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05:02
@ScottW Razodo
no
you're in the river
Or Rasodo to be more correct
lol
hey, does anyone here know if applying ieee floating point reciprocal twice is guaranteed to round trip back to the same value?
like 1.0 / x twice
there are certain identities that actually hold true on floating point, so it's not obvious off the top of my head if this is one of them
05:07
@ScottW Most people learn Japanese because of manga/anime/games/...
Surprisingly, the name you picked is in Hiragana but the generated is in Katakana.
How'd you type it?
@ice-nine just try it
@EiyrioüvonKauyf there's a lot of values to try...almost 2^64 of them?
@EiyrioüvonKauyf i can't seem to find any that don't round trip
@ScottW that's ENOUGH!
05:09
@Mysticial, are you around?
genoeg is genoeg!
@ice-nine ?
Doesn't sound cool in Dutch.
oh wow, that worked
hey, i was wondering if you knew what floating point identities are actually valid...and specifically if 1.0 / (1.0 / x) == x or not?
i'm guessing that fails on denormals at least
@ice-nine That definitely fails for non powers of two.
05:11
but it seems to work on all the normals i tried
are you sure? i know there's an error
but it rounds back to the same value usually
Argh ... I just want sparkling mineral water ... why do they have to add lemon flavour to everything here!!!
Are you compiling with ffast-math or something?
it's not that 1.0 / x is perfectly represented, it's just that if you do it again you happen to round back to what you started
eh, well, it came up in that context, sort of
without getting into the details
it falls out of memory dude
unless rounding
@ScottW Go back to your London wife!
05:12
go take a numerical analysis course :[
error: ‘hexfloat’ is not a member of ‘std’
     std::cout << std::hexfloat;
wait
scott has a real wife o_O
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I.. already know.
No. It's in iomanip/ios.
05:13
in any case, i wonder what identities you actually can count in fp
wait that's not even related
it's in ios
T_T
apparently x + -0.0 == x always, but not x + 0.0
what the llama
it seems like someone ought to have gone through the trouble of compiling a list of these
I can't get hexfloat to work
not even std::ios_base::fixed | std::ios_base::scientific, std::ios_base::floatfield
GCC doesn't do it either
Was just interested. @Mysticial and @ice-nine is this wrong? ^
wat the llama is this
could it just not be implemented yet?
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I guess.
@Rapptz Depends on how it's compiled.
what can i use besides vim -.-"
ueh
i've used vim for too long
and besides emacs
for a quick text editor
05:19
If the intermediate results were done at the same precision as the input and output, then there should be some points that are not one-to-one.
@Mysticial You mean the compiler probably optimised it out?
@Rapptz Possibly. C/C++ allows intermediates to be done at a higher precision.
I'm guessing hexfloat isn't supported.
Just like put_money and get_money.
iomanip was probably neglected.
05:25
hmm, in python (1.0 / (1.0 / x)) == x works from 10^28 down to 10^-27, just trying powers of 10
i wonder if it works for all doubles along that range, not just powers of 10
10^29 actually
anyway, it's apparently not an identity at least
@Rapptz nah i think that was added old.nabble.com/…
@ice-nine i think python does automatic rounding to bignums but you should check
i know it does it for ints; idk about doubles
@Rapptz :[
i think python 2.7 still uses c doubles for float
i'm not sure about python 3
i wouldn't put it past guido to use soft fixed point math just for some notion of "purity"
Gotta be pythonic.
05:33
euh
one thing i hate about python
"lets make this code look like shit so it's pythonic"
^ every python idiot
@Borgleader guy that made python and basically runs it atm
Guido van Rossum
actually, it definitely isn't a particular range of values that round trips
there are some values that round trip and some that don't, even in the range i gave
anyway, i guess that settles it, it's not an identity at all
@Borgleader HxH :P
i wonder what really is, though
other than x + -0.0 == x
05:37
^^ That guy is the person to talk to about FP questions.
I think he's a former committee member.
Do you "know" him or did you just check the badges?
@Borgleader "know" as in, interacted with on SO.
And I remember hearing that he was a committee member.
err, i think i know that guy actually
haha
that's funny, i didn't realize he was on stackoverflow
Xeo
Xeo
Mornin
05:49
Moorniing.
llama
what sounds to llamas make dammit T_T
Xeo
Xeo
06:02
> If you are 100% sure what type the object is, why use auto?
Ugh.
> Conclusion Prefer {} initialization over alternatives unless you have a strong reason not to.
GotW?
Xeo
Xeo
2
Q: Why is list initialization (using curly braces) better than the alternatives?

