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22:00
@ThePhD yes
C#, Java, Haskell
Scala
@ThePhD in general, there isn't really a clear line between scripting and nonscripting languages, ergo...
Lol
Scripting in C++.
Lol.
I can't imagine C++ being good for scripting
Ell
Ell
22:01
@MooingDuck There isn't a clear line between them, but I would think most people would say c++ falls under "not scripting"
user1804599
Define "scripting" or STFU.
Many ~~~scripting~~~ languages aren't good for scripting.
Or anything, really.
Try PHP.
you can do a lot of script-type stuff in ML, and that's statically typed
user1804599
Shakespeare is the only scripting language.
i think anything with a REPL can be used for "scripts" in the sense of Unix executable text scripts
user1804599
22:04
There you have it: C#, Haskell and C++ can be used for scripts.
hmm, my catch.hpp is a webpage
user1804599
You saved it wrong.
user1804599
Ik ga slapen.
user1804599
Bye.
22:07
@StephenLin Fuck Unix.
@StephenLin I have seen two C++ REPL thingies.
Ell
Ell
@MooingDuck Really?
@Ell one was an IRC chat bot thing
the other is here
@MooingDuck doesn't that just create an entirely new executable each time? the IRC bot i mean
22:09
@MooingDuck or does it actually maintain state?
Even if it does, it's not invalid REPL implementation.
@StephenLin probably
you can sort of do a REPL through lldb or gdb
@MooingDuck #llvm has a C++ REPL with Clang.
Python saves the compiled bytecode, too.
22:10
Cat,
the repo is called chat-master,
but there's a branch called develop
Do I fork chat-master from develop?
The repo is called LoungeChat now.
You fork entire repositories, not single branches.
Oh. So I merge against develop?
Workflow is on the page. Make yourself a feature branch starting off current develop.
TeamCity why can't you connect to the goddamn MSSQL.
Actually fuck MSSQL.
How do I delete my fork?
There's big red butan, but why do you want to remove it?
22:14
throw it in the bin
Ell
Ell
@MooingDuck Woah
I'm on it and it's awesome
My fork is behind and has the wrong naming, it looks like.
@StephenLin do you work @ uiuc?
You can rename it, but it's not very important.
As for being behind, it'll always fall behind, just pull from the upstream.
Oh, okay.
But still, I want to nuke it. Just for it to feel fresh.
Except I still can't find teh red button.
They've done a good job hiding it. D:
22:16
git reset --hard ?
It's in the repo settings.
kill it all <3
In the Danger Zone.
REPL C++ scares me
the only thing with a REPL should be a dynamic language :[
REPL?
Ell
Ell
22:17
read eval print loop
or a light scripting language like Lua/ Scheme
Ell
Ell
like a python/ruby shell shell
^
python or ruby mostly is what i'm thinking
Your language classification is hilariously arbitrary.
@CatPlusPlus nah i'm good
Lua ( , from meaning moon; explicitly not "LUA") is a lightweight multi-paradigm programming language designed as a scripting language with "extensible semantics" as a primary goal. Lua is cross-platform since it is written in ISO C. Lua has a relatively simple C API, thus "Lua is especially useful for providing end users with an easy way to program the behavior of a software product without getting too far into its innards." History Lua was created in 1993 by Roberto Ierusalimschy, Luiz Henrique de Figueiredo, and Waldemar Celes, members of the Computer Graphics Technology Group (T...
> lightweight ... scripting language
Ell
Ell
22:19
@CatPlusPlus Mine? o.O
Sorry, it's not arbitrary if Wikipedia says so~
: [
i forgot you have a problem with wikipedia
@StephenLin :c
sour grapes
Um...
Where is the VS working directory usually?
I realized lately that I pretty much only use exceptions as "task failed" and ignore the type of the exception in 99.9% of cases. Is that normal?
@Pawnguy7 Space.
22:23
@Pawnguy7 $SolutionName/$ConfigurationName
we don't even use exceptions in llvm
everything is an assert
Great choice.
Ell
Ell
why? :3
@StephenLin and in release mode when user inputs invalid data?
Because error checking is for chumps.
22:24
then it asserts and fails
it's a compiler
I am not certain what the configuration one would be. There is Debug and Source (I made source).
it's better to fail than to generate invalid code
@Pawnguy7 default configuration is "Debug"
assert is for checking invariants. User input is not an invariant.
