« first day (1195 days earlier)      last day (3980 days later) » 

05:01
@MooingDuck thanks, I'm getting more of the C++11 syntax, but I'm still thinking C++98
@MooingDuck Maybe I should do docs :v
I don't feel like making a doxygen theme myself again though.
hopefully there are decent ones online
I'm not the only one who considers default doxygen ugly right? :(
@Rapptz everyone does
I made this: rapptz.github.io/Gears/docs (warning: incomplete docs)
took me forever to turn it into something pretty
05:18
@MooingDuck btw - was that question really that bad -- I'm referring to it having a -3 rating :(
we gave you a fair warning
not that I downvoted it
I just figured it would have been eventually.
@GlennTeitelbaum yes
@GlennTeitelbaum yours isn't any of these
@MooingDuck lol, okay, I just have no idea how I could have asked that any other way, and your answer really helped me, so, I'm still glad I asked it
@GlennTeitelbaum There was no right way to ask it. It's not the wording that was bad, it's the wrong type of question entirely.
I just answered it because I like writing containers and algorithms and whatnot
@MooingDuck it was practical, and obviously answerable :)
05:23
@GlennTeitelbaum Practical to you, not to the community
you write interesting questions
I like your questions
you're an outside the box thinker
well, not this question so much, but your other questions
@MooingDuck And my bitrange question was practical :)
I went back looking if you have a history of bad questions. I found a history of interesting questions, a small number of which were not a fit for SO.
@GlennTeitelbaum yes
I feel like I'm passing myself off as knowledgeable or "in" or something and it feels wierd
I mostly answer, the questions I post sometimes are Q/A, but most are because I am trying to learn something, there is a chance others could also learn from answers, like the one you gave to the last question, practical to most people, agreed, probably not
@GlennTeitelbaum I think I'm done with my answer now. I added a ton of suggestions based on reading your code. The only big thing is you NEED a const_iterator, and your iterators are missing the standard typedefs, which are important.
@MooingDuck I also like containers and have written a ton of custom ones, that was the smallest code I wrote that showed generally what I do, and I wanted to know how to update them, I may review what you said, and rewrite and post that in an edit
only thing you missed void iterator::insert_before(const T& x) { LLNode * add= new LLNode(x); parent->insert(it->prv, add); } - I don't have just a vanilla insert, and I use it->prvso the insert comment might not be accurate
@MooingDuck and that was my +1 :)
05:42
@GlennTeitelbaum void insert(LLNode * before, LLNode * added) It's not public, but it's there, and it violates the Rule of Least Surprise
@Mysticial would you like to give me advice :3
@MooingDuck lol, since the first line is LLNode * after=before->nxt; it should be easy enough to switch
@MooingDuck thanks again - who knows, maybe you'll need a custom doubly linked list soon too :)
@GlennTeitelbaum what good is a doubly linked list?
lmao
the only container I've made so far is a static_vector.
@MooingDuck And if I asked you what good is a bitset range a while ago?
05:49
@EiyrioüvonKauyf for what?
@Mysticial so these nice finance people came yesterday and talked about nice optimizations that no one will ever teach you
like Hyperthreading isn't always good and freeing is slow as shit so just malloc a ton in the beginning and run with it while trying to reuse memory
*low latency, performant code. no clues how to learn D:
Those aren't exactly "obscure" optimizations. But mention them on SO and you'll be flamed for "premature optimization". ahaha
.... how i learns is the question
@Mysticial doubt it.
The second one borders common knowledge.
; ;
the second one is common knowledge
but like writing your own fpga code in order to decode protocols is not common practice
05:52
@Rapptz vector + a simple allocator?
