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16:01
Hello!
@ThePhD multithreading.
user3010322
Is a horrible idea when it comes to file IO.
@rubenvb Discs don't multithread.
@R.MartinhoFernandes if the file handles are slow, more threads will put more load on the disks.
I mean it's either one or the other, right?
Why would you even throw threads at it?
16:02
Unless the OS locks on file I/O, which I would doubt.
user3010322
It makes sense to have a single dedicated thread handling ALL the IO. It doesn't make sense to spread requests out to multiple threads because the file system will perform locks on the disk reads and your performance on ALL threads will decrease epxonentially.
Secondary storage is slow enough that you can single-thread everything without context switches and without a lot of do-nothing threads waiting.
@ThePhD Sure it does
Thread waiting for IO is useless thread
Well, the premise here was that loading multiple files is slow because multiple file handles need opening.
user3010322
I had first hand experience with this at Microsoft, where one company we were helping decided it would be great to spin up 10+ threads to all pull from disk. <_>
user3010322
16:03
"But faster loading!"
user3010322
<___________>
Guess I was wrong.
But then I doubt one big binary blob vs multiple files shows little to no difference.
It's about seek time
@rubenvb You never tried copying thousands of small files, have you?
@CatPlusPlus i.e. latency.
user3010322
Copying boost. u.u
16:06
And filesystem overhead
user3010322
Linux's FS seems to copy boost pretty quickly.
user3010322
That ext4 FS or whatever.
user3010322
But Windows? Oh man. Oh maaannn.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, cp is fast, Windows Explorer sucks donkeyballs.
ext4 is not that good at small files either
16:07
But I forgot about file system overhead.
Figured that was fast.
haha
user3010322
Maybe it's the utilities built on top of the actual FS that made it slow.
user3010322
Also, fucking legacy issues, like not letting me copy shit withmore than 256 characters.
Windows issues disk flush command after every write by default
user3010322
Hate that shit in so many applications.
user3010322
char[256] THIS'LL DO.
16:08
@ThePhD that's because they use old API.
Everyone is bad at path handling
and magic numbers.
Microsoft doesn't help with PATH_MAX
Path handling is the Devil.
Which is 274 or something like that
Xeo
Xeo
16:08
guys - any tips for a backup 2.5" external hdd?
Yeah, wrote warming up procedure.
@Xeo Buy one with lots of RAM. Oh wait, wrong thing.
user3010322
But even the old API had "Call the function once to get the size, call it again to do the actual filling"
@Xeo Why 2.5" if external?
user3010322
@Xeo @Mysticial Should know. He's storing his own Anime collection.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes so, just some drinks today, or nothing after all?
16:09
They're more expensive
And crappier
@CatPlusPlus Portability, I'd guess.
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus parents want it that way :s
@ThePhD That's pretty much the only way to do things, if you're down at bare-metal C.
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes ramfs for backups? :D
Oh, btw, Tomb Raider pack on Steam for €14
user3010322
16:11
@rubenvb What I'm saying is programs didn't do that. They just did char[256] and called the function once and then called it a day.
@Xeo Hmmm, feel kinda meh for that :S And I want to go to bed early because train.
@rubenvb you like tomb raider?
user3010322
@R.MartinhoFernandes Drinks at noon, you'll be out by 6!
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes kay, no problem
@Jefffrey sometimes. I liked playing Legend and Anniversary.
I played the original back in the day, was one of the first games I played. It stuck.
16:12
I didn't like Anniversary because T-Rex fight was suckified.
I don't know how you do it. I played one of the very firsts when I was a child, but never got the hype for it.
It felts kinda boring
@Jefffrey It was the atmosphere
It's like there are different genres people like or something
the most exciting thing I did in Tomb Raider was shooting walls
Who played Broodwar?
16:16
@JosuéMolina Aye.
@sehe Lalalalalala.
