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04:00
@ScarletAmaranth yeah :/ but i was wondering any other memory architecture considerations
@ThePhD well, just looked at your camera and scene, it seems to be fine, what is exactly the problem you're encountering?
user3010322
The generated rays are bananas.
user3010322
I look at the resulting scene (or the lack of a scene at all) and just all my tears.
hold on
you have working spheres, right?
user3010322
No.
04:06
let's render the same thing with the same parameters
user3010322
Okay. What's your scene look like?
what primitives do you have working? I can set something up based on what you already have
sphere is good for testing
user3010322
Spheres, Planes, have not tried disks
ok, sphere and plane
do you have notion of reslution ? (and pixel size?)
because I don't and I use "1 unit" as a pixel size
so I can't change that
user3010322
Uh
user3010322
04:09
Not really
user3010322
1 pixel = 1 unit right now
user3010322
I don't have 3 pixels = 1 unit or whatever
so you have the same shitty problem as I do ?
user3010322
I have no idea what you mean. :D
04:09
changing the resolution just changes the area of the viewplane
user3010322
Haven't gotten there yet.
user3010322
Will cross that bridge when I get there.
oook, so let's set up something liiiike...
a sphere at (0, 0, 0) with say 100 diameter
user3010322
So 50 radius?
user3010322
04:11
Ookay.
aaand
what is your notion of y, z and +, -...
user3010322
+z is forward, +y is up, +x is right
user3010322
Or, so I'd like it to be.
(let's make sure that when I say -200y it's not like... +200 up
oook, soooo
camera will be say 300 units up 300 units "towards wehere you're sitting" and 0 x, k?
@EiyrioüvonKauyf For what?
user3010322
04:13
Okay
and look at of the camera will be (0, 0, 0)
user3010322
viewPlaneDistance?
I might be the only person who likes LH coordinate systems.
@Mysticial the oh so popular cache lab when doing a matrix transpose :'D
let's roll a 500
in my context it's 500 units and a unit is always 1, I haven't bothered with scales and measures yet
04:16
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Oh god... Transposes suck.
@Mysticial :'D so any suggestions? getting a decent grade on this is like pulling teeth.
i like... how there are numerous research papers on this
A trick is recognize that a transpose can be done as multiple transpositions of smaller degree. (less interleaving)
Suppose you want to transpose a 4 x 4 matrix. Recognize that you can first group it as a 2 x 2 matrix of (2 x 2) per square. Transpose that first.
Then transpose without each of the 4 squares.
So all the data gets moved twice. But the memory access is lot less ugly.
yeah block transposing :/ i'm trying that next
I actually do it mostly within SIMD vectors.
Say I want to transpose 4 x 256-bit vectors of 4 doubles each.
@ThePhD alright, got everything set up (sorry I had to insert some invisible lights and shit for it to even compile)
user3010322
04:23
That's fine.
user3010322
I'm getting no intersections at all.
user3010322
So I'm doing something wrong.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf And then of course if you can align your blocks to the cache-line and use streaming stores.
@Mysticial what ... are streaming stores :| also not sure if we're allowed SIMD but I was thinking that too haha. and yeah. the oh so efficient getting all of one column and then putting it into another row to get better cache utilization :'D
user3010322
@ScarletAmaranth Would you mind dumping the values for cameraX, cameraY, and cameraZ here?
04:26
yeah, sec
When you write to an address, you must load that cacheline into cache. Write to it. Then it will eventually get flushed back to memory. If you use streaming stores, it doesn't load it. It will try to coalesce your writes so that when you complete a cacheline, it goes straight to memory.
user3010322
user3010322
@ScarletAmaranth ^
@Mysticial i don't think we're allowed to use any libraries :'D . otherwise this would be 1% easier
user3010322
For more values:
user3010322
04:29
@Mysticial Keeping in mind that it's probably close to use useless for a 4x4 matrix (even though it might be a lot faster for, say, a 4000x4000 matrix instead).
one moment, I am adding a plane and some lights to put things in perspective, that single sphere won't tell you much
alrighty
soo
@JerryCoffin For a 4 x 4 in SIMD it's the only way. :) Since each unpack instruction only has 2 inputs and 1 output.
