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17:00
@R.MartinhoFernandes Woo, the guy accepted my answer so presumably that's one more person not misusing std::function!
user142019
enum class OnNavigateResult : bool { DoNotCancel, Cancel };
OnNavigateResult onNavigate(string url);
user142019
Descriptive and no confusing non-const reference arguments. (Y)
@rightfold yep. agree
user142019
Anyway, I'm off to shower. Byebye.
don't drown there
but meh, I don't want to write a custom type for each function result.
Xeo
Xeo
17:05
lol
I don't like this.
I have mutable where I should not.
WTF? PHP room has more active users at the moment?
wat. pressing F12 triggers a breakpoint in nt.dll
Poor melak is going insane with VS.
in VS2012, same project, F12 causes a thread to quit o_O
17:09
the fuck?
Visual Studio not saving project files when you add/remove something is REALLY FUCKING ANNOYING.
every time I press F12 in my app's window, "The thread 0x1994 has exited with code 0 (0x0)." O_o
@R.MartinhoFernandes Tiny tidbit: std::run_once / call_once is apparently extremely slow, buggy, doesn't handle exceptions correctly, and... well. Yeah, apparently it sucks </insider>
The things you learn~
@melak47 A special window message? Isn't F12 linked to something special in the system usually?
@ThePhD like what?
"kill a random thread"
or trigger a breakpoint, if you feel like it
Just change your key settings back.
Change the meaning of F12 to something innocuous.
17:13
huh?
what key settings
Oh wait nevermind, I have no idea what I'm talking about~
F12 doesn't do anything except print out "F12 : pressed"
@ThePhD Fix it then
huh
that I did not expect
hm. when I'm not debugging it in VS, nothing out of the ordinary happens. whatever~
Well, it is a Preview.
They don't have to be liable for any of it. :3c
@R.MartinhoFernandes Apparently type_traits isn't broken in VS 2013. Rather, it's become more stringent / standards-compliant (whatever that means).
So I have to write my type_traits to me more std::'s compliant I guess or something.
17:26
> Thank you for your feedback, we are currently reviewing the issue you have submitted -- Microsoft
why don't I believe you ;_;
Expect turnaround in 6 months or so. :3c
@EtiennedeMartel hey hey hey! stop finding competition for me! @BartekBanachewicz is just fine where he is
@ScottW o_0 for real?
@thecoshman Scott's too sexy for that job stuff.
I forgot where Etienne works. :c
@ScottW Your looks are better~
@ThePhD It's on my SO profile.
@EtiennedeMartel Holy shit: ludia.com/en/about.php
YES I'M SO GLAD YOU WANT TO SHARE YOUR VISION WITH ME LUDIA WOULD YOU LIKE TO TELL ME MORE?
YES YES I WOULD LOVE A CUP OF TEA AND A CALMING CUP OF JOE.
YES, WE CAN DRINK BOTH BECAUSE WE'RE AMAZING LIKE THAT.
BUUUAAA HAHAA HAA HAAA.
17:33
@ManofOneWay nope, never. :) Why?
@ThePhD lol
@EtiennedeMartel Though, is the tooling at least fun?
@ThePhD What?
s/g/f
Sorry, I failed. x3
Sure it is. Thanks to meeeee.
17:35
Haha.
I'm actually designing tools right now.
But I'm trying to do it in Unreal4.
And I want to kill myself. :3c
@ThePhD Don't they already have a pretty decent tool pipeline?
We picked unreal for the explicit reason that we were going to customize it to do everything it doesn't do currently.
@ThePhD who is we?
Which means somebody has to go, understand their source code, and then edit it all to do such things. :3c
@thecoshman Not-me.
17:39
std::endl -- a horrible thing.
I always use endl.
I pretty much never use it
I want my debugging statements to be printed when they occur.
Ell
Ell
I just use "\n"
@ThePhD justify
17:41
@StackedCrooked I just don't use iostreams for debugging statements. Problem solved then ;)
@thecoshman std::endl flushes your entire stream everytime you use it.
It's not just a newline (why would that bake that into std::endl in the first place? Who knows...).
Every time you flush you send 6 microseconds down the drain.
Ell
Ell
But it all adds up!
@StackedCrooked ahh there we go, an explanation. Thanks.
