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18:00
> I'm an experienced programmer, specialising in creating high performance software for Linux using C++.

I live in FARIDABAD, INDIA.
new <- HIGHPERFORMANCE SOFTWARE
experienced in what? :0
programming, you silly
user1804599
@BartoszKP experienced in writing terrible C++ code.
@ScottW Not that I understand women mind, but I doubt.... Oh, wait, I get it ;0
user1804599
18:06
-3
Q: How to get reputation on stack overflow

andreas.abelI 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....

user1804599
This was on Stack Overflow in .
:DDD
the only answer should be "learn how to read" ;0
user1804599
Please format your code correctly. Nobody is going to look at code that looks like output from /dev/random. — not-rightfold 5 secs ago
18:08
@Mysticial yo I have a question
go for it
same code, GCC 4.8.1 and clang 3.3
clang is 35 cycles faster
(on a total of 96 cycles)
I can't really spot a crucial difference in the assembly though (like, they're obviously different, but no different structure or anything)
ideally I'd like to track down what clang does and "backport" it to my code
(note, on linux the difference disappears)
Ell
Ell
Ima have a party guise
have fun
btw, party at Sunday evening?
@Mysticial any way I should tackle this? (I could send you the assembly files if you want, they're ~30kb, 1200 lines)
18:12
@nightcracker I've seen differences like that happen between MSVC and ICC. Sometimes with ICC being the slower one.
@nightcracker I'm so not gonna look at 1200 lines... lol :)
Ell
Ell
@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 >.<
lol
how was your last party?
party? seems you have a life, what are you doing here? :0
user1804599
18:17
@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. :(
@JerryCoffin I mean assembly lines
@JerryCoffin the C code is about 100 LOC
@nightcracker So do I. That's why I talked about instructions.
hmm.
this never occurred to me before, but I guess that Find(pred) is really Filter(pred) but where pred only triggers once.
@JerryCoffin then I'm confused - those 1000 lines ARE the 90 cycles, except 4 times in parallel
to be fair, I'm not confused, I was confusing - sorry for that
18:22
@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.
@StackedCrooked the last gathering i went to we player magic the ... gathering
@JerryCoffin Er, I thought it was a lot more than 3 right now.
user1804599
I feel drunk.
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.
@JerryCoffin this has nothing to do with "rare", I'm specifically designing something to saturate the CPU for maximum throughput ;)
18:23
I know that the CPU in the Xbox One can do two FP, two integer, and two loads or stores.
@JerryCoffin (an encryption algorithm is the general theme, but working on a little side project right now, which is very similar)
right now I'm doing ~1200 instructions in 384 cycles with clang
284
Q: how to achieve 4 FLOPs per cycle

user1059432How 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...

