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09:00
but there's no great difference in the technique, IMO. It's just applying the same optimization techniques to all of your code, instead of just to the bits that matter
(in practice, I'd argue that you're always using the first approach. You just set the bar of "fast enough" higher or lower)
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Oblivious is a good word.
@jalf More than that actually. When you're going for "as fast as possible", you basically make the critical portion as fast a possible using any means necessary, and then design the rest of the program around it.
IOW - bottom up
Instead of top down.
@Mysticial But for "as fast as possible", the entire program is, by definition, the critical portion
if it is possible to save a single clock cycle somewhere in your program, then it is not "as fast as possible"
@jalf I didn't intend to imply that there's no leeway.
09:02
I want to implement a faster sleep. It's a major bottleneck in my code.
I'll just give an example.
@Mysticial well, I did. There can't be, or it won't be as fast as possible ;)
Implementing a fast fourier transform.
hence my argument that you're always going for "fast enough" (but in some cases, "fast enough" might be very close to "as fast as possible")
Input is a bunch of real and imaginary numbers side-by-side. So you design the interface first using what makes the most sense. And you implement it.
09:04
@StackedCrooked LOL! Yes. Since 'program' includes OS, inefficient use of API is also a huge factor. I wonder how many 'high performance' apps are crippled by crappy network code?
merp "fastest possible" = "fastest theoretically possible" + n for some n you choose
@jalf 'fast' does not have cover the entire program, of course, you have to pick your battles. There is no point getting part of your code executing near instantaneously if it is only ever run once at startup.
If you do it bottom up, you realize that you can reorder the data in a way that works better with SIMD. So built up from that. In the end your interface changes to something different.
@jalf Yes -- in a lot of cases "within N% of the theoretical limit" (where "N" is typically a single digit number) is sufficient. Nonetheless, that typically requires a completely different approach from the usual "profile and fix the botlenecks".
time wasted optimizing unimportant code could have been better spent optimizing code that makes a difference
09:05
@Mysticial why won't people share their black art microoptimization secrets with me :'D
@EiyrioüvonKauyf If you've been paying attention, I kinda am right now.
:)
@thecoshman sure there is, if the goal is "as fast as possible". (Which is my point. In practice, I don't know that anyone ever really has a legitimate need for "as fast as possible")
@Mysticial yes, but with a FFT, either way you input the data the same way... though I suppose extreme optimizations might require you handle the data in a different way to avoid manipulating it too much vOv
Heh - since I benchmark my apps with a kitchen timer, I'm not all that bothered with micro-optimization:)
@thecoshman Right. So change the interface. Which requires the client code to change how it uses it.
It's an upward propagation effect.
user1804599
09:07
abc is a nice module.
@jalf There are a few (but it's definitely rare). During WWII, you could literally and directly translate faster computation to lives saved...
@JerryCoffin Yeah ok, I see what you (and @Mysticial) mean. You won't write the code with no regard for performance initially, if you're after high performance
user1804599
I could use it for interfaces.
@JerryCoffin You can actually do provable bounds that, "my current implementation is within N% of optimal".
@JerryCoffin but then you have a trade off against "amount of time making it faster", and at some point, the cost of that outweighs the performance gain, so in practice, the optimal point was "fast enough", and not "as fast as possible" :)
09:09
@jalf not quite, my point was that you may not always be trying to get the entire code base to run AFAP, only a certain portion. But as I think you are hinting at, eventually in order to make that target area fast you probably do need to start making other areas faster too... or perhaps slower, but leave more memory... but now we entering a world of tradeoffs, and deamons be lurking.
@Mysticial merp i am
Delaying your code breaking capabilities for a year in order to make it 0.001% faster was not going to save lives ;)
but SIMD and SSE and Neon and poop aren't so much secrets
but your bottom up approach was nice :3
also the guys you mentioned shall have a creep reading their posts
@Mysticial Exactly--e.g., typically by comparing to memory bandwidth for the amount of data you need to process.