Ruby technology of future
About 7 hours trying to get this shit to work
In a fucking dev env
user1804599
I’m going to boot my other computer before going to Spain.
user1804599
I need the Hexapoda logo. :v
oh man
now i want operator @
Person jefffrey; @jefffrey;
16:26
@Jefffrey what's that?
user1804599
@ is often used in pseudocode to denote “any operator.”
^ ( in the standard )
@rightfold What's that?
Oh, any operator, not the any operator.
16:28
lol
what is that?
Why is it so hard to find candidates that can explain what "dynamic_cast<>" is ?
And why the hell do they all rate themselves "9/10 in C++" when they don't know the basics ?
Because nobody uses it. It's bad style.
@ereOn Depending on the scale, 9/10 could mean anything.
@FredOverflow: I chose dynamic_cast but the same goes for any other cast actually :(
16:33
dynamic_cast: evil and marker of bad design. Not a template. Compiler magic involved. Implementation defined.
You had interviews today?
I did 10 interviews in the past week
And all sucked?
None was good enough to deserve a second interview.
And we are offering a Swiss salary
So that's not the problem I assume.
Is your company located in Switzerland?
16:34
Yep it is.
What C++ projects are you working on?
A MDM (Mobile Device Management) solution.
I wonder how bad I would suck in a C++ interview.
Something that allows system administrators to mass deploy apps on mobile devices and desktop computers
16:35
Sounds somewhat interesting. Why does it need to be C++?
> Snake: You know, the snake game. Lots of people in the Lounge are developing a snake game, each one on their own. You could give it a try too!
Well the existing codebase is a mix of C++ and Python.
ahahah
@FredOverflow Because it already is!
@R.MartinhoFernandes The name doesn't match. Stop messing with my head!
16:35
@rubenvb See description? ("aka Criterion++")
I assume nobody wanted to rewrite it all. Especially as it is working fine so far.
@ereOn How do you reach out to potential developers?
"What does explicit do ?" "It is used to mark a function private" ==> I now want to kill myself...
#define explicit private:
Still quite raw, and I have a lot of stuff to think about related to the implementation, but I think it won't be too hard.
16:37
@FredOverflow We posted an offer on several websites. Including Careers.
@ereOn wow. I'd know that. I think. At least partially.
@ereOn Has it really happened?
@rubenvb It prevents implicit conversions on single-argument constructors.
@rubenvb The worst thing is not people not knowing: it is that the same people come up with fake definitions and hope we won't notice.
@ereOn They have probably just come out of school.
16:38
@Jefffrey Yes... sadly. I also had the very funny : "mutable is used to override a function"
@FredOverflow And also in operators. Sometimes.
C++ is fun
@FredOverflow Also prevents implicit brace initialization for multiple argument constructors IIRC
@FredOverflow only single argument constructors? Why that limitation?
@rubenvb Because you never have implicit conversion on multi-arg constructors?
@rubenvb Because these are implicit conv ctors?
16:38
@FredOverflow: Some of them. But a guy had 10+ years of experience in "advanced C++" (his words, whatever that means)
So far all you can do with Nonius is warmup.
@ereOn It just means his C++ books are 10 years old ;)
But it's Winter, so warmup is important.
16:40
@FredOverflow Haha I guess yes ;)
Right. It's for constructors.
Anyway, if you are aware of anybody willing to join a small Swiss team, feel free to ping me :p
@AndyProwl that's a nice website (you probably forgot to click "Share!")
@R.MartinhoFernandes Winter is already here? I thought it was still coming?
@rubenvb And conversion operators
16:40
> Now with warmup procedure\!
I thought for a second it disabled implicit conversions in any function call's argument.
@CatPlusPlus whistles
Why are you escaping bangs
@CatPlusPlus Oh yeah, like explicit operator bool() const lol.
16:41
@CatPlusPlus Because git commit -m "Now with warmup procedure!" gives "No such event".