Ell
Ell
to like a second.
17:43
TIL
yeah ok, wtf is up with that? I thought endl was just a 'what ever makes sense on this platform'
Ell
Ell
I'm gonna try writing something with OPUS
@thecoshman naw, \n is "whatever makes sense on this platform"
it will translate to \r\n on windows
@jalf :O is that so
Ell
Ell
17:44
@jalf TIL
Well, for text streams, at least. If you open in binary mode, no translation of newlines will occur
You're on your own~
Which includes std::endl.
although tbh I'd say that a raw \n makes sense on every platform, these days. Unless you're targeting notepad.exe, you really don't need \r\n IMO
@jalf Some standards use /r/n as part of their newline protocol and other things.
It's weird. @JerryCoffin knows more, IIRC (sorry if you don't x3)
17:47
@ThePhD yep, and in those cases, it would be pretty horrible to rely on the platform-specific \n conversion ;)
I use COLIRU_NEW_LINE_STOP.
then you should be explicit about wanting a \r\n, and not a "whatever a newline looks like on this platform"
It's a pity that moving the cursor up or left is not portable.
Interactive console UIs are kinda fun.
@thecoshman So is \n. endline is just \n followed by a flush() (which you rarely want).
@ThePhD Almost all IETF stuff uses \r\n.
@JerryCoffin Ah.
Ell
Ell
17:52
wtf. My vim has crashed or something o>o
But I don't know vim so maybe not
Vim is pretty stable.
sbi
sbi
I have just posted a performance question, if you happen to need some rep.
Ell
Ell
It wasn't responding to any keypresses
@StackedCrooked CAPS_ARE_SO_CLASSY
@sbi Purrformance?
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Are you the @Cat?!
17:55
@sbi No.
sbi
sbi
Then why are you purring?
Because he wants to be a Cat. And a Lesbian.
Just like Cat.
@StackedCrooked I assume you don't want us to just say 'profile it'
17:57
@jalf Ok. I'm trying to add QGraphicsItems that have fixed locations on the display.
@EtiennedeMartel never give up on your dreams~~~
@EtiennedeMartel that's your rapist face, not your face
@thecoshman My real face is very similar.
@EtiennedeMartel :O
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Don't try to fool us. You are this one, Shirley.
17:59
@sbi o_0
@sbi Wait. I think I know her.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Who is it?
@sbi She really looks like one of my friend's girlfriend.
It's a very weird coincidence.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Whose instagram account did you link to?
s/friend's girlfriend/me FTFY
18:01
@sbi Oh. That guy.
IT'S ALL SO CLEAR NOW.
My brain farted.
sbi
sbi
That's been clear to us all the time.
@ThePhD "she really looks like one of my me" ?
@melak47 Yes. :D
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Well, so the picture you posted as your own actually shows your friend?
@sbi No. That picture wasn't mine. But it does show my face.
18:04
@EtiennedeMartel your rapist face FTFY
@thecoshman Yes.
@sbi The person that is taking the picture is gonna get loved tenderly.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel So you're a long-haired, bearded beer drinker, huh? I guess I like you already.
@sbi catch up :P
sbi
sbi
18:06
@EtiennedeMartel Give it a few decades, so that your hair has time to acquire some greyness, your skin wrinkles some more, and that stupid smile if wiped from your face by life's harshness, and you might look like me. :)
@thecoshman As usually, I have no idea what you're trying to say.
@sbi I don't think I'll ever stop being naive.
7
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel Keeping a naive approach to the world won't prevent you from looking less happy in a few decades. Even naive people can be unhappy.
@sbi ¬_¬ I thought it was well known that man liked a beer
@sbi He'll become bitter and jaded.
18:08
Are you trying to make him unhappy?
@sbi I shall remain optimistic.
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman It was. Even to me. Why?
And if someone tries to make me unhappy, I'll just kick him in the face.
That'll teach him.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel So? Even optimists get beaten up once in a while.
@not-TonyTheLion No need to. He's got many years to work on that all for himself. :)
@sbi Sure. It just means you have to get back up quicker.
18:09
@sbi I recently was tasked to design a performant logging system. However, the emphasis was reducing the load on the producer instead of the consumer. I.e. to reduce the cost of logging in the main application. The speed of the consumer didn't matter much. It's seems your case is the opposite.