OleksiyMyClass a1 {a}; // clearer and less error-prone than the other three MyClass a2 = {a}; MyClass a3 = a; MyClass a4(a); Why? I couldn't find an answer on SO, so let me answer my own question. I hope some people find it helpful!

The premise of the question alone is ugh
Xeo
Xeo
He already assumes that it's better.
I linked it to him.
Xeo
Xeo
06:05
> “write code against interfaces, not implementations”
<3
@MarkGarcia It was a reply to his "If you are 100% what type the object is, why use auto"
Check under (Un)readability?
Xeo
Xeo
@MarkGarcia ... that was a link?
I liked that section.
Ah wow that was a link.
I didn't even notice it either.
Xeo
Xeo
Nobody got that
06:06
Yep. :)
I don't like one guideline though.
using auto x = type{a,b,c}; is so dumb to me.
Xeo
Xeo
I don't think that's so bad. Has a better flow of name followed by what it is.
People seems to be very wary of auto.
I wouldn't use auto for defining (not initializing from function) a variable.
@Xeo Yeah I guess but I'd rather do type x; than auto x = type{};.
06:09
> If you use auto a = x * 5someliteral where * returns an expression template, that template has a reference to a temporary object that will be destroyed at the end of the expression.
@Rapptz that
^ Don't expression templates (usually) return objects by value?
Xeo
Xeo
using foo = X;
auto bar = X();
auto baz() -> X;
@StackedCrooked But they don't necessarily store objects
for efficiency reasons
@Xeo ..?
Xeo
Xeo
They likely just have a reference to all the variables involved in the expression
06:11
What is this supposed to show?
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz Just the declaration style I like :)
auto x = std::stringstream{}; // why am I doing this ;_;
Xeo
Xeo
The only problem I really have with that style is the move / copy, even if I trust the compiler to eliminate it. It still bugs me in the back of my head.
well in std::stringstream's case it's the only operator= it has defined.
Xeo
Xeo
No operator= was harmed during the snippet auto x = T{};
06:18
@Xeo Then let's hope Herb would make copy elision the default behavior in the standard.
Xeo
Xeo
ermwhat
If he really wants to push that initialization syntax then he should make that thing that bugs in the back of your head go away! ;)
I've been listening to electro(pop) music lately..
If zip(a, b, c) returns a zip_range<A, B, C> which has a member zipped_ranges which is a tuple of the, well, zipped ranges, what happens for round_robin(a, b, c)?
robin_range<A, B, C> which has a member robin_ranges.
:d
I have no idea what round_robin does.
06:27
I guess a, b and c are paired with each other?
> roundRobin(r1, r2, r3) yields r1.front, then r2.front, then r3.front, after which it pops off one element from each and continues again from r1. For example, if two ranges are involved, it alternately yields elements off the two ranges. roundRobin stops after it has consumed all ranges (skipping over the ones that finish early).
From D.
I've seen the term in use in general in CS. Comes up often when it comes to scheduling, queuing and so on.
How would you code that?
Xeo
Xeo
It only pops after every range has taken its turn?
@Rapptz counter which range's turn it is.
> A round-robin tournament (or all-play-all tournament) is a competition "in which each contestant meets all other contestants in turn"
@Rapptz One step at a time. I need to name the damn things first!
06:29
Oh.. so you call it multiple times and it has state?
That makes sense I guess.
Xeo
Xeo
lazy ranges etc
If you're interested in how writing a range works I recommend not starting with round robin. Mostly because I haven't implemented it (ffs I'm just starting).
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Did you actually have a use for that zipped_ranges yet?
wot
How else can I zipWith?
I'm one of those lame people that just names their proxy objects x_type.
06:32
Fine, but no proxies here.
Hm, so you're doing the counter without a proxy?
wot
2 mins ago, by Luc Danton
If you're interested in how writing a range works I recommend not starting with round robin. Mostly because I haven't implemented it (ffs I'm just starting).
Honestly.
I saw that.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Do you really need the member tuple for that?
I guess I'm misunderstanding how it works.
06:33
@Xeo Yes.
template<typename Self>
static void start_implementation(Self& self)
{ tuples::for_each(self.round_robined_ranges, operators::start {}); }
^ this is what it looks like implementing stuff
Btw bask in the glory of that member name.
Xeo
Xeo
Eh, I'll have to look how you implement zipWith, then. I was thinking of map(uncurry(f), zip(ranges...)) as the implementation.
@Xeo I don't provide it, it's only in my head. And it's map(uncurry(f), zip(r...)) indeed.
Why uncurry?
Xeo
Xeo
f likely doesn't isn't expected to take a tuple
06:37
> :t zipWith
zipWith :: (a -> b -> c) -> [a] -> [b] -> [c]
> :t zip
zip :: [a] -> [b] -> [(a, b)]
> :t uncurry
uncurry :: (a -> b -> c) -> (a, b) -> c
as an asian
we need more curry
FTFY
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Proper primitives are a beautiful thing.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Don't worry, Haskell has curry.
Ye. Keeping the interface tight for the time being. The only exceptions so far are things like take/drop which really alias to slice.
@Xeo ik :3. do you watch dramas btw
46
Q: Why do I have to specify data type each time in C?