I escaped it wrong, though, but meh.
@ereOn Are all your interview questions that basic?
@FredOverflow: Nope. But I never had the chance to go past the basic ones ^^
You should ask what i++ + ++i does ;)
That's why we've been looking for almost 2 years for people.
@FredOverflow: Haha. Did something like that on SO already ;)
Wow. Too bad your company is not located in Hamburg ;)
16:43
@FredOverflow I guess: 2i + 1
@Jefffrey Are you serious? It's UB.
Ask what value category does "C++" yield
that was a good guess nonetheless
Everybody knows i++ + ++i gives a result of std::forward<boost::thread>
16:44
223
Q: Why are these constructs undefined behavior?

PiXint main(int argc, char ** argv) { int i = 0; i = i++ + ++i; printf("%d\n", i); // 3 i = 1; i = (i++); printf("%d\n", i); // 2 Should be 1, no ? volatile int u = 0; u = u++ + ++u; printf("%d\n", u); // 1 u = 1; u = (u++); printf("%d\n", u); // 2 Should also ...

@FredOverflow yep, complex numbers look like a UB
@AndyProwl Depends on the return type of operator++. It's most likely a prvalue.
@FredOverflow I knew you knew it :)
avalue
Where a is alcohol
@ereOn It doesn't make sense to use std::forward with types that are not template parameters.
16:46
You're bad at jokes
you too (see the alcohol one)
user1804599
@FredOverflow they are not constructs.
user1804599
They are destructs.
constrUBts
I miss alcohol so much
16:47
Bjarne StroustrUB
@AndyProwl What happened, did you have a fight?
@FredOverflow Well my whole sentence didn't make any sense anyway so... ;)
Lmao : the guy I interviewed this afternoon just wrote back because "I made a mistake".
yes, I'm bad at jokes
He believes the type of "foo" is std::string... :'(
I want to cry.
@ereOn well it should be !
Oh wow.
16:48
@ereOn lol?
@ereOn Na, it's const char[4].
@FredOverflow No fight, just sickness
@FredOverflow not char const * ?
@A.H. Nope.
16:49
It's an array lvalue.
Perhaps he meant "foo"s
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's the only literal that is an lvalue, is it not?
lvalue? its a literal !
@A.H. It's both!
16:50
dafuq was bjarne smoking
8
A: C++11 value category of string literal?

Andy Prowl So I'm pretty sure the value category of integer, character, boolean and floating literals are prvalues. That's correct. What is the value category of a string literal? Per Paragraph 5.1.1/1 of the C++11 Standard: A literal is a primary expression. Its type depends on its form (2.1...

@A.H. He's got little to do with modern C++
> A literal is a primary expression. Its type depends on its form (2.14). A string literal is an lvalue; all other literals are prvalues.
lvalue, that's usually what's on the left of an assignment, right?
^ 5.1.1 §1
@rubenvb NO
> Note that the letters l and r have a historic origin in the left-hand side and right-hand side of an assignment. This is no longer true in C++, because there are lvalues which cannot appear on the left-hand side of an assignment (like arrays or user-defined types without an assignment operator), and there are rvalues which can (all rvalues of class types with an assignment operator).
16:52
C++ is fun
@rubenvb Yes. You can also usually think of it as something you can take the address of, or something you can reference repeatably in your program
so its lvalue because its non temporary?
It's lvalue because it's lvalue
@FredOverflow I didn't say that's the definition. I said usually, which is true, as far as Google tells me.
@rubenvb Google is wrong.
16:53
is it
"foo" is an lvalue because &"foo" is well-formed.
&"foo" is well-formed because "foo" is an lvalue <- FTFY.
@A.H. Seems like a good intuition. The string literal is always in memory (it has static storage duration), no matter when or if you use it.
op& is overloadable. Just saying.
(IIRC)
16:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes But not for string literals. Also, people who overload operator& are horrible people.