@Mysticial Well, yes, for SIMD it's a bit different story. Just unlikely to make a noticeable difference to cache usage at 4x4.
right
04:31
no but 100x100 it's a slight diff :'D
*streaming SIMD
The reason why I care a lot about the SIMD case is because it's a way to make non-vectorizable code vectorizable - by means of a SIMD transpose.
user3010322
cameraX = 1, 0, 0 ????
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Not all that different for 100x100, since it'll still all fit (pretty easily) in cache. Depending on the type and the CPU, might even all still be all in L1.
@JerryCoffin i realize it's best for large N however any difference = good :'D. we have very very 'fun' performance objectives
04:35
@ThePhD cameraZ = eyePos - lookAt;
cameraZ.normalize();
cameraX = up.crossProduct(cameraZ);
cameraX.normalize();
cameraY = cameraZ.crossProduct(cameraX);
user3010322
Maybe my cross product is wrong.
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Thing is, if you're only dealing with L1 cache, you may lose more from double read/write than from non-linear accesses (unless it enables something else, like the afore-mentioned SIMD instructions).
@ThePhD Why are you making your own? :( Use a library that'll have a debugged and optimized one :(
user3010322
Okay, it wasn't my cross product.
@Borgleader I am rolling my own too, the joys of amp
user3010322
04:38
Something about my use with Vec3::Up was goofed???
user3010322
I dunno, I'll check again..
well
after you do
cameraZ.normal you should have
0, 0.7, 0.7
user3010322
Well, that's wrong
user3010322
it's 0, -0.7, 0.7 for me
user3010322
???
user3010322
04:40
eyepos - lookat ?
user3010322
Isn't it supposed to be lookat - eyepos?
also @JerryCoffin ? why would it all fit
oh, I do it in the reverse order, that's my bad, sorry
(it doesn't matter ultimately)
saved me some code IIRC
67*67*4 bytes ~ 150kb. < 32k = size of L1
user3010322
Well, that's the main difference.
04:41
well
it's not
and then the cameraX = (0, 1, 0) cross (0, 0.7, 0.7)
L2 ~ 64 - 256kb range
which is 0.7, 0, 0 -> now normalize
user3010322
Oh.
user3010322
You're eyepos is 300, 300
user3010322
I was doing 0, 300, -300
user3010322
04:43
As in "300 units back, 300 units up"
user3010322
My bad.
well
my back is your front probably
user3010322
Maybe.
user3010322
In either case, I got the values to match exactly.
alright, so now we have equal (maybe even correct! xD) camera coordinate systems, right?
04:45
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Depends on CPU. I know of CPUs with L1 cache up to at least 1 MB.
user3010322
user3010322
So it would seen?
user3010322
Is it... supposed to be in the upper left hand corner?
@JerryCoffin oh sorries :/ im thinking i7's - Intel Core i7
32 KB L1 i-cache
32 KB L1 d-cache
256 KB unified L2 cache
8M unified L3 cache

All caches on-chip
@ThePhD with lookAt (0, 0, 0) depends on where the cneter of your coordinate system is
I have 0, 0, 0 in the "middle"
user3010322
04:47
I'm not normalizing the rays to width and height.
user3010322
e.g. I'm not skewing the x and y values by halfwidth and halfheight
this is what I have
I added a plane just because a single sphere isn't too perspective-ish
add one too
at:
point (0, -10, 0), (0, 1, 0) normal
(warning: do not click to enlarge the image, I still havent fixed the shading bug with circles)
user3010322
user3010322
Well
user3010322
04:54
The plane never gets hit
user3010322
for some reason, it keeps doing the wrong thing. Maybe my plane intersection code is wrong here too, but I can't really tussle with it.
let me show you something
(sec, gonna take a while to set up the scenes properly)
user3010322
@ScarletAmaranth It's... sideways?
05:14
# It took 2.13 seconds to enumerate untracked files. 'status -uno'
# may speed it up, but you have to be careful not to forget to add
# new files yourself (see 'git help status').
this... is new.
user3010322
@ScarletAmaranth A normalized vector can have negative components, right?
I'm being dyslexic. :(
user3010322
Mmm.
user3010322
To get a point on the plane when you have the distance D from the origin and the normal x, y, z of the plane...
user3010322
Just fit it into the plane equation, right?
user3010322
05:27
The -d = ax + by + cz
user3010322
equation
user3010322
thingy mahjigger
user3010322
I just need x, y, and z that work out I guess
user3010322
So in my case, -10 = a(0) + b(1) + c(0) ...
user3010322
So b = -10. Hm.