Something like this?
@JerryCoffin what about hazards and such ?
gcc compiles the exact same code to ~1100 instructions taking 531 cycles
@Borgleader no, I'm actually computing something useful here, rather than trying to waste watts ;)
@Borgleader but the idea of designing an algorithm that can optimally abuse the instruction-level parallelism in a processor is very similar
@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.
18:30
@JerryCoffin Yeah, you might be right
why doesn't intel implement _mm_roti_epi32 :(
assuming all further things staying equal, and a 1 cycle throughput _mm_roti_epi32 would make my encryption algorithm competetive with AES-NI in speed
@Borgleader Speaking of which, I should probably update that project for AMD Bulldozer FMA instructions.
Or at least, re-tune it.
@Mysticial is that the pc you built the other day?
@Borgleader Yeah
@Mysticial do you know any processors with en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XOP_instruction_set
18:34
But right now I'm too busy trying to get my super-optimizer/auto-tuner to work on it.
@nightcracker That would be the one I just built.
oooh mm
would you.. eeh.. mind benchmarking some code at some point for me?
AMD has had them since Bulldozer. Mine is Piledriver - 2nd gen Bulldozer.
@Mysticial Auto-tune is for shitty singers... why do you need it :P
@nightcracker Sure. Gimme me a least a day though since it's - well, running that auto-tuner right now. :)
What is it about eating food that makes you feel... sluggish?
18:36
@Borgleader :)
@Mysticial what features exactly does your CPU support?
(for my compiler)
@Jefffrey not sure, I considered it to be a very short term project at the time, and wasn't sure if SFML would/will work.
@R.MartinhoFernandes: Poke?
is there any point to having Find() if you have Filter() and First()?
18:38
or hell, even just Filter.
@nightcracker You're still limited by the hardware to a lot less than 1200 instructions in 60 (or even 90) clocks.
^^ short answer - a lot of instructions.
But it's not quite a super-set of Intel Haswell though.
@DeadMG is it supposed to be like first $ filter odd [1,2,3,4,5,6] == 1?
@JerryCoffin same function, GCC: ~1100 instruction, 531 cycles clang: ~1200 instructions, 384 cycles
18:39
@Rapptz Yeah.
@Mysticial no AVX2 ;(
it seems pointless to have range | find(odd) compared to range | filter(odd) | first().
@nightcracker Nope. AMD's not gonna have it until like next year.
Ell
Ell
@stacked my last party was pretty good. Apart from the fact I got drunk then threw up and exposed myself while doing so :/
oh find takes in a predicate?
why doesn't it take a value
18:40
@Rapptz doesnt it have both versions?
well, Find(value) is just Find(x => x == value);
@Mysticial is getting a binary OK for you, or do you want assembly (or even source)?
there's little point in having Find(value) except to forward to Find(predicate).
(don't worry, I know you won't have time today, but just so I can have the binary (or whatever) ready for when you do)
@DeadMG you good at naming things?
18:41
Oh find in Haskell takes a predicate
not especially.
Physical keeps striking me as stupid.
but head $ filter odd xs wouldn't work on an empty list, whereas find odd xs would give you Nothing
@nightcracker Binary is fine. There's nothing on that computer for you to infect anyway. :P
what, head on an empty list doesn't give you Nothing?
18:42
Not even source code. :)
nope
@DeadMG Find often is implemented to return index, as opposed to Filter
@BartoszKP Fuck non-generic indices.
@DeadMG just spotting the difference :) true that find in this form is rarely used
in C++ it returns an iterator.
that's not so bad (except for the whole iterator thing).
18:44
there's findIndex if you want the index in Haskell.
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.
@Mysticial does it have turbo boost
@nightcracker Yes it does. I think up to 4.7 GHz under the right conditions.
But I've never seen it go about 4.2 GHz on full load.
18:45
won't that screw up the profile?
What profile?
@Pawnguy7 What is that an answer to?
benchmark*
@Jefffrey "if you are ok with it" or something. Github.
@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 ;)
18:47
@Pawnguy7 Oh, ok. No problem.
@BartoszKP Fuck that shit.
@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.
the C# people only have half a clue what they're doing at best.
So I should be able to lock the multiplier at a fixed value.
@DeadMG seems you know them all very well :S
18:48
well, OK
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.
I'll be OC'ing the machine later. (probably next week)
@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.
anyway
For example, oftentimes, changes don't compile unless you do it all at once.
But typically with me, that means if it does compile, it is a bunch of random changes.
the design I've suggested is more viable in Wide because ranges are based on optional.
so it would be easy to do if (auto val = range | first()) { // etc }.
18:50
@Pawnguy7 I understand. :)
Although.
You can help me come up with a better name.
@Pawnguy7 What the fuck even ... wat.
would be neat to have optional as a language feature rather than library
@Rapptz Unnecessary.
@DeadMG I need a more descriptive variant to provide an answer.
18:52
I don't think so.
@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.
I think int? would be neat.
@Rapptz What benefits would you gain from having it as part of the language?
@BartoszKP It didn't have LINQ, but it did force the design of LINQ and practically everything else in the future.
@Pawnguy7 What on earth even is a Physical.
That is the problem.
user1804599
@DeadMG a base class.
18:54
@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.
It is... a rectangular object, that has speed on both ... what is the plural of axis? Anyway, it moves it given speed, correctly.
Just off the top of my head.
iunno, might be complaining/wishing too hard. I'm fine with optional being a library but I think it'd be neat to have it as a language feature.
@Pawnguy7 Plural of axis is axes.
@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
user1804599
18:55
y u no interesting questions.
@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.
Hm. Gotta eat.
@BartoszKP Well, it's not really as simple as that. Because you've lost information- where the first element was.
if I ask for the first element that matches a predicate, then you have to find it to give it back to me.
what I'm really saying is that First should return a tuple of element, and location.
19:00
Pizza time. See ya all later.
I had pizza. Hrm.
@Mysticial will intel ever implement XOP/rebranded XOP? Or in particular _mm_roti_epi32
@DeadMG But it does exactly what the name tells you. If you want index, then you're looking for IndexOf for a collection, not an ienumerable
@DeadMG but index doesn't always makes sense for IEnumerable
location != index.
@BartoszKP I did something wrong.
19:03
here's a simple example.
imagine that I have a range (say, IEnumerable<char>) that reads from a file.
@DeadMG oh right, you mean the iterator thing. anyway, ienumerable is also too abstract for location. If you need location use list, or array
