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Ell
Ell
23:00
it's done that forever? o.O
> Why don't you come to the Stack Overflow C++ Chat? We love C++, we think it can absolutely be used right, and we know how to do that, and we'd be totally happy to share.
^DeadMG on "Can Java be used for serious gamedev?"
OH wait.

C++

Friendly conversation, including C++ talk — NOT the "Lounge"!
Ell
Ell
I thought he was being sarcy about java
I need to start reading
who said that
and why
> we'd be totally happy to share
LOL
not the sharing they're thinking of
Ell
Ell
Ima play Don't Starve
@MooingDuck lol
23:09
@Ell i feel like most people do that everyday
hmmm @CatPlusPlus can you code in other languages?
like a compiler with errors in french?
:[ so i can only code in english?
i can't have si() { } autre si( ) {} ... ?
:[ ... am i the only one that thinks that's bad
So
I think I've figured out
23:14
it's sort of annoying to speak only uhhh... german and have to code in english
how to read Unicode in reverse.
Which means I'll be able to bi-directionally iterate over codepoints.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf please don't
@ThePhD Congratulations? You always could.
it's random-access which I find fun.
@A.H. it's ok i can recompile python with translations
<3
..... or just have a macro that does string replace meh
You can't achieve instantaneous random-access with a buffer of bytes representing encoded code points for UTF16/8
You can't achieve that with any variable-width encoding. :c
23:23
depends on the structure of the buffer
and yes, you totally can.
Ell
Ell
@ThePhD why not? :O
std::vector<std::vector<codepoint>> :P
for any variable-width encoding whose width has a maximum.
and possibly, even for those which don't have a maximum but the maximum size must be finite.
The only way to directly index into the storage of the codepoints would be to allocate a full 3/4 bytes per unicode character and then index directly into that.
But that's not how UTF8 or UTF16 works.
Random access is not very useful.
I think Robot dropped it altogether.
23:26
He did.
There's no operator[] on his text classes.
@ThePhD Nope, there are other ways of doing it.
@DeadMG How?
deque.
Are you going to do the stupid deque nonsense and argue it's still technically under the lower bouyd or w/e
SEE
GODDAMN DEQUE
Doesn't even count. DOESn'T EVEN COUNT
there's nothing technical about it.
if you use a deque structure, you can index in O(1).
23:28
Well, I didn't say O(1). I want single-instruction random access. So there. D:<
vector doesn't offer that either.
Instantaneous, yo.
also
@DeadMG It totally does! &myvec[0] + 25; // 25th element in a single instruction, yo
Or just myvec[25]
er, that's two instructions.
23:29
That's not a single instruction. :v
Or just myvec.data() + 25
at least.
WELLLL
What I'm gettign at is there's no checking and iterating over anything but what coutns. :v
neither is there if you use the deque.
obviously the implementation has to do stuff like that.
but it's not something the user has to deal with.
I don't see how.
23:31
ok
fragmented chunks of data still means I have to go and check and read off codepoint counts before I get to what I want
no, it means the implementation has to do a bit of extra reading.
the user does not have to do any such thing, the codepoint is entirely assembled by the implementation.
also, there are no fragmented codepoints, each one is entirely in one or another chunk for the deque.
Well, that's what I mean. The implementation still has to do extra reading. So it's not useful random access.
well, the extra reading is arbitrarily low, depending on what kind of tradeoffs you want to make.
And it has to do reading that scales with the number of codepoints it has inside of itself.
23:34
no, it doesn't.
it's O(1) extra reading.
How?
It wouldn't be O(1) if it scaled.
same way as a deque normally works.
a deque is an array of arrays, right?
vector<unique_ptr<array<T, N>>>, give or take
A list of arrays I think.
It's not a list of arrays IIRC. I used to think that, but Xeo correct me on that.
23:35
But each array in the array of arrays contains a variable number of bytes.
@ThePhD Right, but it contains a fixed number of codepoints.
and therefore, the maximum number of bytes is also fixed.
@DeadMG A fixed maximum, maybe.
in the worst case
even if I have C UTF-8 codepoints in the sub-buffer, and they are all maximally sized, and I try to access the last one, I will only have to read C-1 codepoints to find the last one.
5
Q: STL internals: deque implementation

cprogrammerI am using a std::deque for storing a large collection of items. I know that deques is implemented as a list of vectors. The size of those vectors cannot be set but I wander what is the algorithm for choosing that size.

