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22:00
I smell the cheese.
It got moved
But you have not justified receiving repeated key up events so I understand his insistence.
@R.MartinhoFernandes nope, just seeing X sending me many key down-up events when I hold a key
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't have to
@sehe you proposed there was a valid reason
22:00
Ultra-compressed sizes. Which do you need?
@ThePhD y u no 7zip?
@thecoshman I suggested there might be a reason. Valid is subjective. Good luck
impressive
just x86 rel
@Borgleader I have 7zip. I used .RAR's ultra-compression.
right now
prebuilts for the other configurations would be good but don't need them
22:01
I think the 7zip format can do even better
@sehe I'll just direct my rage at you ¬_¬ git
7zip is amazing
@thecoshman I noticed. I don't have your cheese...
Hm, you're right. LZW would probably compress it better.
But. Shrug. Meehhh.
Try it for the lulz, see how much of a diff it makes :3
22:02
@Borgleader Compare it with bzip2 -9 for fun? (where's the download /cc @ThePhD)
@sehe grumble grumble
boost_1_54_0.zip 103.2 MB, boost_1_54_0.7z 53.8 MB
Fuck zip
@sehe It's uploading.
At times like this, I'm so glad I bummed 10 GB off of Dropbox.
@ThePhD x86 real is zip and the others are all rar?
@ThePhD Wait. I can't start dl until ul finished?
22:03
@ThePhD Woah
@DeadMG lol
I have quite some more online storage. But I don't do dropbox
@sehe Dropbox won't expose the link until it uploads fully to their servers.
It occurs to me my sand dunes are eating my cacti...
@Pawnguy7 Worms?
@ThePhD lousy. I tend to wget -c from the start :) md5sum for consistency check
22:05
@DeadMG Oh, woops. Guess I was inconsistent with the GUI. Yeah that one's a zip.
I'm gonna 7z compress all of these right now though...
not sure what you mean
DropBox should allow me to gift away storage.
@R.MartinhoFernandes why, how much you got?
Gift away storage?
@thecoshman Over 100GB. Currently using 600MB.
22:07
I really wish that if a 1gig file was shared between two people, it only took up a half gig each, rather then them each having the full amount used up each
@R.MartinhoFernandes :O wtf?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wha the tits.
you paying?
how do you get more/less capacity on Dropbox?
@sehe refers and drop quest can earn you some
22:07
Just accumulated a lot from promotions and whatnots.
how the fuck you get that much though I have no idea
@sehe You usually invite yourself or invite a VM, rollback the VM, and then change its mac address. Wash rinse repeat.
Referrals, space race thing, Samsung promotion.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I never figured you were the type of guy for promotions and whatnots
@sehe OCD :P
22:08
@ThePhD Yeah. You told us before. But the robot is not a fraud
@sehe I just installed DropBox on my phone and BAM! Have another 50GB.
I didn't even know there was a promotion for that.
Oh, the early phone promotion.
hm... when a window get minimized, it receives the WM_SIZE message with height 65532. looks weird %)
Yeah I wasn't there for that. =[
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah. Broken business model. Or better: arbitrariness
@Abyx -4
22:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0 50GB
@sehe huh?
@Abyx mental arith: 65532-2^16
@Abyx what you playing with?
win32 API
@Sehe I have both 7z and .rar compressing hte Release dir of llvm's x86 build at the same time.
Ell
Ell
22:10
Hi guys
RAR is compressing at 8x the rate of 7zip.
Ell
Ell
My nexus 7 is temporarily fixed!
In fact it's done.
@ThePhD testing your system's cooling, huh
@ThePhD that process has probably just taken precedence
22:11
@thecoshman what OS do you use? One that randomly favours arbitrary processes
@sehe Yep. :D Final .rar LLVM Release takes 43 MB.
@sehe ¬_¬
why...
@sehe yeah, but it supposed to be unsigned, according to MSDN
7z is in trouble. It's only at halfway of all the files and it's current file size is 32 MB
If it gets bigger than 43 MB, it loses and RAR wins as far as size goes.
@Abyx It clearly is. However, it seems to be a good idea to reinterpret it
22:12
@sehe process started first, claims access to reading that file first. potentially, if the process is mostly IO bound
@thecoshman I misremembered. Turns out it was 48GB.