@BartoszKP No, it isn't.
just give back an IEnumerable that represents the rest of the range.
@DeadMG if you need this, use Skip or SkipWhile
@GamesBrainiac ?
19:05
@BartoszKP I debugged someone's entire program for them, for free too :(
lol
@GamesBrainiac you sell-out, 50 push-ups for punishment for you ;0
@BartoszKP SkipWhile isn't far off, I guess.
but he asked so nicely
user1804599
strtok is thread unsafe. Avoid it like the plague. — rightfold 11 secs ago
user1804599
19:05
ughtok
@not-rightfold you look old
user1804599
I am 18.
Whoah, you're pretty talented for 18 man.
I'm 18 too
hurr
@rightfold Srsly, a try { first(); } catch(...) { second(); } approach?
user1804599
19:08
Why not. vOv
user1804599
I have no idea how to do it otherwise without first checking if all the characters are digits, which I find fugly.
@rightfold That's called "lexing" and it's how these things are implemented.
user1804599
if (std::all_of(string.begin(), string.end(), &isdigit)) {
    items.push_back(boost::lexical_cast<int>(string));
} else {
    items.push_back(std::move(string));
}
user1804599
This better? :v
@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.
19:12
@rightfold A bit. ISTR that isdigit has some nasty cases where it can be UB depending on the input?
user1804599
I don’t know. It’s a C function so probably.
user1804599
I find the try/catch approach beautiful and easy to understand.
@rightfold what about negative numbers ? ;0
user1804599
Heh.
@nightcracker No idea. They might implement similar instructions, but unlikely they will actually implement XOP.
19:14
@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.
@rightfold as @DeadMG pointed out, your problems have been solved 10000 years ago :0 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_analysis
user1804599
I know what a lexer is, thanks.
user1804599
And I think writing a fully-fletched lexer with manual character-by-character processing is overkill for this simple problem.
@rightfold why do you implement it in such an odd way then? ;0
@rightfold all right, fair point
19:17
@not-rightfold sorry, after you've said that you're 18 I started assuming that you probably don't know anything :P
can I undo a branch merge in git, rebase the other branch onto master (it was accidentally based on some other branch) and then repeat the merge?
user1804599
If you need to support quoting or other complex patterns, a more sophisticated lexer is probably a good idea.
@Mysticial I want one of them mill CPUs (have you watched that yet or is it still on your unending list of things to do? :P)
@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).
@Borgleader me too
my encryption algorithm is embarrasingly parallel so it would be pretty fast I think
19:18
@JerryCoffin nice point, I wouldn't have thought of that. That makes this simple, cool
I wonder if it could be simulated on an FPGA >.>
@Borgleader what?
@Borgleader I've seen that. Too far ahead for me to worry about. :)
@KonradRudolph Did you push?
@Borgleader the dude with the awesome hair ?
19:20
@Rapptz no
@Borgleader fuck that shit, lets build it on a breadboard
@nightcracker The mill architecture, I wonder if one could make a working "mill CPU" on an FPGA
@Mysticial Oh cmon, be proactive :P ycruncher first app to officially support mill cpus!
though if you didn't delete the local branch I would just do git reset --hard HEAD~n where n is the number of commits merged.
19:23
@Rapptz Thanks, gonna take a look
try git reflog then look for the sha of the last commit you did to master and do git reset --hard <sha>?
@Borgleader Undoubtedly could. Ignoring a few ever-so-minor details like clock speed, an FPGA can do anything custom silicon can.
@KonradRudolph You should be able to undo the merge with git reset --hard HEAD^
@Mysticial Hard to say -- they did copy x86-64 from AMD with virtually no alterations.
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
but I’ll just try it, actually
nope, that does nothing
19:32
@KonradRudolph Can you explain what you are trying to do more concretely? I mean give an example similar to what you are trying to do.
Wait, gimme a sec to draw an ASCII diagram
no prob
oh man this gonna be good
So I currently have this:
              E fix-something
             /
        C---D feature1
       /
  A---B master
essentially I accidentally branched fix-something off feature1
what I actually wanted was this:
> oneapro: QT is great yes, but the KDE environment as a whole is trash
twitch.tv chat
19:35
        C---D feature1
       /
  A---B master
       \
        E fix-something
i.e. fix something in the master without taking over the changes from feature1
@KonradRudolph git rebase --onto master feature1 fix-something should do the trick
wow, that is absolute magic
and that undoes the changeset D in fix-something without removing it from feature1?
Yes, it should
user1804599
@KonradRudolph It isn’t.
user1804599
Any Turing machine is capable of doing it. There is no need for magic.
19:38
@Code-Guru That's what I always say if the manager asks me if the bug fix will work on production ;0
@rightfold o wow
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
I used to perform magic tricks.
Amazing, it worked :)
thanks a lot @Code-Guru
@KonradRudolph no prob
nice to see that a 201k doesn't know everything ;-)
user1804599
19:40
@Code-Guru Then why do I still have to wipe my ass manually?
@rightfold apparently you don't have sufficiently advanced technology...or magic...to do it for you
user1804599
It’s magic, but only for sufficiently advanced values of technology.
@rightfold In Japan you don't.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked They poop as much as they have sex?
No they have advanced toilets.
19:44
@rightfold Besides don't you have a bidet?
user1804599
@Code-Guru bidets don’t wipe my ass.
user1804599
They clean it with water.
Mr Pedantic.
well, it's clean so you don't have to wipe it
did I misunderstand what std::is_assignable is? :|
zch
zch
19:52
@Rapptz, works with int*&
you cant assign to std::declval<int*>(), it needs to be lvalue
@rightfold A Turing machine is itself magic (only limited simulations are with any known technology).
hi all
dumplings with bolognese sauce - I'm a genius! ;0
@StackedCrooked Mr I-know-what-bidets-do-to-my-ass
20:12
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)
not very common to meet an IRL bidet.
it's kinda annoying to insert static_cast<int> whenever I just need plain int
The pizza was good. In case anyone was wondering.
@Jefffrey good pizza is redundant
lol
TIL you can declare a function with this signature: class X* name();.
Or class X name(); for that matter.
20:32
@Jefffrey That's probably from C.
where in C you have to do struct X foo(); whatever
I'm guessing
Yeah, I thought the same thing.
Maybe it's time for C++ to cut the umbilical cord with C.
hmmm
@Jefffrey that would break too much code
which is the only reason really they've kept the backwards compatibility
@TonyTheLion yes yes yes yes yes
20:34
lol
Just in case you missed it.
@Jefffrey C compatibility is useful
@A.H. Not to me.
@Jefffrey you have never used a C library ?
20:39
@A.H. Ok, you win.
I have two variables .

