
less difficult than you might think
besides, "I have a toy program so I don't need good things" is not a good argument.
it just makes everybody else feel like you have no experience whatsoever.
 
8:27 PM
@Puppy my argument is it's not important enough for me to spend lots of time trying to make it concurrent and work properly..
 
making it not shit doesn't cost a lot of time.
 
@Puppy actually I have virtually none in concurrent programming, though I do plan on learning latter... I am still a student, so I can't be expected to know everything.
 
yes, but the concurrency thing is not the most important.
it's just the most obvious.
unit tests and reproducible behaviour are fucking critical.
 
@Puppy unit tests aren't critical, and the behaviour is fully reproducible, as long as I don't edit the program to start running things concurrently that is...
 
well unit tests are completely critical.
and the behaviour isn't reproducible even in a single-threaded context because every time you instantiate the class you get back different outcomes...
 
8:31 PM
@Puppy testing is critical, unit tests are just one kind of test
 
they're by far the most practical and numerous kind of test
 
@Puppy Which is the whole point of the type!!!
 
@Isaac Which makes it a terrible type that should not exist.
 
@Puppy I'm sure I will use them, just not for this type
@Puppy I still need the type itself, but I could remove the '++value' thing and make sure whenever I instantiate it I do so with a unique 'value' but that's just slightly more work for no real benefit
 
well
apart from the fact that it makes your design sane, reproducible, more decoupled, testable and concurrency-safe?
this is probably the part where you ask yourself why it must have a unique value because that sounds like you're sharing some state that you should not be.
 
8:37 PM
@Puppy well the type is created by the parser when it parses symbol definitions with no names, e.g. struct { int a} b;, the name of the type of 'b' will be an instance of Symbol_Name::Anonymous, I could just keep a variable in the parser that keeps track of how many anonymous symbols were declared, sure, but I'm still unconvinced that my type is bad, just because there are other ways of doing the same thing...
 
you're right, it's not that there are other ways
it's that this way is really bad.
also, why do you need a name for the type of b?
 
auto b_factory = [i = 0]() mutable { return b(++i); } you're welcome
 
@Puppy because all types are 'symbols', all symbols habe names, and no to symbols (generally) can be declared in the same scope with the same name, so it needs a name that's different to the names of other (potentially anonymous) symbols that are declared in the same scope
 
well then it sounds to me like "All symbols have names" is just wrong.
clearly anonymous types don't have names.
 
@sehe What might that be?
 
8:41 PM
@Puppy they don't have user accessible names, anyway I choose these things to make my compiler simpler, and now that their heavily ingrained there's no point in changing it.
 
well, ya really should change it.
it'll give you a nice test of what it's like to maintain some code, and I doubt that you really have that much of it anywya
and if you don't fix crap, the crap just keeps piling up until you have nothing but a massive pile of crpa.
 
@Morwenn dunno. Something crypto related I think
 
@sehe I think I like the name.
 
@Puppy it makes no difference to the language itself, just the compiler, also how in the world is it crap??
 
it's crap because you're enforcing a constraint that's blatantly not true.
 
8:44 PM
@Isaac new ton;
 
"All symbols have names, except these totally anonymous ones that don't have names but let's ignore them"
 
In computer science and cryptography, Whirlpool (sometimes styled WHIRLPOOL) is a cryptographic hash function. It was designed by Vincent Rijmen (co-creator of the Advanced Encryption Standard) and Paulo S. L. M. Barreto, who first described it in 2000. The hash has been recommended by the NESSIE project. It has also been adopted by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) as part of the joint ISO/IEC 10118-3 international standard. == Design features == Whirlpool is a hash designed after the Square block cipher. Whirlpool...
 
also, the compiler is the codebase in question, so that's the main concern, yes.
 
@Puppy by symbol I mean my struct Symbol not symbols in the language...
 
yes, I know.
exactly the same logic applies.
 
8:45 PM
Also I do fix things that are stupid allot (half my developing time is doing that), I just don't think this is stupid.
 
@sehe As always when it comes to cryptography, I don't understand a thing ._.
 
Me neither :)
 
it's clear that you don't think this is stupid; that's why I'm intervening on your behalf
 
@Puppy then what the hell is a scope ? at the moment it's a struct Scope : std::map<Symbol_Name_Pointer, Symbol_Group*> plus some other stuff..
 