I have a circular dependencies in the GUI
@MooingDuck nah. static_vector<T, N>
crashes on start $
@GlennTeitelbaum well, I believed there might be a use. doubly linked lists do have a use, but it revolves around splice and non-movable types. Which is... rare
not to mention there's std::list
05:53
or minimizing coherence traffic
tl;dr any ideas on how to write fast code haha
*learn to write fast code
no courses on it :(
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I don't know what that means so I'll believe that there might be another case
meow coherence protocols
In computing, cache coherence refers to the consistency of data stored in local caches of a shared resource. When clients in a system maintain caches of a common memory resource, problems may arise with inconsistent data. This is particularly true of CPUs in a multiprocessing system. Referring to the "Multiple Caches of Shared Resource" figure, if the top client has a copy of a memory block from a previous read and the bottom client changes that memory block, the top client could be left with an invalid cache of memory without any notification of the change. Cache coherence is intended to...
aka cache is a bitch sometimes
@EiyrioüvonKauyf why would you want to minimize cache coherence?
meow faster code
also no locking
<3
so their policy in some respects was fuck this and that and that
because we're going to go so fast we're invalidating caches fast
aka i loved the presentation :3
@EiyrioüvonKauyf usually faster code involves maximizing cache coherence...
@EiyrioüvonKauyf but yeah, there is that too. I'd forgotten producer/consumer queues.
05:57
@Rapptz if it made it into the standard, I'm guessing ppl thought it had a use :)
g'night
06:13
It's best to just not need cache coherence. :)
17
Q: Being asked to "politely" take a Demotion

JeffDoeI've been working as Director of Software and Chief Software Architect for 2 years with a team of talented developers building a rather complicated piece of code from scratch. We now have 13,000 lines of operational code, under Continuous Integration control with Unit tests, Doxygen, the works.....

Sucks to be that guy.
welcome to work place politics
I suck incredulously in it ...
which I am compensated with so far decent investment skills
being good with work place politics -> high on the ladder in the work place
which does not automatically translate into $$$
06:29
@StackedCrooked Whenever I open a question from there, I always browse all the other questions out of curiosity of these people's positions...
Apparently, according to English Language & Usage, complacency is used mostly in a smug sense.
I don't think so. Never seen it used in a smug way.
"a feeling of smug or uncritical satisfaction with oneself or one's achievements: the figures are better, but there are no grounds for complacency. (builtin dictionary on OSX" (Oxford Dictionary of English))
I don't agree with it, it doesn't make much sense.
"I'm complacent with this shirt" doesn't imply a feeling of smugness.
I didn't know the word. I thought it meant the same as compliancy :D
I think smug should be defined as "excessive or overtly flamboyant complacency" or something.
FWIW merriam-webster defines it as "satisfied with how things are and not wanting to change them"
@StackedCrooked It's one of those words I like a bit more than average.
06:51
is there a legitimate reason why there is no std::vector iterator insert( const_iterator pos, size_type count, T&& value );
couldn't it copy all but the last one, then move the last one?
@doug65536 You're moving from count times.
@doug65536 IMHO too "un-general"
@doug65536 why
why not
pretty useless
@GlennTeitelbaum Your problem is a good candidate for a proposal.
06:53
I'm not that guy :)
that one isn't very convincing, vector insert is often a bad idea anyway... why not (constructor) vector(size_type count, T&& value, allocator_type alloc). same thing, move the last one.
they never do that in c++11 std lib?
Oh boy, it has been a long time.
@doug65536 Actually, yours makes sense. Hmmm...
@ScottW It's so you could do those TPS reports.
Ello
06:57
hi
Any chance I could get a little help with a segfault? First time i've ever had one.
you're dereferencing a null pointer probably
@Athix pastebin stack trace?
06:58
@Athix No need to post the question here. We're quite an avid bunch of answerers. ;)
Real-time is a bit easier for me personally
@Athix you delete'd it
@Athix or the object that contains it
@Athix pointer is 0xbaadf00d
Hexspeak, like leetspeak, is a novelty form of variant English spelling using the hexadecimal numbers. Created by programmers who wanted a magic number, hexspeak words can serve as a clear and unique identifier with which to mark memory or data. Using hexadecimal notation, which includes the digits 0123456789ABCDEF, it is possible to spell several words. Further words can be made by treating some of the decimal numbers as letters - the digit "0" can represent the letter "O", and "1" can represent the letters "I" or "L". Less commonly, "5" can represent "S", "7" represent "T", "12" represen...