@jalf it might though. If nuclear power controls were that tiny bit too slow to react.... but hey, contrived example, in that case you probably want accuracy over speed.
09:10
@Mysticial Stepanov said something similar:
> Every programmer has been taught about the importance of top-down design. While it is
possible that the original software engineering considerations behind it were sound, it
came to signify something quite nonsensical: the idea that one can design abstract
interfaces without a deep understanding of how the implementations are supposed to
work.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I wouldn't say it's "my" bottom up approach. I just reinvented it in college because it's the most logical thing to do when you get to this stage.
merp cs is somewhat nonsensical sometimes
like your O(n) goes to hell when you use certain 'sorts'
because they forgot about L1-L3 cache
D:
@StackedCrooked Can I just point out that Stepanov is pretty awesome?
Basically, I went down-and-up enough times to realize that once you know what you're doing already, it's just best to start bottom up.
09:13
@Mysticial nods
Bottom up is not a weird sex thing, is it?
3
@FredOverflow sigh....... :D
Juvenile peacocks are so cute ...
@jalf In their case, it was often a matter of the computer operator stopping computations in the middle and switching algorithms to one better suited to a specific set of parameters. In this case, it wasn't technically computation running as fast as possible--it was results as soon as possible.
09:14
@jalf Disclaimer: It's not something usually do. Only where it matters.
Always bugs me when people try to argue that it's some kind of sin to consider performance at all when designing your code. Why not write it so that it can be made fast later on?
@jalf I think most of us here can name half a dozen of those people on SO. :D:D:D
@Mysticial merpmerp; back to the crying at hardware books and wondering why this one thing magically makes things fast
@FredOverflow No, it's a quite normal (but very enjoyable) sex thing.
@jalf I guess it's a bit of knee jerk reaction to people who obsess over it to the point of writing terrible code, when when asked, the performance the clean easy to read code is more than good enough.
09:16
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Screw the hardware books. The only thing you need to get from them are the concepts. Once you start playing with real hardware, it's completely different (and a lot less ideal than what the books make it sound like).
@EiyrioüvonKauyf I got a lot out of reading about CPU architecture. Becomes a lot easier to understand the performance characteristics of different instructions when you know what happens to them at runtime
@JerryCoffin dat pun :D
also out of order.... not actually the best idea when doing performance --> something i wouldn't have thought of immediately..... merp so many good ideas,
@thecoshman sure, I know where it comes from. And I'm not saying the other extreme is better. But it still bugs me :p
09:17
As usual @JerryCoffin proving he is knowledgeable is diverse areas.
so is this really called micro-optimizations
i don't even know what to google for
"low latency cpu optimizations" seems silly
@Mysticial Depends on what hardware books you're talking about. "Microarchitecture of Intel's latest CPU" is worth ignoring. Designer's Guide to VHDL can be really useful.
@jalf yeah I know. "I need to make this section of code faster, it is a proven bottle neck" "der don't optimize until you have proven you need to" "... yeah... I did prove it"
@StackedCrooked ... I'm sure there is a 'your mum' joke waiting to cum come out of that
@JerryCoffin I actually do read Agner's microarchitecture PDF.
Just for the numbers and theoreticals at least.
what bugs me is the superstition when it comes to performance optimization. people have beliefs like STL is slow etc..
09:21
@Mysticial "Ignoring" is probably overstating things, but a lot of people obsess over them far past the point that makes any sense. Used to be especially funny (e.g., people counting cycles on 8088's, but the fact was that just counting the number of bytes was usually more accurate).
"I'm not gonna put a try/catch here because that would make it slower."
@StackedCrooked how about people who still use turbo c++?
@Borgleader Some people are just hopeless...
@StackedCrooked Which isn't completely unfounded though. std::vector is probably the most commonly used container for me, but I avoid it for performance-critical code because I can't pre-allocate without it zeroing the dataset.