vector<unique_ptr<array<byte, 16>>> <-- that's either 16 ASCII characters or something like 4/5 UTF8 Kanji
23:37
all that matters is the maximum.
it's a maximum of 4 codepoints.
so even if I try to access the last one, I will only have to search three preceeding codepoints to find it.
and if you ask me for the Nth codepoint, I can access the N/4'th subbuffer (accessed in O(1) because it's a vector) and search there, searching an absolute maximum of 3 codepoints.
then I guarantee to find the one you requested.
Deque array of arrays:
[ 'A', 'B', 'C', '0xE6', '0x97', '0xA5' ] -- 4 codepoints
[ '0xE6', '0x97', '0xA5', '0xE6', '0x97', '0xA5' ] -- 2 codepoints

Find the 5th codepoint
sure.
n/4 is 1, so I search in the 1-index sub-buffer.
then 5 % 4 is also 1, so I search forward one codepoint and I find the 5-index codepoint.
0
Q: Java program works in Windows but not in Mac

abacabaHi I have done a program that send a screen capture over a socket. Well, it works if I take the screen capture in the mac and send it to the windows pc, but if i want to take the screen capture in windows and send it to the mac it just send part of the file... Here is the client public class En...

assuming that by "5th" you meant "An index of 5", because, y'know, 0-indexing and stuff.
^^ so much for write once, run everywhere. :P
23:43
Okay
Deque array of arrays:
[ 'A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F' ] -- 6 codepoints
[ 'G', 'H', 'I', 'J', 'K', 'L' ] -- 6 codepoints

Find the 5th codepoint
sure.
n / 6 = 0, so I search in the 0-index subbuffer.
then I search forward 5 % 6 == 5 codepoints and I find the codepoint.
... That doesn't make any sense.
Before you used n / 4
yes.
You're basing it off the maximum that's kept in a deque at any given time?
the constant is the maximum number of codepoints in each subbuffer.
23:44
So you're keeping track of the maximum?
no, it's the maximum in any sub buffer.
which you would normally set to be constant, but you could make it a variable if you really wanted to go changing the data structure like that.
Okay
Deque array of arrays:
[ 'A' ] -- 1 codepoints
[ 'G', 'H', 'I', 'J', 'K', 'L' ] -- 6 codepoints

Find the 5th codepoint in this setup?
illegal structure.
I see.
well, it might not be illegal, because you know, double-ended instead of single-ended, but that merely involves special-casing the first subbuffer, so it's a bit of a detail.
23:46
So in the end you'd have to count the maximum number of codepoints in any subbuffer, keep that information, and then index into the subbuffer based on that.
you don't count it, you set it as a constant beforehand.
.... But it's not constant.
the number of codepoints per sub buffer is a constant, it cannot be changed.
You can only guarantee that you can fit X number of bytes, not codepoints.
@ThePhD Well, since I know that each codepoint is at maximum 4 bytes, then those two guarantees are equivalent.
23:48
... So you have an over-allocating buffer.
yep
so what? vector does that when it reallocates too.
Ell
Ell
recalls something about phd saying about 3/4
That... kind of defeats the whole point, but if you can do that then it's ezmode. ._.
well, not really.
just set C = 1 and off you go if you really need the memory.
it's a tradeoff.
Even C=1 doesn't maxpack
23:49
well, strictly, you could simply dynamically reallocate the buffer.
well, you could dynamically reallocate it in both cases and use a vector instead of an array.
C = 1, UTF8
Deque
arr 0: [ 'A', 0, 0, 0 ]
arr 1: [ '0xE6', '0x97', '0xA5', '0' ]
Optimally, that'd all be in arr 0
you could swap unique_ptr<array<T, N>> with vector<T>.
If you're upper-limiting the number of codepoints with array<T,N> or keeping track of it manually and using vector<T>, sure you can fast-index into it, at the cost of excessive amounts of memory as the string gets bigger.
well, yes, there is a memory cost.
I never said that there was not
Hm.
Well, okay.
23:53
ultimately it's a tradeoff about how bad you want random access.
If it's not free it's not worth it.
lolwot.
every data structure has tradeoffs.
no property of any structure is for free.
Well, for something like an immutable string,
the goal is for fast access to individual codepoints.
I'm not really seeing that immutability is an advantage here.
Shrugs.
@DeadMG I just tried the code with a fresh build of LLVM/CLang, x86 Debug, using v110 (VS 2012) version of the tools. It seemed to work.
23:59
@DeadMG I'm going to disagree, but since they're free, they're always there, and we take them for granted and forget about them

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