@thecoshman a window. a leaky one =\
@thecoshman Cool theory, bro
That's not a lot.
For RAM
@sehe not really. height -4 makes no sense
@Abyx when I minmize windows, they usually have size 0x0 :/
22:13
@ThePhD Are you profiling compression algorithms by running them all together on the same machine?
@sehe sorry, I'll get on reading exactly how 7zip and RAR both work, how Windows will then react to their needs. I'll also just hack into Phd's machine to see what he is running right now and what hardware he has.
@Abyx oh. then it's just an overflow bug. nothing to see. move along
@melak47 I really doubt it. how do you know their size?
@melak47 No. 160x31.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ..no
22:14
@melak47 Yes.
Not making this up.
@thecoshman Hey, I didn't spout surprising claims!
oh, nvm. window size. I was thinking of client area size
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm actually only looking at size. I just happened to be running them at the same time. Though, running separately, WinRAR finished compressing LLVM Release in under a minute. It's been some 7 minutes for 7z.
@ThePhD maybe you should benchmark it on your new computer :D
22:15
oh fuck! I can really have negative client area size then!
8 minutes, 7z still isn't done...
eureka
@Abyx wut :o
FUCK WINDOWS.
This ultra compression better be the most AMAZING thing I've ever seen.
22:16
@Abyx You should probably meet the pirate.
@ThePhD It already is! It has amazing runtime
@melak47 I have non-client area (window borders) height > 31
@Abyx how does having more than 31 in height make your client area < 0
facepalm it just ridiculous. no wonder that it gets mad and leaks that 200Mb
@Abyx Likely, just around 35
22:17
@melak47 window height = client area height + non-client area height? (and window height is the constant 31)
ergh... there is a 'xwindows' tag on SO... despite the many accepted names, and 'xwindows' being renounced ¬_¬
Hm.
Well, here are the results.
No they are not!
@Abyx Lesson learned: Gosling was right when he conjectured that unsigned integers were too hard for programmers to grasp.
@R.MartinhoFernandes but..how hell do you get a window big enough that the size overflows because auf the +31? :/
22:18
VTC, and dupe thx
... LOL
Dropbox has no SCHEDULER.
Very nice, dropbox.
@melak47 Pretend he set non-client are height to 35. Window height when minimized is 31 (by spec, see link above). Therefore client are height must be -4 so you get 31 = -4 + 35.
So, my 16 KB image file that shows the results won't be uploaded until the LLVM thing is done uploading.
Ell
Ell
I don't understand. How has an integer overflow caused a 200mb memory leak?
@ThePhD It's a "drop" box. Usually, gravity doesn't schedule well. So their name matches the operation
22:20
@Ell -4 as an unsigned short ends up as 65532. My guess is that he used that number to allocate something.
Oh wait, I lied
There it is.
(And kids, this is why taking unsigned parameters because you don't want to allow negative numbers is bad)
@Ell Because he substracted unsigned ints, forgetting that the result may have to be signed. Then he allocated the resulting capacity?
2 mins ago, by sehe
@Abyx Lesson learned: Gosling was right when he conjectured that unsigned integers were too hard for programmers to grasp.
Looks like dropbox uploads things in chunks.
Amazing
22:22
So it won't consider a new item until a chunk is finished.
@Borgleader Quite active with your new spells, eh?
@ThePhD :D
So it might delay you for some 6 minutes before it gets to the proper chunk,
and then schedules a new, smaller thing to be uploaded.
Ell
Ell
Now I want to read a "Why Unsigned Integers are Evil" article
22:23
@Abyx what are you allocating based on window size?
7z wins for size.
.zip is the worst -- I don't even include it here.
82
A: Why doesn't Java support unsigned ints?

UriThis is from an interview with Gosling and others, about simplicity: Gosling: For me as a language designer, which I don't really count myself as these days, what "simple" really ended up meaning was could I expect J. Random Developer to hold the spec in his head. That definition says that, for ...

@R.MartinhoFernandes Guilty :3 It's a new toy, the interest will fade quite fast
interest will compound, actually
Every debtor knows this
@Ell FWIW, take this as something related to "unsigned integers in C or C++", because it isn't that troublesome in other languages.