@Athix or it isn't constructed somehow
Hmm
I have the full source code if it'd help any. aeonsplice.com/segfault.zip
I don't get how it could already be deleted though, considering it's the method TO delete the object. :S
07:02
> an RNA virus, usually spread by the fecal-oral route
why are you using raw pointers anyway?
use std::unique_ptr
didn't know they existed, what all changes would I have to make to implement them?
tired
going to bed
:S
@Athix all those unnecessary scope resolutions make the code hard to read
Sorry, I only recently figured out that you can use two namespaces at the same time...
@Athix huh?
using namespace std;
using namespace aeon;
@Athix members of a class are in-scope in a method definition, you don't need to write aeonstack::statestack.empty() in void aeonstack::update()
07:11
A namespace is basically a set of names. Using namespace means importing one set of names into another set.
@Athix statestack.empty() is sufficient
@StackedCrooked "a space of names" FTFY. ;)
Hmm, I could of sworn code::blocks was giving me crap for trying that before though.
@Athix Why does aeonstack use a std::vector instead of a std::stack?
@Athix never believe autocomplete or IDE errors
they're often wrong
07:13
namespace mine {
    using namespace std;
    using namespace nonstd;
    using std::string; // use std::string in case of ambiguity
}
^ This also works.
@St
@PomfCaster Different semantics.
@StackedCrooked Ahha, figured out replies.

Thanks, that'll come in handy
@Athix I've never needed this actually. But it may be useful in some situations.
can i ask only one question on java.. its eating me up
07:15
So it turns out I forgot to pass the stack pointer in my init, solved the segfault
But now it's wiping all states for some ungodly reason.
@Athix avoid pointers when possible. it isn't "faster" to have vectors of pointers, you are defeating the whole purpose of vector
@doug65536 what? I'm not using pointers for speed, i'm using them because if I didn't it would cause issues when trying to do crazy stuff
@Athix in fact, it's a lot slower. vector allocates blocks and suballocates from that. vectors of pointers force an allocate per object
not to mention pointer-chasing instead of good locality
@doug65536 namely with the creation of new states, from within old states, and that kind of thing
07:19
I imported std::chrono in my project's namespace. std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::microseconds>(..) is a little too verbose for my taste.
lol, yeah they went a bit nuts with chrono didn't they. I like it though
Yeah, I really like chrono.
Probably one of the things from C++11 that I use the most.
Implicit conversion of duration types is really handy.
e.g: microseconds(10) < seconds(1) just works
This example from cppreference confused me for a second:
> std::chrono::duration<int, std::kilo> ks(3); // 3000 seconds
@StackedCrooked That "for a second" clause confused me for... yeah.
Hi all
It confused me for ~1 second.
07:25
Any JNI developer here?
If there one here he probably wouldn't want admit it :)
@StackedCrooked no way, it goes above 1? didn't know
@doug65536 what does above 1?
@StackedCrooked the unit. micro, milli, etc
07:30
wow. thanks. TIL
Ugh, any ideas on why a pointer inside a vector would be wiped when popping the vector back by one?

vector = {1,2}
pop_back();
vector != {1}???
Ell
Ell
what does it equal?
still trying to figure that out, one minute
Can't seem to figure out how to view all variables in codeblocks
07:49
I'd believe you, if there was no while loop. — user1095108 1 min ago
lol
Ell
Ell
it's probably easier to just print them
anyway driving test, bye all
custom iterators need value_type, difference_type, etc typedefs in them?
@doug65536 Strictly speaking, probably not--but it would be borderline insane to omit them.
@JerryCoffin thanks
@doug65536 Note you can get all the usual typedefs by inheriting from std::iterator.
07:58
I'd still need to typedef iterator_category then though right?
@doug65536 At least if memory serves, no (though you do have to supply it as a template param, so it's not saving you much).