vector< vector<double> > s, vector<double> p ;
vector<double>:: iterator itr = s[size-1].begin();
s.insert(itr,1,p);
My compiler is showing error in the last line .
WHY ?
@osimerpothe Two questions: 1) Why are you not posting this on SO? 2) How can we help you if you don't show the error message?
Well.
what is size?
int size = s.size();
Yes . I have solved my problem .
you are trying to insert doubles into a vector of vectors
20:44
Thanks .
@A.h I have recognized this error .
also p might be empty
user1804599
@osimerpothe noo
Many Many thanks .
user1804599
Use auto size = s.size();.
user1804599
int may not be large enough to store every possible value of size().
20:45
done .
Actually std::vector<std::vector<double>>::size_type size = s.size(); is way more sexy.
ugh
too long
or just good old std::size_t
@A.H. Too short, also it might be different from the real std::vector<std::vector<double>>::size_type.
user1804599
20:47
@Jefffrey at least use decltype(s)::size_type size = s.size(); then.
user1804599
@Jefffrey It’s size_type, not size_t.
@rightfold Right.
3 more chars. Yayy.
lol, 43 characters for a type.
user1804599
@Jefffrey InternalFrameInternalFrameTitlePaneInternalFrameTitlePaneMaximizeButtonWindowNo‌​tFocusedState
What would we do without auto or decltype?
user1804599
@Jefffrey use __typeof__
20:50
@rightfold Imagine adding templates to that
@rightfold what is that (can't find much on the internet)?
__typeof__? I'd rather have the full name :V
user1804599
@Jefffrey non-standard extension similar to decltype.
GCC extension and BOOST if I am not mistaken @Jefffrey
user1804599
It’s present in at least GCC and clang.
user1804599
20:52
@A.H. It can’t be defined by Boost as it would be UB due to __ in the name.
user1804599
It would be boost::typeof or BOOST_TYPEOF in that case.
without the __
Changed a + to a -.
Fixes every bug I have been trying to fix for the last hour.

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