@Isaac Why do you want to put the anonymous types into any kind of scope?
also inheriting from standard containers is.. super bad.
 
8:47 PM
@Puppy I did that just to make things slightly neater, I didn't think there'd be any problem with...
 
You're deriving from a container, but a scope is not a container
 
I'm starting to feel that that's a general problem here.
you're taking shortcuts but you don't seem to understand that they have serious costs and consequences that you just don't always feel immediately.
 
@Puppy hmm very good point.. I might not need to have them in scopes... but I'm not sure yet, maybye when I've written more code I'll realise that I will never need to access them by 'Name'
 
well the user can't name them so there's no need to look them up by name.
 
@Puppy my general approach is wait till theirs a problem, then worry about it (as long as of course code executes as I intend it to)
 
8:50 PM
that can be a very valid approach in some cases.
 
@Puppy hmm... the compiler can still generate references to them though...
 
and it's important to not always jump on the be super proactive bandwagon.
but there are many cases when you do need to be proactive.
generally speaking, interfaces need to be designed cleanly, then you can implement them as badly as you like.
@Isaac So what? Reference types with like, a Type*.
 
@Puppy sure, but I see no problem with deriving from a container, would you still be opposed if I had a variable std::map<Symbol_Name_Pointer, Symbol_Group*> contents = {} instead?
 
@Isaac see this question (it's a C# question, but it partially applies here too)
 
nope.
having a container member is totally fine.
deriving from containers, though, is super bad.
33
Q: Subclass/inherit standard containers?

iammilindI often read this statements on Stack Overflow. Personally, I don't find any problem with this, unless I am using it in a polymorphic way; i.e. where I have to use virtual destructor. If I want to extend/add the functionality of a standard container then what is a better way than inheriting one?...

you can find lots of material about how unsafe it is, mostly revolving around the virtual destructor issue.
 
8:54 PM
@Puppy by 'generate reference' I mean get a 'T*' inside the compiler, where 'T' is some type internal to the compiler like Symbol
 
Ell
are standard containers marked final?
 
@Isaac Yes, I know. That's what I meant.
@Ell They should be, but final didn't exist at the time ;p Now it would be a nastily breaking change.
 
my type Scope doesn't have a virtual destructor, mostly because all instances of it are only ever destroyed when the compiler exits.
 
The fun thing is the standard still gives tools to inherit from std::stack and std::queue.
 
user1804599
8:55 PM
@Ell no that would be bad
 
@Isaac That's .. pretty awful.
 
user1804599
It would break generic code that exploits EBO but doesn't account for special cases.
 
oh, I can name a super simple case where having the compiler support concurrency is very useful
 
lol digging down the hole
 
intellisense support.
 
8:56 PM
Honestly, I don't see a problem with inheriting from standard containers as long as you know what you're doing and the resulting type doesn't leak into the library part that's meant to be used by end users.
 
user1804599
Fuck final.
 
sure, that's called implementation details
 
@milleniumbug Well yeah.
 
Wide has a VS plugin that offers intellisense support, and VS can operate multiple compiler instances concurrently for this purpose.
 
I use std::move, placement new, aligned buffers a lot in there
 
8:57 PM
 
@Puppy er it's a compiler, I will worry about IDE integration in a few years when everything else is finished...
 
@Isaac Compilers are IDE integrations.
unless you've done it super duper wrong.
 
@milleniumbug Nothing especially bad there.
 
what's the difference between "Get error, print on command line" and "Get error, render in a flyout"?
especially when some other dude implemented the part about the flyout.
 
@Puppy a hell of allot of work (probably) that's what...
 
8:59 PM
nope.
 
I see a pattern there
 
Anyway I have to start somewhere...
 
Wide's VS integration layer is probably about 1%
 
I'm sorry, but what is Wide?
 
and I also offer web browser integration which again probably accounts for 5% or so.
my language.
sorry if you missed the context in this conversation, but I've been writing my own compiler for a language to replace C++ for years now.
 
9:01 PM
Oh cool, me too, I started a year ago or so, though It's been slow due to other commitments...
 
it's been slow for me too since I got a job instead of being sick and free all the time.
 
You
Hello
It's me
 
I'm hopping to finish before I get one :P
By finish I mean get a complete working compiler (not actually a complete library or idea integration)
 
@You But do you even listen to Shpongle?
 
Hello @sehe
 
You
9:03 PM
Who's Shpongle?
 