Akki619As you can see from the code snippet below, I have declared one char variable and one int variable. When the code gets compiled, it must identify the data types of variables str and i. Why do I need to tell again during scanning my variable that it's a string or integer variable by specifying %s...

4
Q: How is void *a = &a legal?

user2681063Consider the following C++ code: void* a = &a; Why doesn't the compiler complain for using an undeclared identifier? Also, what does the compiler consider the variable a to be? Is it a pointer to a void object or is it a pointer to a void* pointer?

Not UB, no?
Hmmm....
lol at that guy's top answer
Nominated for the stupidest interview question ever. And there’s a stiff competition. — Konrad Rudolph Jan 7 '11 at 10:26
@MarkGarcia Looks defined to me. Before initialization, the content of a isn't defined, but its address clearly is, so using the address to initialize the content is fine.
06:53
@JerryCoffin That's what I also thought.
Though sequence point thingies bring confusion.
How would I assign a useful object to this? — user2681063 34 secs ago
@MarkGarcia Lack of sequence points is most of what causes confusion.
@MarkGarcia Sequence points have always been confusing
@JerryCoffin lol. Of course. Hmmm... That statement is negatively true. :)
@Rapptz Honestly, sequence points is one thing I really want to master in C++.
@MarkGarcia Well they're not in C++11.
?
They're not what?
06:58
Ctrl-F 'sequence point': 2 matches for 'whether sequence pointers are copied [...]'.
@MarkGarcia Too late for that. C++11 uses phrasing like "sequenced before", "sequenced after", "unsequenced" or "indeterminately sequenced with respect to" to describe sequencing (and note that "unsequenced" is different from "indeterminately sequenced").
ok i'm going to do a stupid
what's LLVM 2.7 IR
what's IR
Infrared.
i'm guessing in source assembly?
@LucDanton very funny

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