Has nothing to do with performance, just stupidity at that point.
09:23
@StackedCrooked yeah, IMO that's the best "micro"-optimization tip: understand what you're doing. Understand the code you're writing and the code your compiler is emitting, and understand what your CPU is doing with the code.
@Mysticial reserve?
Am I the only one finding baby peacocks really cute?
@Mysticial couldn't you just preallocate the vector outside the critical code? That's what I typically do
@Mysticial or are you talking about the underlying OS's allocator
@Mysticial yeah, but good design comes first right? I am sure you would get better returns from good design first.
09:24
@thecoshman good design is subjective though, and depends on your goals.
@sudorm-rfTelkitty Just stop. No one cares.
@thecoshman The point is that "good design" changes (or at least can change) when you need to get really fast.
@doug65536 Both actually. std::vector won't let you set the number of elements to N without calling constructors on them. And the OS won't let you allocate large chunks of memory without zeroing it.
@jalf "As fast as possible"
@Mysticial I don't mind if your decision is well founded.
09:26
@JerryCoffin yeah, but I was getting more at, thinking about weather or not you need a vector storing 10K massive (ram wise) entries, when actually you are just storing a running total of some field (contrived example)
I do have a bit of a phobia for unnecessary zeroing because my very first "high performance" machine required 40 - 60 seconds to calloc() + commit 60 GB of ram.
@Mysticial heh, ouch
glglgl, Saarbrücken, Saarland, Germany
29.3k 3 30 54
You could use .reserve to preallocate and .insert to copy the data.
o_0 that's a fair bit of ram to be zeroing out :S
09:27
This QR Code links to his stackexchange profile page ;~;
@MohammadAliBaydoun smooth
The real problem (IMO) is that most people really have almost no conception of 1) how fast computers are (or can be). 2) how close to optimum simple code can be, 3) how fast their code really needs to be, or 4) the limit on how much they might speed it up if they try (and know what they're dong).
Why, why, WHYY! (proposal for next generations range-for loops)
Why the fuck is that flagged?
09:28
I think the root problem is they don't how to actually test how performant there code is in the first place.
Fucking tablet. Accidental flag.
lol
Make a tablet go through 5 confirmation windows before flagging.
:)
[feature-request] design better responsive websites so they can be used on tablets
09:33
@Borgleader because ... :p
(I'm on my laptop now, can't sleep >.>)
I'm actually using the desktop version of the chat on tablet because AFAIK the mobile version doesn't have the reply-to-message feature
correct
we are lucky it has the reply textarea at all
@JerryCoffin I recently had to make a big decision on that with the FFT that I use in y-cruncher. The existing implementation was "optimal" for Nehalem and "upgraded" to Sandy Bridge 256-bit AVX.
But things didn't look too good for FMA instructions and larger vectors.
@Borgleader the mobile version is terrible, just god awful terrible
TIL where Eliza Cassan's name comes from. Thanks Amazon.
09:43
Almost 2AM and I got work tomorrow. Night.
@Mysticial night
lol silly cali people
That looks like the dog in @ScottW avatar :D
@Borgleader Dog with six legs?
s/the dog in// && s/avatar//
09:59
@MartinJames If you look carefully you'll notice there's a cat.
That photo is making a clear statement: ScottW gets pussy
A flat cat on a mat.
Is there anyone who can help with this code: codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/39867/…
Probably, but it's unlikely they are in the Lounge.
2
10:08
@KutluhanMetin codereview.SE is not for errors
please delete it and post it on stackoverflow.com instead
user1804599
Colleague y u noisy keyboard.