05:31
On a somewhat related note; I always find myself wanting something between header 2 and 3 — Richard Tingle 4 hours ago
That's just so true.
At least also for me.
@MarkGarcia Given the importance of what I have to say, I should be looking for an H-256.
@ThePhD sry I had to run off for a moment, I just flipped the normal of a plane, not important, but I basically just moved the camera from 0 on the first picture to 100 on the second, the lookat stays the same only direction needs to be recomputed
@JerryCoffin I don't know if that is is some video encoding scheme, or a new element for WMDs.
@MarkGarcia New video encoding is H.265. Mostly pointless, since virtually nobody really does everything they could in H.264.
05:49
@sehe its not as elegant as mine...
Ok, I should scroll before I type
@ThePhD I think I'll make a debug mode that will spit out some info into the image
user3010322
Yeah, my plane intersection code doesn't really jive with these rays.
user3010322
When I set normal = 0, -1, 0 it works
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think jefferey's entry should be the logo ! do we get to vote ?
you use different notation
user3010322
05:52
but when I have normal = 0, 1, 0 for the plane it fucks up
than I do
user3010322
Bah.
user3010322
Goddamn notation.
user3010322
I guess I'llhave to figure out the differences. >_<
I've been planning on open sourcing the entire thing but it's way too ugly
and I really can't be assed to refactor at this point, I'll get to it in the future
05:53
Eric's solution for ranges is very nice, to the point of being elegant.
@MarkGarcia ikr :3
The idea is okay.
@Borgleader I can feel your excitement for the next article.
People won't like it though.
It's still coupled to iterators
@MarkGarcia I was hoping it would already be out.
06:00
You can already tell in the comments people are still shitting on iterators.
He recognized the idea that types can be used to model different kinds of iterators. More types -> more information -> more optimizations.
@Rapptz Honestly I think thats a stupid reaction. His solution is elegant =/
I don't see how it's special
The idea isn't even original and he even admits that o.o
@Rapptz IMHO, mostly uninformed. Iterators themselves are very powerful.
Why not build on top of them?
Because iterators have issues
It's been talked about to death here
I'm neutral in my stance, I don't shit on iterators and I don't love them either but I can see why people don't like them
06:03
Abstract the issues. That's mostly how C++ solves things.
@Rapptz people don't like iterators ?
why the fuck not
lol
Next you're going to tell me you didn't know people don't like <iostream>.
no that one I noticed
@A.H. My guess: 80/20 rule. 80% of them don't like them because they couldn't understand them, much less appreciate. :P
I'm pretty sure people understand iterators
You'd have to be pretty dumb to not understand them
06:07
@Rapptz you will be surprised
last semester I had a team mate who couldn't understand them
I don't know what his part 4 will go over
but atm I don't know if he solves the "Fat Iterator" issue
I think it should be possible with r-value for *this (maybe?) but iunno I think that's a big issue
and if he wants to improve Boost.Range then it'd be pretty stupid to leave that problem there
@Rapptz I think he already has given the solution:
8 mins ago, by Mark Garcia
He recognized the idea that types can be used to model different kinds of iterators. More types -> more information -> more optimizations.
I... don't see the relevance
@Rapptz You mean "Fat Iterator" as in do-it-all, know-it-all iterators?
06:12
@Mysticial buzzkills said no SIMD optimizations ( we can't assume they'll compile with -O3) also no more than 12 local vars.... >_>)
@Rapptz Damn, my schedule! Why you post tempting read? :'(
@EiyrioüvonKauyf Is this a competition or something?
@Mysticial this would be a class xD . well actually "If you can find a standards compliant method of enabling these optimizations, feel free to use it.
"
@EiyrioüvonKauyf preprocessor ifdef
That's standard compliant.
aka if i can turn it on inside the program somehow - i can only assume it will be compiled by a standards compliant thing
06:14
Have a normal version. And enable a SIMD version if the compiler supports it.
you mean like
> #ifdef USE_SSE
> #include <x86intrin.h>
> #endif
merp kaykay
The prof isn't even gonna know unless (s)he looks at the code.
they look at the code. we get style points >_>. otherwise large portions of somethings might accidentally use arch specific asm hehhe
06:16
lol
i got taken off points in a function language for using [object] append array. rather than object :: array
literally the same thing yo. and this is a functional language, so the overhead is already a crapton high
also obligatory do you know if youtube intern recruiting is done?
merpmerp sorry about that
I actually have no idea.