Ell
Ell
22:26
Ahh yes
@melak47 dunno. I wrote a plugin which modifies window frame, and the window started to leak because of that negative client height. It calls CreateDIBSection with that height, and something goes wrong. I don't feel like investigating it further, at least now.
I'm off for today. See you later :)
@DeadMG dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/17644642/… /cc @sehe (Benchmark size for bzip -9 if you like)
Oh, wait
You're leaving
Well, buhbye!
Ugh. Adobe CS6, 3.2 GB worth of updates.
@ThePhD Unless he already left before your message, he will now not leave before he tests it.
That's where my money is.
@ThePhD Ugh, I don't remember any of that.
welp
only about 3-4 minutes to DL that 32MB 7z
so much better.
22:32
hm... at times like this I feel like writing a blog post about this shit. maybe I should create a blog.
Who is familiar with <thread>?
:10432362 wget -c 'https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/17644642/llvm.build.lib.x86.Release.7z'
time 7z x llvm.build.lib.x86.Release.7z
time tar cp Release | pbzip2 > llvm.build.lib.x86.Release.tbz2
ls llvm.build.lib.x86* -trah
user142019
@DeadMG Did you have a problem with lack of DiagnosticCommonKinds.inc?
Impressive:
ah, yeah
22:32
-rw-rw-r-- 1 sehe sehe 32M Jul  7 00:30 llvm.build.lib.x86.Release.7z
-rw-rw-r-- 1 sehe sehe 57M Jul  7 00:31 llvm.build.lib.x86.Release.tbz2
@sehe Hee. @R.MartinhoFernandes was right.
LLVM and Clang build them as part of their build process.
but don't put them in the regular clang/include paths.
@ThePhD About what?
@DeadMG that's quite slow. do you use avian carriers for TCP?
@sehe Oh wow, 7zip smoked it. o.0
22:33
@sehe hahahahahahah I knew it.
Where's my money.
you have to either add the build/include stuff or copy and paste them over.
@R.MartinhoFernandes What did I miss?
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@ThePhD Unless he already left before your message, he will now not leave before he tests it.
user142019
Well, let's run make first anyway.
user142019
Blewrg building LLVM and clang. :(
22:33
@R.MartinhoFernandes Lol
@sehe @Rapptz 7zip is VERY impressive indeed. :D
@rightfold Yeah... that might take a while.
user142019
Anyway I think I got Compress() right for a big part.
user142019
If I got ranges right. :v
It's not like it took a lot of time. Extracting took 2s, compressing took 9 s
user142019
22:35
And it's probably inefficient as fuck.
user142019
It returns a byte range. :P
@sehe The default compression levels are not the same though
Ugh, I've been thinking about split for hours now.
AFAIR 7z is on highest by default
Where the hell is @Luc?
22:35
@not-kbok I know
Anybody familiar with <thread>?
@not-kbok He turned on -9 for tbzip or w/e the utility is called
@rightfold Streaming
@ThePhD Nope. I didn't
Given I used to call something like so:
22:36
Oh.
> | pbzip2
Ell
Ell
Split as in split the range when predicate is true?
Well, why not try it?
user142019
return Containers.Optional(byte)(buffer[n++]);
@not-kbok Parallel bzip. It runs SMP on my 8 cores :)
22:36
nextWorld.generate((WorldType) randomRange(0, COUNT - 1)));
yeah
I might decide to mention that I didn't implement operator[] yet.
How would I make this as a seperate thread?
for anything.
@sehe Nice. I have to remember about that.
user142019
22:37
@DeadMG Oh. :v
user142019
Well then I'll use .at! :D
@ThePhD Anyways, -9 doesn't make a difference. Non-parallel version, does, though: took 43s instead of 9s. Still 57 Mb /cc @not-kbok
did you use a std::vector? :P
user142019
std::array.
@Pawnguy7 What do you do with the result?
22:37
@sehe 7z master race
user142019
Didn't know how to do arrays in Wide.
I didn't implement them yet.
Ell
Ell
@r.martinho whenever you're thinking about these things, what is it in particular? I assume you could naively implement them, so is it performance you think about?