Just wrote BS
Are two string literals of the same form ("x" and "x" have the same form) guaranteed to have the same address?
@Jefffrey nope
in C++, no : - /
in Java, I am pretty sure they do
@ScarletAmaranth People still use Java ?
16:57
@Jefffrey 2.14.5/12
> Whether all string literals are distinct (that is, are stored in nonoverlapping objects) is implementation-defined.
@R.MartinhoFernandes holy shit it is?
@A.H. Yes, but please don't do it.
@ScarletAmaranth You are correct.
@A.H. Yes. If you want to make sure you're really taking the address of something, you can use std::addressof
@ereOn is Java trash? yes. but it's very stupid to assume people don't use Java
user3010322
16:58
@FredOverflow Hey, I overload operator& !
user3010322
And I had a good reason!
lol
@ThePhD who else ;)
auto* p = &(void&)x;   // no chance for overloaded operator& to kick an, ha!
user3010322
@AndyProwl It was for a noble and reasonable cause, I assure you.
@ThePhD logging?
16:59
@AndyProwl curious
user3010322
Erm. No, I haven't built a logging system yet.
@ThePhD Like the cowboy_cast?
user3010322
@AndyProwl That was for fun 'n' stuff. >.> Don't judge me!
@ThePhD Ok :) So what did you overload operator & for?
I'm curious now, do you guys say that the "fuck" string literal is allocated at the very beginning of the program execution, here?
user3010322
17:01
For making pointers to class-style pointers (std::unique_ptr, std::shared_ptr, Furrovine::ptr, etc.)
yeah what did you overload & for?
user3010322
I've got an example somewhere in the chat logs..
@rightfold happy birthday !
Come on Steam. Download faster.
@Jefffrey String literals have static storage duration. Do you know what static storage duration means?
17:03
@ScarletAmaranth You surely realize I wasn't serious though :)
user3010322
@AndyProwl Totally useful!
@ereOn sure
In the case of constant expressions, they are put directly in the appropriate data segment of the executable. Your C++ program does not initialize string literals at all.
@FredOverflow initialization, as in, read data from disk.
@Jefffrey Before program execution
17:04
Oh! Happy Birthday to Rightfold.... (no, I'm not singing it).
@AndyProwl define "beginning of program execution".
@ThePhD std::unique_ptr<void> arf( new int(24) );?
@FredOverflow ....void&? what
user3010322
@AndyProwl It's an example.
@melak47 A reference to void. Just like a pointer to void, but a reference ;)
user3010322
17:06
@AndyProwl A better example would be when working with things like DirectX: gist.github.com/ThePhD/8100704
@rubenvb I can define "before program execution" :)
user3010322
Also, I thought gists were oneboxed?
user3010322
@FredOverflow Kinky. I like it.
Oh wait, p will end up as a pointer to void. I forgot to cast back to the appropriate pointer type. Ah well, std::address_of does it for us, so who cares.
@FredOverflow ...this exists?
17:07
@Jefffrey It's usually just memory-mapped from the image
@melak47 Sure, why not?
@ThePhD For some reason I thought that would be UB. I should study smart pointers again
By the executable loader
Any idea of when major compilers will by default set the standard version to C++11 ?
@ereOn MSVC 2010.
The others: probably never.
17:07
MSVC is forever set to MSVC++
Never ?
Because teh legacy code.
And teh breaking changes.
That's so sad.
user3010322
@AndyProwl It's technically UB? After all, I didn't give it a custom deleter.
@ThePhD Right, that's why I thought it would be UB. But I'm not 100% sure, I'm rusty on C++
user3010322
17:09
I think most compilers enable it and handle it by default.
user3010322
But for strict C++, that's probably a violation.
But why can't you just write std::unique_ptr<int> arf( new int(24) );?
auto arf = std::make_shared<int>(24);
user3010322
I was just demonstrating the fact that ptrptr can also perform a cast to a more-derived T** if necessary.
