@Mysticial Not to be insulting, but Howard Hinnant (for the obvious example) isn't stupid. Gonna be pretty tough to produce something dramatically faster than his code unless you narrow the scope at least somewhat.
@Xeo That was pretty much my point--they'd better. Of course, Howard does also write primarily portable code. With some SIMD magic, you can probably improve performance a fair amount for a lot of typical cases (like instead of walking a list of collisions individually, start with a vector of 8 or so collisions, and look at all 8 concurrently).
So, it MAKES me specify things in terms of the command line, which can be machine-agnostic,
but then CRUSHES them the MOMENT I open it on a machine that's not EXACTLY the one I created all of those build configurations on?
How the fuck am I supposed to share my shit with other people, let alone work across multiple machines or set up a cross-platform project for everyone to use?
@JerryCoffin Definitely a different scope. When I said "fully-generic" what I really meant was the ability to add and remove items. There's still additional restrictions on the keys.
QtCreator literally inserts machine IDs and other tracking information in its build spec, so that 20 minutes you spent setting up all the make and ninja calls that it asks for? Fucking blows them up the minute the IDs in the settings file doesn't match. And RATHER than just insert a new entry into the settings file -- since it's FUCKING XML BASED AND COULD JUST ADD ANOTHER NODE FOR MY MACHINE ID -- it instead assumes the whole thing is bunk, flips its shit, and then nukes everything.
you know what always makes me feel better after the revelation that the system I'm using is a complete mess and the only reason anything works is ugly hacks
finding someone and convincing them to make the same unwise decisions so they know my pain
@Mysticial I should implement a method a friend of mine invented several years ago. you start by computing a fairly large hash (say, 64 bits). You then use only some of those bits to select a bucket, but instead of throwing away the rest, you store them in the node as a "confirmer" (or, if it's more convenient, you store all 64 bits in the node). When you do a lookup, you do a hash about like usual.
But, when you look at nodes in a bucket, you compare confirmer values before comparing the whole key. If the confirmers differ, you have a mismatch, and immediately move on to the next node in the bucket. This way you reject the vast majority of mismatches with a single-cycle comparison instead of (for a typical example) walking through the characters of a string.
@Ell Whatever the default is. The guys who use these data structures generally aren't CS academics. So they wouldn't know what the better thing to do is. That's kinda my job to make those decisions for everyone else.
I don't know what the default is for strings in unordered_map, but it sure as hell doesn't look pretty under the profiler.
For the purpose of introspection, sometimes I've wanted to automatically assign serial numbers to types, or something similar.
Unfortunately, template metaprogramming is essentially a functional language, and as such lacks global variables or modifiable state which would implement such a counter...
There's some C macro that has a counter value that's supposed to be unique everytime it's accessed... problem is, it's evaluated before templates, not for each instantiations, so that makes it useless.
@Mysticial DJ Bernstein is (sort of) our kind of academic--the kind who ensures that things are theoretically solid, but (unlike many others) then does some pretty serious testing, and is willing to admit to times that we don't have a good theory to say why this works better than the others, but it does anyway (IOW, djbhash would be worth a look).
Lol, you don't appear have done anything on SO proper since 2013
Okay I need some C++ advice, I have a producer consumer for IO. I want to push to an object that will eventually write the file. Now, I can either roll my own or use Boost's buffered IO. I tried the boost buffering a long, long time ago and didn't seem to see the advantage. What do you guys think...
@Lalaland Thats what I'm using, but ideally the OS would provided this kind of facility. There is a problem with my approach. It works too well on Windows. I get almost ideal performance with CreateFileEx, BUT it destroys other IO devices (cameras). For example, the camera might drop a frame and refuse to start, producing a large beep that can be heard through the hollowed halls of our department.
@Mikhail At first blush, it sounds like it might make sense to keep the code about as it is, but drop its priority a bit (or raise the camera's) so when the camera has data ready, it gets serviced quickly. The rest of the time (presumably little or nothing else using CPU time) your code runs about like it does now.
this has regressed on GCC trunk and now complains about using operator() before its return type is deduced. now to figure out if GCC is wrong about it…
I'd be happy to try doing that if I was a fresh programmer out of uni, because I'd be foolish by that time to not know to what extent is that difficult
So, the problem isn't well defined because Java doesn't have templates, so you can't do source to source conversion. Also Java object lifetimes are different.
in Java you always allocate like obj = new Object();, you cannot create objects on the stack as in C++ like Object obj(); .. so objects on the stack will have obj=null; at the end of the function to call the GC when translated as Java.. something like that
Is there a way to get a "surprisingly wrong" value with the stdlib using auto and unary/binary operators, like std::vector<bool> with auto that returns a proxy instead of a real bool?
@Ven I think that's some sort of optimization, the compiler would've to deal with the code, but from a Java developer perspective, they always use allocations.
@Ven I’m not sure what you mean with the operators, but std::valarray is another thing with pre-auto proxies/expression templates (off the top of my head)
well it is not my problem, I'm just going to convert the code, not compile it & run it. My work is going to be on the level of syntax, that's a compiler\envoirnment issue.
@Ven so back to our initial question, should I write the parser in C++ or C, or wouldn't there be much of a performance gap when not using classes\templates?
I should test the compilation time for templates some day. I can imagine that manually duplicating code to remove the templates compiles slower than the original templates.
I could write it in python if I wanted. It'd be slow af, but it would work ^^; Might as well write it in C++ for what little performance difference it has with C
My site is hosted on shopify. Now I want to communicate between two domains through jsonp. So i wrote one liquid file which have user email id and user uuid. Now the only problem is i need to access the uuid from local storage. The uuid is a random integer of 6 digits. I tried different approache...