I got confused. can anyone tell me how these two std::string objects return the same address for c_str()? ideone.com/cPFtJL
@sbi The world will slowly poison his belief in it until the naive only becomes a stark reminder at how disappointing the world truly is. It will eat away at his core, as he struggles to reconcile his belief and assumption of good intent with the sheer overwhelming harshness of reality, and its exceptionally cruel Mistress -- Experience.
I thought I was bitter. Dayumn
:/
@not-TonyTheLion You're like an IPA. You might be bitter, but you still taste good.
@MooingDuck Dat optimizer?
18:11
IPA?
@ThePhD but I'm passing the addresses to a library call (cout), that ought to prevent that optimzation...
unless gcc strings are COW?
India Pale Ale or IPA is a beer style within the broader category of pale ale. It was first brewed in England in the 19th century. The first known use of the term "India pale ale" is an advertisement in the Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser in 1829. It was also referred to as "pale ale as prepared for India", "India Ale", "pale India ale" or "pale export India ale". History The term "pale ale" originally denoted an ale that had been brewed from pale malt. The pale ales of the early 18th century were lightly hopped and quite different from later pale ales. By the mid-18th cen...
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked Here, too, the slowdown on the producer was the important part. But I already improved that a lot last year, employing template meta programming, and asynchronous processing. This is a RT OS. A foreground task can have a high priority and easily drown the forwarding background task with messages, forcing it to drop them. So backend performance is important, too.
sbi
sbi
@EtiennedeMartel See, that's exactly the attitude I referred to when I spoke of wiping that disgustingly optimistic smile off your face. :b
Ell
Ell
18:13
gah It broke again
@EtiennedeMartel Oh I see
@MooingDuck Wasn't that banned in the standard?
@sbi You should use violence more often.
Ell
Ell
I thought COW was forbidden by the standard for some reason
sbi
sbi
@ThePhD ALT+0151
18:14
@sbi —
@sbi Not sure if useful, but FYI, I used the concurrent_queue (unbounded) class from the Intel TBB libraries to dispatch the messages from the producer to the consumer.
It gives me a line. :c
@ThePhD yes
@ThePhD yes. And at some point in the future, they will fix their implementation. Just... not today
@Ell it is
18:15
Hee.
GCC is non-standard~~~~~~~~~~~
@ThePhD someday GCC catch up to Microsoft in thier implementation of C++11.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked This is (I am not kidding) a 1996 version of vxWorks. I don't think TBB will ever be ported to this platform. Also, with the help of the robot I already created a very efficient locked queue.
@MooingDuck Someday, I won't have to worry about which compiler to pick. :3c
@sbi Cool :)
C++17 in 2035 -- get ready!
sbi
sbi
18:16
Wait. What do you mean, "use the queue to dispatch messages", @Stacked?
@sbi Is the c++ compiler somewhat recent?
sbi
sbi
GCC 4.1.2
@sbi The producer thread calls the queue::push method. The consumer thread calls the pop method. It's lock-free at both sides.
sbi
sbi
@Ell I don't think the standard forbids anything explicitly. There's just no way you can make COW strings work correct and be fast in an MT scenario.
@sbi pretty sure there's no way you can make COW strings be conformant with C++11
in C++98 it was just slow for MT scenarios
sbi
sbi
18:19
@jalf Well, I'm not up to date regarding C++11, so this might well be. Still, I bet the standard does say nothing about COW strings. TCBWT.
but C++11 is explicit about... some non-COW requirement or other. Can't remember the exact wording. Each string must have a unique buffer or something maybe? Or just stricter complexity guarantees on mutating a string (so the copying is no longer possible)
@sbi yeah, pretty sure they don't mention COW specifically.They just require something or other than COW strings can't achieve
@sbi not explicitly. They accepted a standard that explicitly says it, but I don't think the spec is explicit
We had an "advanced c++ course" a year ago at my job. And the teacher (who hadn'tused C++ since the early 2000) told us that COW is good for multithreading. His argumentation if two threads use the string and one of them writes to it, then a copy is made for that thread, so there's no race-condition.