@Isaac If you've done your design right, IDE integration should not be a large addition.
 
You
Never heard of them.
 
* them
 
@Puppy considering my compiler immediately shuts-down when it finds an error, I think my design is totally wrong...
 
9:06 PM
It's a psytrance-ambient band by Simon Posford from Hallucinogen and Raja Ram from 1200 Micrograms.
 
Back to my original question...
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/29730152#29730152
 
yes, this is how C++ does it
live with it
 
Why would it be different?
 
he probably assumes a different instance of a static variable per class
 
@milleniumbug I know that, I want to know if my language should do it differently (it does at the moment)
 
You
9:13 PM
Bye
 
@Isaac I think it's been thoroughly answered- simply don't support that feature in the first place, and then you have no need to decide how it should behave.
 
@Puppy I'm sorry but no, static mutable variables are useful (my example I gave was not the best I admit, but I can think of others)
 
you think em up, I knock em down
 
Ahh well I've already implemented them, so there's no point in deleting them.. it's not like they will cause problems if not used.
 
and frankly, your example is an excellent argument for deleting them.
@Isaac That's completely not true.
never write code if you can avoid it, and always aggressively prune features you don't need or want.
 
9:23 PM
I want my language to have lots of features!
Also another example (which I'm sure you'll hate, though it's the only other case I use them currently) namespace Context { Translation_Unit* file; Scope* scope; }`
 
yeah, that is terrible.
firstly, translation units are utterly full of shite and the number one thing that needs removing from C++.
and secondly, it's really much better to have a few good features than lots of shitty features.
you'll soon find that maintaining them and supporting them adds up.
 
@Puppy my translation unit is literaly a 'source file', and my compiler only currently supports one
 
those are both truly terrible things.
 
@Puppy how is a source file terrible? where else does your code go?
 
er, many source files?
 
9:27 PM
@Puppy right, I will add them latter, I'm implementing my compiler incrementally you see, I plan to have a compilable and working compiler soon, and so I'm only implementing a subset of my languages features
 
yes, but multiple source files? really the #1 feature.
 
@Puppy #include! (don't worry it's a temporary feature)
 
a feature that should never be added.
just fix the problem instead of kludging a crappy workaround
 
yup, suffer making stuff extern until you find a solution
to make you find a solution quicker
 
@Puppy it's a simple feature that can easily be deleted latter on
 
9:29 PM
7 mins ago, by Isaac
Ahh well I've already implemented them, so there's no point in deleting them.. it's not like they will cause problems if not used.
 
@Isaac Delete first. Implement proper feature second.
 
@milleniumbug er why would I need extern? all #include does is make the compiler see one giant source file instead of multiple
 
oh well I already regret saying this
 
@Puppy I can't do everything at once! anything better than '#include' is going to take time...
 
you're right, you can't.
so it's best to not waste your time on crappy gunk.
do the feature, do it right, then you don't have to keep coming back.
then you have actually positively added a feature instead of just making things worse.
 
9:32 PM
@Puppy '#include' will be like 1 (maybye 3) lines of code in the parser for gods sake...
@Puppy and I have some positive features already...
 
I gave up coding smart things a while ago.
 
Ok so not 3... but I'm not up to it yet so Ill worry about it latter, I might change my mind, but it shouldn't effect anything else.
 
Stealing smart things from actually smart people is a far superior approach.
 
Hi @rubenvb ! Regarding your question about the benchmark code, in fact it's a large piece of code. But everything is open source, so I guess there's no harm in sharing. I am trying to make a few changes to the LAD isomorphism solver so it can be used as a library. Ultimately I want to update the LAD code included in igraph to fix some bugs it has and improve its performance.
@rubenvb When igraph originally incorporated LAD, they rewrote it significantly. So much so that now it's nearly impossible to swap it for a new version of LAD, the changes are just too extensive. I'm trying to make LAD usable as a library while making as few changes to the source code as possible, so future updates/bugfixes will be easy.
@rubenvb This means that except for the top level functions, the only thing I change is replacing the VLA declarations with my own custom class and try to keep everything else unchanged (to the extent possible).
I'd need a bit of time to upload what I have, I'll do that tomorrow. My wife is complaining already that I am not paying enough attention to her :-)
 
@Szabolcs OK, I'll try to take a look tomorrow. It'd be great if I could just run a script and get the results, but some instructions on what to do would be helpful too ;)
 

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