@JerryCoffin oh I see. thanks
I'm writing a custom deque-like random-addressible vector that makes reasonable sized chunk allocations that guarantees nothing moves to another address
Xeo
Xeo
just use boost's iterator_facade
@doug65536 that's exactly deque, no?
modulo the chunk size
no, deque makes the chunks 512 bytes on gcc and 16 bytes (!) on msvc
my container takes a power of two "page size"
Xeo
Xeo
I never understood why that's not customizable
08:04
yeah, total lack of foresight
@Xeo Make a proposal!
I will cut some slack though, the (original SGI) deque is ancient C++ history
their compiler probably crashed with integer template parameters :D
no excuse why the C++ std lib adoption of it didn't fix it though
@sehe lol
08:07
@doug65536 what does it do if the object size is greater than 16 then?
makes it size of 1 instance
i.e. an alloc per instance
@doug65536 One obvious possibility: because it was still years after the standard before there was a compiler that could compile a fully conforming implementation of the standard library (and the standard was feature-frozen ~a year before official finalization).
@JerryCoffin So... C++97?
@FredOverflow 98?
Well, Haskell 98 was released in 1999, so I guess that's common practice.
@StackedCrooked The entire album is pure gold.
Xeo
Xeo
08:11
ugh, I need to walk to the postal station today... do not want
To put it in perspective, VC++6 came out just before the standard became official, and it was quite competitive in terms of conformance at the time (e.g., slightly behind g++ in the compiler proper but definitely well ahead in its library).
Wait a minute, VC++6 didn't even get for loops right ;)
ah, VS6. the last high performance text editor written by MS
that didn't get visibly sluggish on a 3+ GHz CPU
@FredOverflow Wrong! The compiler actually could do scope of for loops correctly (with -Za). You just couldn't use it because (nearly?) all its headers depended on extensions that this disabled.
user1804599
Good evening.
08:14
lol
user1804599
@sehe Old.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz it is not.
user1804599
It doesn’t have all the purity and laziness crap.
@rightfold ...though there are Scheme implementations that add laziness (e.g., Racket has a "lazy Racket" dialect/module).
@doug65536 It is pretty sad--VS 2013 on an i7 is (substantially) slower than VS 6 on a Pentium 4.
@JerryCoffin Of course - .NET IDE was introduced after VS 6, auto-destroying all hope of high performance.
08:29
I think the adoption of WPF in their editor also threw performance out the window, due to massive type reflection
@doug65536 Yeah:(
@JerryCoffin Yeah, the UI of VS6 was incredibly responsive compared to later versions.
@doug65536 Massive type reflection?
@wilx basically .NET RTTI. WPF uses it extensively. it's very expensive
I would think the transition from Win32 to .NET is the major cost.
08:38
@Mysticial yeah so suggestions on how to learn to write fast code
right now i'm playing the read all the comp arch and networks game - so from a builder approach rather than an actual programmer one ...
Shouldn't JIT complation and optimization kick in and fix things up?
@CatPlusPlus Ada-like access types?
@wilx to some extent. you can make delegates manually that "know how" to call into something or read some member, but in many cases, the JIT can't be sure and does the equivalent of an extremely expensive virtual call every time
@rightfold the "topic" is old, I don't remember ever seeing it "inverted" in a comic like this
there is a "dynamic language runtime" that tries to optimize that case. not sure if WPF tries to use it though
@wilx In theory, yes. AAMOF, MS has benchmarks to prove it's much faster...
08:43
@EiyrioüvonKauyf There's a lot of different levels of "fast". When to get to a point, it's mostly just knowledge-guided trial-and-error.
fast as in fastest without reverting to x86 assembly because we can't actually program algorithms in that fast
I was thinking yesterday about std::vector and it's growth algorithm. push_back will trigger reallocation at sizes 1, 2, 4, 8, etc... Of course the programmer can avoid this by using reserve, however, it would be nice if the runtime could predict the required capacity based on history (like JIT).
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Believe it or not, I don't go all the way to assembly.
@StackedCrooked does it really double...? usually the resize factor is something else ._.
At least not to writing it. But I read it.