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked You mean the listeners pick the messages from the queue by themselves? That would imply an additional queue per listener, though, that might store any number of formatted strings. I already have severe memory constraints with the chain of producers/consumers I have and their buffer.
Ever since we had our big "dig into the std::string spec to figure out when and how the null byte is required to be present" session here in this room, I've made it a strict policy never ever to look at the std::string part of the spec
18:22
@jalf this
sbi
sbi
@jalf See, being older and wiser, I decided to do so before I ever had a look at it.
@sbi You could have one central listener that dispatches to the secondary listeners.
Could someone maybe take a quick look at this code? (The problem is described there).
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked That's called the forwarding task already. I am trying to design its backend.
Indeed. I forgot.
It seems odd though that logging is so performance critical.
But, I don't doubt that there are good reasons for that :)
18:26
@Tuntuni doesn't that already compile? What error do you get?
> The code compiles with those changes but I have no idea if it's correct.
hurray for reading
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked The guy opposite of me wrote some code communicating over a CAN bus that employs a high-priority task which is invoked every 1msec. (The logging forwarder background task is invoked every 100msec.) He put in some log statements to debug an issue, and was swamped with "logging message queue overran" system warnings that drowned the whole system. It took a few hours to find out what the problem was, though, because the machine kept rebooting 2secs after his app was started...
@Tuntuni looks okay at first glance. there's no indication of an actual problem here. why do you think there is one?
@MooingDuck I get this.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I've never actually used move semantics or rvalue references before even though I've read some stuff on it.
18:29
I like reading stackoverflow questions and answers but I never really do any of those myself. :P
@Tuntuni oh. Did you try emplace_back istead? >.<, since push_back tries to do a copy?
sbi
sbi
@StackedCrooked (These machines are usually setup so that they reboot when they overload.)
@MooingDuck But then I have to provide the arguments. I think I won't be able to call operator() then.
WHAAAAAAAAAAAOOÖÖPH. (the sound of a pointer)
sbi
sbi
18:30
Anyway, we were talking about beer recently, and I just had a mail from a nice chap that he'll be in my favorite bar having a beer tonight. So I think I'll leave you guys, let that question accumulate some more answers, and go for a beer.
@Tuntuni no wait, that doesn't work either
@MooingDuck Yeah. :p
@LightnessRacesinOrbit So with those changes, the code looks correct? When the last operator() is called, an rvalue reference will be returned and a curl_wrapper will be move constructed into the vector, correct?
aaaaaannnd its raining!
@not-TonyTheLion it never rains on the internet.
and once again; what's up with all the not- prefixes?
GUISE.
18:32
Flooding the logs is a common problem though. I noticed that Google's glob library has calls like LOG_EVERY_N and LOG_FIRST_N. I might borrow the idea.
@refp Yeah, I'm wondering too!
@StackedCrooked we set up an automatic system for that sort of thing at one of the companies I worked for in the past, it discarded duplicates and had a counter saying how many times it occured, when the last one occured as well as the first one (with some more rules so that we wouldn't lose valuable information)
@MooingDuck What do the ampersands on the end of operator() mean?
@Tuntuni you know how T& first() and const T& first() const work for like std::vector and such?
18:35
@MooingDuck Umm, I guess?
@StackedCrooked for duplicates we really wanted more info about we had another data-set that included all the timestamps this occured, and some random dump of the data-set that might have something to do with the error/warning/whatever every once in a while
@Tuntuni you can specify const, or mutable or &(lvalue), or &&(rvalue).
@Tuntuni I guess... Did you try it?
@MooingDuck Oh.
so lvalues will use one form, and rvalues will use the other, thus returning the same type.
@MooingDuck I see.
@LightnessRacesinOrbit !! I knew something before Lightness did!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit It does compile but I didn't want to try anything and be happy if it works in case it is UB or something so I wanted to ask here first. Will test now.
C++ Skillz, level up!
@Tuntuni I understand
18:37
@LightnessRacesinOrbit :)
Perhaps I need to apply something like TCP congestion control for my logger.
:P
@MooingDuck Do these ampersands only make sense when used along with templates? Does it mean they're taking an lvalue/rvalue reference of type T?
@StackedCrooked What are you doing with the poor thing.
I'm abusing it in unspeakable ways.