(or even auto p = std::make_unique<int>(42))
user3010322
17:11
But auto arf = std::make_unique<int>( 42 ) would be just fine.
user3010322
In that case, all you'd need t do is ptrptr( arf ) and get a int**, no problem.
@ThePhD gist oneboxing is broken. it only works for robot :p
user3010322
@melak47 Conspiracy!
user3010322
@AndyProwl The best part of the ptrptr type is that it also auto-resets, in the case of COM handles.
17:13
pjtrptr - pointer to Pjotr. Also known as cat_ptr
@melak47 I was wrong, void& doesn't exist. I should have used char&.
// from Boost
return reinterpret_cast<T*>(&const_cast<char&>(reinterpret_cast<const volatile char &>(v)));
@FredOverflow reference to void felt wrong :)
@ThePhD I would have to take a deeper look at it, just by browsing the code I can't tell what it is all about
Why the const and volatile stuff? lol
user3010322
@AndyProwl See an earlier version of the code that demonstrates a often-seen COM-style initialization call (or at least, fakes one up).
17:17
@ThePhD you just linked to coliru :E
user3010322
(and void*)
user3010322
The extra machinery that made it so dense was because of the casting to and from more or less derived types.
@ThePhD You forgot to "Share" the code - I did the same mistake just 10 mins ago
Anyway, time to see the doctor
@AndyProwl Doctor Who?
user3010322
@AndyProwl Woops
user3010322
17:18
@melak47 Sorry x3
user3010322
I still need a good name for my ptr type.
user3010322
It's too generic to be called a com_ptr. =[
user3010322
template <typename T>
using com_ptr = ptr<T, release_deleter>;
user3010322
No I just need a better name for ptr
user3010322
17:21
It's essentially just a more-featured version of unique_ptr.
user3010322
Maybe I should just call it unique and leave it at that.
owning_ptr
pwning_otr
3
user3010322
pwnter sounds pretty good. :D
pwtr
na
never mind
fever influences humor.
user3010322
17:23
Was gonna say, made me think of Pewter.
user3010322
Pewter City
user3010322
BROCK AND ONYYYX.
Pwter City
user3010322
17:26
Added another projecy idea.
user3010322
Ooh, Projecy.
user3010322
Sounds like Project and Prophecy. Good project name...
user1804599
@A.H. Dankjewel.
user3010322
@CatPlusPlus Added. :D
user3010322
17:28
I want a pretty bou. u.u
I see
user3010322
OKAY
user3010322
I think I've implemented all the important bits of WebSoccket...
user3010322
Christ, this was so hard.
user3010322
@Griwes I want a huge platter of sushi now.
user1804599
17:32
Predicates in D are funny.
user1804599
They are template arguments.
user1804599
auto myArray = ["foo", "bar", "12.34", "42"];
auto xs = myArray
    .map!(tryParse!real)
    .filter!("!a.isNull");
They are strings?
user1804599
You can pass strings with D code or functions.
user1804599
17:33
D’s mixin is cool.
Aren't they using lambdas now as a replacement of string mixins?
user3010322
What happened?
like filter!(a => !a.isNull)
user1804599
Both are allowed.
17:35
9
Q: What's the new lambda syntax?

ArlenI've heard there is going to be a new syntax in DMD 2.058 for anonymous functions, but I can't find any information on it. What is the new syntax, and is the old syntax going to be deprecated?

user1804599
@FredOverflow do you think this looks reasonable?
@Griwes d'awwwwww
The only piece of tech stack I don't despise in this fucking project is Capistrano
Ruby technology of the future
Back to Dredmor
user3010322
o.o
user3010322
Just what are you working on?
17:44
Rails application
That's enough
Play DoD, too, let's do a score race
user3010322
DoD?
Dungeons of Dredmor
@rightfold happy birthday!
user1804599
Dankjewel.

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