@Jefffrey Never thought I'd hear that xD
I had a quick look for a laugh. It's UDP network code with no comments, no explanations, no error messages, no results, no environment, no description of debugging performed so far, no check on returned values from system calls - the usual.
user1804599
7
A: Olympic Games Logo - Free Style Edition

Darren StoneRuby, 321 Sadly, a certain head of state seems to be the headline subject of most Olympic news so far. Thus, here is my freestyle logo (mascot?) for the 2014 Games. w=?$;"UW[NASY_LAQVgKAPSlKAOKGLnHAOIHMnHAOHILpHANHJLqFAOFLKAVMAVMAWKAWLAWKAMIHFGK NFMLAMGOFFGAGJPGFIAHGFFOWPPAIGFFKQFOKMJHAIJJQGNLG...

user1804599
> Sorry for the primitive rendering but he deserves no better.
user1804599
10:17
:D
Sysadmin killed our VCS server.
Wait, we don't have a sysadmin. That might explain it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes The last sysadmin is doing 25 to life for servercide?
@R.MartinhoFernandes o_0
@thecoshman We're small.
10:19
@R.MartinhoFernandes ... that's what she said!
SCNR
What does the piano hook in Rudimental's "Powerless" remind me of?
no
some other track from a few years ago, but I can't place it -.-
Hmmm, I'm the only programmer in the office today. That means I can just keep a vim window open in a random file and no one can tell if I'm working or not! ;)
@R.MartinhoFernandes you're not very good at slacking off are you...
10:26
@thecoshman Why not?
you can do that anyway vOv
@thecoshman Do you think I should put that on my CV?
"What's your worst fault?" "I'm not very good at slacking off"
4
you probably should. Any body else, of couse not
What does that mean?
> OK, seriously? I call trolling. There have been two new github accounts made in the last week specifically to create and comment on these issues: @9Z8LwVMdctC630D0gAWmmFHe1nR and @roger-bell. No one is denying there are serious security flaws here which ought to be addressed, but creating throwaway accounts just to trump up some pet issue with implausible stories is simply trolling.
10:29
Are you trying to sabotage me?
@R.MartinhoFernandes you are a jammy git. You seem to be able to do things which ever way you fancy, and it works out.
Oh. I see.
Jan 2 at 23:23, by R. Martinho Fernandes
I do admit I'm quite lucky, though.
:)
@thecoshman a jammy git!?
@Borgleader Ireland does that to you, I guess.
(Means lucky)
@R.MartinhoFernandes it's not an Irishism, at least, not as far as I know.
10:36
good morning
@R.MartinhoFernandes indeed, gumbel gumbel. Though equally, you do seem to work hard for it, so it's not like you don't deserve it vOv
Xeo
Xeo
bad morning
@DeadMG is that so?
@thecoshman Encountered it here often enough.
wow what's with all the sour grapes?
@DeadMG He's been in pain for the past weeks.
10:37
@DeadMG bad wine?
Oh, you meant thecosh?
yeah
also, I remembered that Xeo was in pain, but I didn't remember him grumping about it like I normally do
Xeo
Xeo
well, until recently, I could at least lie in m bed without my leg bothering me
also it was more tongue-in-cheek, really
And I've just walked to the postal office, so there's that
fair enough.
What of sour rowan berries?
10:39
I am not exactly going to be criticising you for grumping about persistent pains.
I ate too many chocolate bars yesterday and had some unfortunate sleep fails last night
@DeadMG ... sounds disturbing...
Xeo
Xeo
I think I've fallen asleep pretty quickky yesterday, once I tried, but I woke up after 5h st 8am in exchange for that
Disturbed sleep does indeed sound disturbing.
@Xeo I went to bed about midnight, but woke up again at 3am, spent about the next hour most uncomfortably
I was just about to get up and turn my computer on at 4am but then fell asleep again- for about half an hour.
had to get up and piss at half past four
woke up again after that at 8
@R.MartinhoFernandes I was thinking more about bodily function not keeping in check...
10:53
@MarkGarcia The most annoying part is that he thinks SO should have "direct debugging questions"
@LightnessRacesinOrbit what do you/he mean? questions that are just "this borke, make better plz"?

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