@R.MartinhoFernandes the result of what? You mean in terms of thread safety?
22:38
@Ell I can't seem to make it lazy without calling the predicate twice per element.
@Pawnguy7 What does the function return and where does that go? Or, in case the answer is "nothing", what global state does it touch?
user142019
I'll see what the compiler will do when I give it to him. It probably already fails at the use of zlib's macros (Z_FINISH and friends).
@R.MartinhoFernandes nothing, the object contains a 3D array, it just sets values of it
@rightfold Couple things- Wide supports move-only ranges so you'll want to move it into the lambda.
user142019
No need to import Utility?
and secondly, Wide is slightly less permissive about implicitly narrowing integers than C++ is, you might need an explicit conversion for passing literals (which are int64)
I might change that in the future because it's mostly extensions.
@rightfold Not implicitly, no.
also
don't put named usings at global scope because they are not file local.
I just got bitten by this myself.
user142019
22:41
Ah. xD
user142019
Well, I don't want to export them from a module either.
I had using std := cpp("iostream").std; in some sample code
@Pawnguy7 Maybe std::async will be good enough for that.
user142019
Will you support module-private stuff?
user142019
Or just even file-private stuff.
22:41
and then realized that I had using std := cpp("test.h").std; in an internal file at global scope.
yes to both
user142019
private using std := cpp("array").std;
private using Zlib := cpp("zlib.h");
auto future = std::async(std::launch::async, [] { your_stuff });
file-local using is on my list of things to do soon, and module-private.
user142019
Oh God my computer's fans.
lol
user142019
22:42
It's fucking hot in my room and I'm building LLVM and clang.
@ThePhD 7z took 1m9s on my box, resulting 36MiB; If you lower the bar somewhat, you can get a sweet spot:
time 7z a -mx3 -m0=lzma2 test2.7z Release/

Everything is Ok

real	0m3.430s
user	0m20.998s
sys	0m0.155s
sehe@desktop:/tmp$ ls -ltrah
-rw-rw-r--  1 sehe sehe  36M Jul  7 00:39 test.7z
-rw-rw-r--  1 sehe sehe  48M Jul  7 00:40 test2.7z
user142019
clang using 100% CPU.
@sehe Ooh, very pretty.
wacom.com/products/pen-tablets?gclid=CNiU-pjnm7gCFU2CQgoddHQA0w <--- looks like these guys are the leaders in making tablets.
Ell
Ell
@deadmg is = used for equality?
I don't know who else manufactures external art tablets.
22:43
@Ell No.
@ThePhD they are
Ell
Ell
I don't know how you can prefer := to =
@ThePhD So, it does compression to 48MiB in just 3.4s!
Ell
Ell
But its just syntax I guess
user142019
@DeadMG I also need some way to pass a byte range as a byte*. Is that possible in any way?
22:43
@Ell It's about disambiguation in a couple of core contexts.
@rightfold The input range is not guaranteed to be an array or anything like that at all.
user142019
Or do I need to copy it into a buffer first?
@sehe Which beats out a lot of other algorithms in both speed and size. That's pretty crazy.
Igor Pavlov (or w/e his name is) is a genius!
@Ell I could just make it return like a vector or vectors for example, but that forces immediate execution and I don't want: if all range algorithm are eager like that, you get the same problem as with the STL algorithms: to chain them you need temporary vectors at each chain point.
it might be a string that I decoded into an array of bytes via Map().
@DeadMG out of curiosity, how long did decompressing the release 7z on windows take?
22:44
it's not even guaranteed that the result of x() is going to be an lvalue.
@sehe It was so fast I didn't notice. A few seconds at most.
(well, either that or CPS iterators, which I posited once but fortunately no one took seriously enough to implement)
Ell
Ell
@r.martinho ahh right, so all of your other algorithms are lazy too?
@DeadMG Ok. Good. 2s here. I was kind of expecting another fiasco like decompressing boost on windows.
Robot breeds laziness
22:45
I think I'll leave split for now, and implement ordered decomposition directly with generate instead of split.
@sehe Well, boost uses zip IIRC.
I'm going to use 7z for everything now.