18:39
@Tuntuni they are letting you put qualifiers on the this* "parameter". It has nothing to do with templates.
No, actually, I'm having difficulty getting it right. Ack management, retransmission, and out-of-order handling (which are the basics) are proving to be challenging.
They're overloads, one takes a curl_wrapper&& this, and the other takes a curl_wrapper& this (roughtly. this is actually a pointer, so it does mojo)
@MooingDuck Ohh, right. I've read about that before, but forgot. :P I really like reading about C++ but I never use it, lol. Thanks.
@Tuntuni This is the correct way to use C++.
2
@CatPlusPlus Oh, you.
18:47
@CatPlusPlus Haha. I meant not using the new C++11 features, not C++ itself. :D
@CatPlusPlus :)
> In Visual Studio 2013 we are continuing to remain true to the Microsoft design principles
lol
@jalf Money money money!
MS has principles
user142019
18:50
I have had pimples.
!!
@rightfold PIMPLs.
> __vectorcall calling convention is added. Pass vector type arguments by using the __vectorcall calling convention to use vector registers.
That is great. Obviously a bandaid over the ridiculously stupid and shortsighted idiocy of the ABI they chose to use for x64, but hey, at least they're providing a workaround now
not another calling convention
there are special registers for vectorization?
18:52
@StackedCrooked __m128?
SSE registers, yes.
That stuff is really foreign to me.
@jalf what should they do instead?
user142019
@StackedCrooked XMM0 through XMM7 are vector registers.
user142019
Some C++ compilers provide data types that use to those registers.
18:54
@not-TonyTheLion What they should have done originally is what GCC and any sane ABI would do: something like "the first four function parameters of type __m128 is passed in select SSE registers"
That's what they do with scalar values in their x64 ABI: first N values are passed in registers, everything beyond that is pushed to the stack
but with SSE (which x64 guarantees is available), they always push it to the stack
I think I get it
@MooingDuck Aw man, MSVC doesn't support ref-qualifiers for *this. :/ Not really unexpected though.
@rightfold up to XMM15 in x64 :)
18:55
> Surely breastfeeding is the very definition of the term, and yet there are still those busybodies who are willing to walk over to the mother of an infant and pompously comment that "this is a family establishment" (to which the only appropriate reply is: "I know, I am literally feeding my family")
haha
So if I write idiomatic C++ will the compiler or CPU make optimal use of SIMD extensions etc?
I'm not sure what they mean with their _vectorcall convention though?
the rest of the article is fairly trite, though
@StackedCrooked depends on the compiler
user142019
@jalf Is x64 the same as x86-64?
18:55
@rightfold yeah
that obviously doesn't use SSE registers?
user142019
I see. TIL.
@rightfold :o
@not-TonyTheLion you can decorate a function with that calling convention. And if you do, the function will use SSE registers for passing SSE arguments
> "Put them away, love" is essentially what those 139 sexist bores were saying when they registered their distaste at Holly's breasts
18:56
@jalf GCC has a good optimizer IIRC.
sexist if we want to see boobs, sexist if we don't. I think that certain feminists just reckon that everybody's sexist all the time for any reason
@rightfold It's also the same as IA-32e. :P
@jalf instead of the compiler figuring it out, you have to tell it to figure it out?
next time I'm on TV I'll just let my balls hang out, shall I?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Yup. And that's why those (the extremists) suck. grin
18:57
@StackedCrooked yeah, all the main compilers do auto-vectorization these days. MSVC2012 added it, and GCC has had it for a while, as has ICC. Can't remember the status for Clang. They have an auto-vectorization project (Polly, I think?), but no clue if it's integrated into Clang yet
@not-TonyTheLion ayup
ah I get it now
MS has to be the weird one again
but at least now you can tell the compiler to figure it out. Previously, it was just a lost cause
user142019
@jalf LLVM does auto-vectorization, so I would be surprised if clang doesn't.
@rightfold ok :)
18:58
And yeah, it's really more the role of LLVM in the first place. Clang shouldn't really get involved I guess
@LightnessRacesinOrbit lol
@LightnessRacesinOrbit ahahaha
shudders
> Brace Completion. C++ code now auto-completes the closing characters that correspond to these opening characters (...)
Why do IDE designers think this is a good idea ever?

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