I think stackoverflow.com is great, and I would like to contribute. Usually, I find the answers to my questions already there. I'd like to upvote the best answers and questions, but I do not have any reputation here. How do I get initial reputation?
The canonical way seems to ask a question....
@stacked yeah, crazy right. It only occurred to me it was a Sunday when I just went out to try and buy some shot glasses and all the shops were closed >.<
@nightcracker First, narrow the applicable part down from 1000+ lines to the lines where those ~60/90 cycles happen. Even at maximum IPC, that can only work out to ~180 instructions (at least for the ~60 cycle case), and it's likely to be noticeably less.
user1804599
I do not like how Stack Overflow highlights template arguments. :(
@nightcracker A typical processor can only retire 3 instructions per cycle, max. Code from a compiler will rarely exceed 2 instructions per cycle. Therefore, 60 cycles will only translate to ~120-180 instructions at most. If you have any instructions that are very complex (e.g., multiplication or division) that reduces the number even further.
I'm pretty sure that a modern Intel CPU can push something like one 256-bit vectorization, two loads, two stores, two integer ops, and two floating-point ops per cycle.
How can the theoretical peak performance of 4 floating point operations (double precision) per cycle be achieved on a modern x86-64 Intel cpu?
As far as I understand it take 3 cycles for an sse add and 5 cycles for a mul to complete on most of the modern Intel cpu's (see e.g. Agner Fog's 'Instru...
@DeadMG It sounds to me like you're thinking of how many can be in flight, which is on the order of dozens or so. Decode and retirement per cycle is much more limited. An i7 (for example) can decode a maximum of four instructions per cycle. Offhand, I don't remember the limit for retirement with absolute certainty, but it's about the same (and almost never more than the decode rate).
@A.H. They can/will reduce execution rate even further.
right now, I'm considering that First() returns a range, which is 0 elements if the source range is empty, or 1 element which is the first element of that range.
@DeadMG as a C# fanboy I would recommend looking at LINQ - it has First when you're asserting that it's not empty, and FirstOrDefault when you're not sure ;)
@nightcracker I'm sure there's a way to disable it. I built it and it's OC-able, but I haven't messed with the CPU settings other than to get the ram to run up to speed.
maybe some of the C# people have more than half a clue, but they don't seem to have much influence, and they're massively constrained by the giant cockup that was C# 1.0.
@Jefffrey that, and I am still a bit scared git will eat everything :D. Also, much like with design, I hesitate to know when something is... right - right time to commit, in this case.
@DeadMG 1.0 didn't have LINQ, and this is the only part I was referring to, as an example of a group of well-named functions, very intuitive to use. I don't know anything about Wide, but in the context you've provided seems that indeed OrDefault version is unnecessary here.
@DeadMG I'm pretty sure that nothing can force you to choose unreadable and stupid function names. Not sure however what do you mean in particular in this case - if some internal linq issues then you may be right, I don't know.
@DeadMG not having to hack with unions/storage for trivial destructors to make it a literal type, no messing around with operator< being std::less et al, no need to actually include a file, and don't have to deal with std::optional<std::optional<T>> in generic context because well, it isn't likely to happen unless the language supports it.
@BartoszKP What I mean is, the First() designers can't choose to return an IEnumerable<T> like I did, because going from IEnumerable<T> to, say, T? is difficult/impossible, thanks to the moronic way IEnumerable was designed in C# 1.0
@DeadMG Is there a place where the flaws of IEnumerable are explained? (I know someone wrote a post on why everything deriving from object was a bad idea IIRC)
@Rapptz 1 is an implementation detail (and really C++-specific because C++ sucks), the whole std::less thing is a total debacle and optional is hardly the only sufferer, same is true for including things (but I don't feel that #include <optional> is a big burden), and optional<optional<T>> would come up in generic contexts regardless of if it's a language or library.
@DeadMG Not sure I understand. They could choose to return an IEnumerable<T> but that would make the name unsuitable. First returns the first element - it's a as simple as that. If you want IEnumerable returned you use Where.
@DeadMG all right, so I'd find first misleading for such behaviour, although I see your point. can't think of anything better then skipwhile for the moment. your case is rather skipuntil but it's also not very neat.
@DeadMG Yes -- you want to cast to unsigned char before passing to isdigit (or any isXXX). Otherwise characters outside ASCII will typically be negative, and give UB.
@BartoszKP Depends on the situation. Just for example, C and C++ source code don't support negative literals at all (something like -57 is parsed as a unary negation operator followed by a literal with no sign).
Okay, I’ve undone the merge, now I just need to figure out how to rebase the branch … I’m not sure “rebase” is the correct terminology here, since I want to rebase it back in history, rather than forward
does anyone know why integral user-defined literals can only to be defined using unsigned long long? (i.e.myType operator"" _myLit (unsigned long long)