08:45
@EiyrioüvonKauyf my 2 cents: get good at profiling and look at profiles of a lot of code. then you'll get your eyeballs looking at code that matters a lot and use your time effectively
@Mysticial what do you go to ...? aka any suggestions to learn tricks :/. merp like a book of nice things like make sure your loop indicies are right haha
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Usually 1.5
@StackedCrooked but that is additional bookkeeping, which likely just makes the whole thing more expensive
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Compiler intrinsics and dirty micro-optimizations.
@doug65536 i'm not profiling code, i'm talking about fundamental software design. it's a different thing entirely
@Mysticial yush. micro-optimizations.. i can't find anything about that :/
08:46
@EiyrioüvonKauyf ah, hoping for magic bullets. good luck with that
like financial algorithms books don't go into actual implementation
@jalf Yeah.
@doug65536 no it's called computer architecture usually. but that's a really long way to get to the goal
@EiyrioüvonKauyf optimizing everything is exactly what NOT to do
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Of course not. Nobody reveals their secrets.
At least not all of them.
08:46
I guess that brings us to the argument that hand-tweaked code will always be faster than JIT.
So you have to reverse engineer stuff.
Anyway, it was just some random pondering.
@Mysticial :/ darn. this was nice, but not that much ~
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Ha. Even my grad school didn't have that course.
lol
Sounds like most of the stuff that I taught myself over the last few years.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf a developer that wants everything to be "really fast" is a dead giveaway of a novice. it's drastically better to write your code clearly, profile it, then spend time optimizing what matters
Xeo
Xeo
08:49
hm, I need to get dressed. that'll be fun
Still suffering from the leg?
@doug65536 can you stop.
or go work for a financial services firm so you know what you're talking about slightly more
Xeo
Xeo
no betterment in sight
there's this thing called GPUs and for some reason they do numeric computations really fast, i guess Nvidia is a company of novices
Xeo
Xeo
wtf
08:51
@StackedCrooked You can always start with reserved capacity that is probable and experience only few reallocations.
@doug65536 There's multiple ways to do it. That one - more commonly known as the "correct" method will get you decent speed. But it won't get you the best/optimal speed. The other approach is a black art.
:):)
creeps
oh UIUC
you're lucky i didn't go there muahaha
When you're in finance and you need to beat out your competitors in the high-frequency trading business... You will want to do absolutely everything you can to get more speed.
because milliseconds literally means money
random anecdote: they said NASDAQ assures uniform cable length haha
yeah, like spending hours optimizing something that the CPU spends 0.01% of it's time in
08:53
no. but spending hours optimizing a small numerical thing by 2x speed, for example hyperthreading optimizations or scheduler optimizations means significant multipliers in the workflow
HFT should be illegal, IMHO.
yay! I made it 1 billion times faster. program is 0.01% faster now
It is a pure speculation.
@doug65536 you really don't know anything about HFT
@wilx i have no opinion, i just like the tech end of it
@EiyrioüvonKauyf do you?
08:54
@doug65536 To give you an idea. This guy is someone who knows how to do the "black art" optimization:
they're one of the few industries that plays with fpgas
@Mysticial haha his haswell answer alone shows that one
@EiyrioüvonKauyf your workload is CPU bound?
Other people in that area that I run into every once in a while would be:
http://stackoverflow.com/users/253056/paul-r
http://stackoverflow.com/users/142434/stephen-canon
:3
either way so ideas on micro optimizations? otherwise i guess i'm stuck reading random IEEE papers and comp arch things
compiler intrinsics aren't very interesting
@EiyrioüvonKauyf The best way to learn it is to write something and optimize it.
08:58
merp, i wouldnt have thought of the hyperthreading though is the problem i.e. turn it off
There's two approaches to performance:
- "Fast Enough"
- "As fast as possible"
^ the latter of course (in this case)
for my general programming i.e. scientific programming i use the former
And they require completely different approaches.
@Mysticial And the latter generally takes around #Inf time to achieve
there is a third, too fast
08:59
@jalf Correct. :)
@jalf of course ;D
morning all :)
and then there's, waste of time because it's I/O bound or there's another bottleneck

« first day (1195 days earlier)      last day (3980 days later) »