@StephenLin better still would be to display an error message and clean up
22:25
well, llvm is not user-facing
i don't mean the front end (clang)
i mean the llvm backend
Library user is still a user.
all the input to llvm it supposed to be scrubbed already
Great design.
so if the library user makes a mistake, his process will crash and he has no opportunity for recovery.
not to mention that in some places, LLVM simply prints to the console and then terminates, even if you explicitly ask it not to.
plus, LLVM is one of the most undebuggable libraries ever, with a dozen opaque types that the debugger can't interpret
::shrug:: you can complain to the llvm dev lists if it's a problem
22:27
I did complain to #llvm.
you can propose something on llvmdev
I don't use LLVM, so I'll just continue laughing at the horrible design that breaks API 101.
the error handling and assertions in LLVM is extremely user-unfriendly and definitely one of the worst aspects of it.
if there's an alternative you think is better, you can submit patches
I could, if I wanted to refactor the entire of LLVM and Clang.
not to mention that many of Clang's APIs are pretty terrible, refactoring it would be less of a refactor and more of a reinvention
22:29
well, i don't know that much about clang
if you use llvm its usually enough to just generate llvm IR
if you generate sane code and use a mature backend, it should be pretty smooth sailing
so in other words, it's fine as long as nothing goes wrong.
if you're using an experimental backend, it's probably because you're developing it yourself
the backend has nothing to do with it.
I'm authoring a front end.
most of the asserts are in places where backends don't support certain patterns yet
the middle end is pretty free from asserts i think
@MooingDuck It seems that it works when it is SolutionName/SolutionName. Looking back up, though, I forgot to mention, this is for 2012. Apparently I thought I told you, sorry.
22:30
as long as you generate valid IR
LLVM's assertions are very unhelpful error text, the way they're written means the debugger can't tell you shit about what's going on, and forced process termination is exceedingly unhelpful.
@StephenLin That's an utterly unhelpful precondition.
generating valid IR?
yep.
well, i don't maintain a front end, so i don't know
but it doesn't seem that difficult
You cannot assert validity of the IR.
22:31
obviously, if I generate invalid IR, then not only do I expect LLVM to tell me, in detail, exactly what went wrong
there's a verify pass that does most of it
but I also expect it to let me choose how to recover from the problem.
It's a precondition, not an invariant.
opt -verify
@CatPlusPlus Well, you can't assert that it'll execute how you intend, but you can verify some aspects of it.
@StephenLin A good part of which is the problem to which I am referring.
22:32
@Pawnguy7 Probably SolutionName/ProjectName, where ProjectName happens to be the same as the SolutionName
Oh. Yes. To me solution = project, never quite understood the difference.
@Pawnguy7 Solutions contain multiple projects.
@DeadMG LLVM can assert its internal stuff, e.g. how it lowers the data structures to actual IR. But not anything that comes from the library user, is what I'm saying.
well, if you have suggestions on refactoring that apply specifically to the verifier (which is all based on a particular pattern, so could be refactored to do something else in a somewhat contained way)
the Wide solution contains Lexer, Semantic, Codegen, Driver, etc.
22:33
then you can suggest it on the list
i haven't gotten the attention that this is a huge problem for most people
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, I agree. If LLVM's internals have gone kablooey, then an assertion probably is appropriate, since I'd never understand anyway.
but i don't know
but if the user gave invalid IR
22:34
my brethren are confused
@Pawnguy7 in general, each output exe/dll/lib/etc is a project. The solution is the whole thing togeather
@StephenLin In my experience, both LLVM and Clang actually deal with very very few external developers.
i would consider a middle end assert anywhere other than the verifier a bug, though
i mean, an assert that fires
an assert in the verifier is definitely a bug.
what do you mean? that's what it's there for
22:35
the verifier's job is to tell me what went wrong, not crash and die.
to verify
well, ok
right.
and a verification failure should not be an assertion.
well, those all go through specific helper functions
so, you're free to propose that those helper functions do something different
and doubly so, it should not be an assertion contained in some macro in some loop where the debugger can't tell you shit about what the trigger was.
and triply so, the assertion error message should be written so that the user can understand it.
llvm policy is to assert as liberally as possible though
in general
22:36
well, LLVM policy is fucked, then.
an assertion is utterly the wrong tool for invalid user input.