Who else is (considering) going to Meeting C++ 2013?
gzip and LZW is all I need
where is it?
@rightfold implement LZW module for Wide plx.
22:47
@rightfold Yeah, I suddenly noticed that you just did stream.next_in = range; and I highly doubt that this is going to function, unless next_in is a std::function<std::optional<unsigned char>()> with the relevant calling semantics.
user142019
I'm changing that anyway to support infinite ranges.
user142019
Take(count) {
    return function(range)[count := count] {
user142019
Any reason you did it this way and not Take(count, range) { … }?
it's for | chaining.
user142019
Ah right.
22:49
operator|(lhs, rhs) does { return rhs(std::move(lhs)); }
user142019
@DeadMG That is suspiciously similar to |> in F#. :3
so all stdlib functions which are chained that way always return function(range)[stuff]
@rightfold Inspired by boost::range, actually.
user142019
I think I should also do that for Compress?
yep.
22:51
@not-kbok Dussefdorf DE
but what I don't support is something like
yay, got Boost built and installed, just in time to remember that I only really needed the header-only libs
great planning
f := Compress(); range1 := f(range); range2 := f(otherrange);
the result of Compress only has to be callable once.
so it's perfectly legal to set up only-usable-once state in the Compress() call itself.
user142019
Compress() is a pure function!
22:53
oh, fuck.
@sehe November 2013? That's near my birthday!
@ThePhD: You didn't update Clang again, did you?
@LightnessRacesinOrbit hahahaha
@DeadMG No. I only pulled the latest trunk, but that was like, 2 weeks ago.
22:54
@not-kbok Wait, I though October
not since your purrequest was sent?
yeah, not since the purrrequest.
hm
I got unresolved external linking to your libs
You're right: 8th and 9th of November 2013. @not-kbok
@sehe Early bird tickets end today!
22:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm acutely aware of that
So, I was wondering, am I going to risk running into some people I know on the first conference I might be visiting?
user142019
> Stages/Lexer/Lexer.h:47:18: error: no type named 'vector' in namespace 'std'
user142019
Hahaha.
Hmm, that's an event that's actually close to my location! ...if only it wasn't XXX€...
this_thread::sleep_for(duration) can result in longer sleep than intended. Is this also the case for condition::wait_for and/or future::wait_for?
@rightfold That happens sometimes.
22:56
@DeadMG Did you keep my changes in the ClangTU.cpp (or something like that0 that listed all the libraries present in the trunk build?
user142019
libc++ is too strict. :P
@rightfold You would probably get similar results porting from libc++ to MSVC
@StackedCrooked Most probably - I can imagine it could not be a case only if the OS you were running on was a RTOS.
@ThePhD I cut a few I didn't need, but mostly.
user142019
Stages/Parser/Builder.h:10:14: error: ISO C++ forbids forward references to
      'enum' types
        enum Error;
             ^
22:57
compiles fine in debug mode.
user142019
Well this is weird.
> Stooges/William/Shakespeare.h:47:18: smell: suspect type named 'rotten' in the start of 'Denmark'
Strange.
Maybe I should do a completely fresh build?
yeah, try building wide x86/release yourself
odd that that would be the only unresolved external.
@rightfold You passed -std=c++11, right?
user142019
Yes.
22:57
@Griwes I'm considering paying down. Hopefully I can strike a deal with my employer once I show the commitment. But it's gonna be a tough sell
I'm pretty sure forward declaring enums was in the list of C++11 features.
user142019
Let's try GCC.
@sehe ...if only I had an employer :D
Mmm. Even tougher sell :)
user142019
__debugbreak not declared. Whoops.
22:58
oh, it has to be a fixed underlying type.
Or if I had 2k PLN.
just change to enum Error : int, and a similar fix to the definition in Parser.h should be fine.
That's a tad expensive, with the plane and stuff
Well, 2k PLN is two months of a scholarship (assuming I'll get it this time).
@rightfold Which file?
user142019
22:59
FunctionCodeGen.cpp
user142019
Generator.cpp
(also, I'm pretty sure that Clang should have __debugbreak()... )
user142019
I'm fixing it with #define __debugbreak() ((void)0) :P
Prolly ending around 800 EUR or something
lol

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