the idea is that if you're not 100% sure you're during the right thing, you shouldn't even try
well, you might be right about the verifier
you could fix that without too much refactoring
all the other asserts are supposed to be there to make sure that invariants that were supposed to already be checked and stable remain so
@StephenLin If I don't do something correctly, then LLVM has two responsibilities. The first is to communicate to me clearly and in as much detail as possible what I did that was incorrect. And the second is to let me handle the error. Having an assertion forcibly crash my process is extremely unhelpful.
the existing assertions serve neither purpose.
blah, finally figured out why my code is failing, unicode exe linking with ascii dll :/
Ell
Ell
And go to your room. NOW!
well, the asserts outside the verifier can't tell you anything, since they assert things that are supposed to be invariant post-verification
22:37
@MooingDuck Lolwat, how is that possible?
so if they somehow fail, it's because of something the developer hadn't thought of
@ThePhD there's nothing to prevent it
you have a point about the verifier though
and well, that all goes through helper functions in the verifier
so maybe there ought to be a cleaner interface to it
...and said dll doesn't compile as unicode.
@ThePhD I had MSVC link debug and release CRT at the same time into one executable.
22:38
there's no reason not to go to the list and suggest it, as long as it doesn't impose extra runtime cost if you are ok with the existing behavior
@CatPlusPlus o.0
That's pretty badass.
it wouldn't really be that hard, probably would just be some other handling code in a macro
@CatPlusPlus I've never seen it suceed at doing that O.o
@StephenLin If I wanted to treat my frontend as known valid, I simply wouldn't run the verifier and wouldn't link to the debug build.
the asserts outside the verifier have to be asserts, really, since they can't really tell you any other information than that an invariant got violated
22:39
so many macros
so really
the performance of the debugging build ain't that important.
and I speak as a guy who had to wait five minutes every time Clang included the Windows header in debug mode.
well, you can suggest some other error handling in the verifier...i'm don't think there's any resistance to the idea on principle
well
as long as you can opt out of it and get the asserts if that's all you need
i amsaying that outside the verifier you can't really do much but assert, though
apparently, the fact that a bunch of people don't like the idea of exceptions and the current code won't be exception safe is a real problem for making the error handling worth using
22:41
because how the heck do you know how an invariant got violated halfway through an optimization pipeline?
They should throw a Terminating Exception
there's no good way to figure it out if it made it past verification...it's probably a bug in some other optimizer but there's no way the person checking the invariant is going to be able to tell you that
struct Terminator : std::runtime_error {

     Terminator ( ) : std::runtime_error( "Muahahaa" ) {
          kill( 0x1337 );
     }

};
and there's no way llvm is going to run verification after ever pass by default
i think there's an option for verify-after-all though
so that might narrow it down to the pass causing the issue
yeah, opt -verify-each
anyway, i can see how providing your own error handling routine for the verifier could be useful, if you're embedded llvm as a library
i honestly think you should propose it if you think it's worth it...i don't have enough experience to know what the community would say
there might be something there already, even
i don't know
you're not going to get around the fact that every function in llvm liberally asserts to verify invariants though, that's just fundamental to llvm's design philosophy
if they fire it's either a bug in the verifier or a feature not yet implemented in that particular backend, though
sorry, bug in the verifier, or bug in one of the previous optimization passes before the one asserting
i think the main issue is that most of the users of llvm are actually users of clang
so the experiences of people writing their own front ends directly don't get as much attention
@ThePhD Excellent, I just found out the header says the function takes const wchar_t*, when the actual implementation takes const char*.
22:54
I guess compiling without asserts isn't a really good option either for the front-end developers.
that was my experience of developing for Clang, too.
you don't get much attention/support unless you're developing Clang, as opposed to developing with Clang.
I mean, Clang as a library, OK it's better than GCC, but holy shit, it's terrible.
@MooingDuck .... Loooooooooooooooool.
@ThePhD this bug has been in our code for 13+ years O.o
@MooingDuck How... how does it go on that long?
Is it just, there's so much ASCII that nobody can tell?
@ThePhD yeah, only about 40% of our projects are compiled with TCHAR == wchar_t. The other 60% are still ASCII.
22:57
@MooingDuck Bleehhh.
wchar_t everything.
Related, 95% of our code is still 32 bit because the conversion is too hard O.o
I've been too afraid to ask why it might be hard
:c
Get out while you're still sane.
actually, code is garbage, but the people/bosses are awesome, so I actually enjoy it here
Ell
Ell
2 hours for 90mb :(
Heh, youtube shows alert popup if you try to reveal a comment which no longer exists.

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