@Rapptz Hm. Does "Fat" also means light year lengths of template instantiations? :)
06:21
@ScottW if that was targeted towards me, i have no clue what it said as I wasn't looking....
ok then.
06:33
Shit
I have hiccups
I haven't had hiccups in like 8 years
This feels horrible
Oh man this is terrible
drink water?
@TonyTheLion Hey <3<3<3
06:45
Hi
How are you?
tired, you?
you are surrounded by tires? :)
yes, because im an autobot and i just had them changed
I'm a tad tired as well
also, I'm feeling lazy
meh
I just tracked down a user through the users list because i couldnt remember his name but i remembered his avatar and i needed his question for a possible duplicate
06:54
@Borgleader :/ i'm a decepticon. an obfuscated C one :|... also obfuscation in javascript >_>. using memory locations for functions is annoying
07:14
Is this SQL? The question is tagged C++. — Borgleader 6 secs ago
@Borgleader lol
it doesn't give me that option
it's already rejected!
@Rapptz lol. Somebody approved that.
07:29
he's been doing a lot of tag wiki edits
... for a while now it seems
-515 	17:18 	reversal 	Serial upvoting reversed
-510 	15:57 	removed 	User was removed
lol
wow
So I flagged the rollback war on this question last week:
1615
Q: What is a metaclass in Python?

e-satisWhat are metaclasses? What do you use them for? Concrete examples would be much appreciated!

That flag is still active. lol
I don't see why they want to keep the fluff.
but ultimately it's his question I suppose and his writing style etc
@TonyTheLion Have you never had the urge to rob something whilst exposing your butt?
When I started working in SO, I did it because of the friendly communauty. We had jokes, and memes, and it was fun. If you remove the fun, you get wikipedia. I understand the value of wikipedia. I just don't have fun contributing to it. No motivation, no contributino. — e-satis 2 days ago
07:34
I'm in favor of keeping the original. The OP done some very good contributions. At least give him something in return.
Damn
Dude straight up deleted his answer
@TonyTheLion Why can't I see the butt?!
Yes he did.
@ScarletAmaranth Not really, no.
>
1615
What is a metaclass in Python? 7
asked Sep 19 '08 at 6:10 by e-satis
1) Content dispute on the question. 2) OP deleted his 2000+ vote self-answer. 3) The question got wikied from minor edits and a roll-back war. Consider removing the wiki. All the content is from the OP. – Mysticial 2 days ago active
07:37
mornin
@TonyTheLion I have no words
07:49
@ScarletAmaranth what? He doesn't rob out with his cock out, is that really so hard to believe?
JBL
JBL
08:02
Good morning!
user1804599
08:12
Hello.
user1804599
If I have a set of points (2-tuples of doubles) and I want to find the one nearest to a given point, I should use a binary tree, right? Should std::set do?
Welp, that answer took way longer to finish than I expected =/ crosses-fingers for an accept
tl;dr +1
@Borgleader First sentence gets my upvote.
I never like that function, it always confused me :(
the new way is much clearer.
thanks for the upboats guys!
user1804599
08:24
I bookmarked it.
@rightfold you need a spatial index
user1804599
OIC.
alright, time for bed
user1804599
PostgreSQL supports that, me thinks.
user1804599
08:33
But doing an AJAX call for each point is expensive and fugly. :v
user1804599
Emscripten. :D
Nah. Tbf there's a hole in the market imho
user1804599
How about a quadtree?
Not perfect for that
user1804599
08:37
What is?
I don't know :(
I was researching that from the databases perspective
Did you know you can follow @LoungeCpp to get status updates on the neverending development hell of loungecpp dot net?? #AMAZING
10
And they use some crazyshit optimizations
JBL
JBL
@CatPlusPlus I have a feeling this will be funny :D
user1804599
I know.
user1804599
08:40
I will google for “finding the nearest point in a set of points.”
user1804599
I will go with a binary tree for now; can always change it later.
Apparently naive index building is good enough :P
Um what
user1804599
In computer science, abstraction is the process of separating ideas from specific instances of those ideas at work. Computational structures are defined by their meanings (semantics), while hiding away the details of how they work. Abstraction tries to factor out details from a common pattern so that programmers can work close to the level of human thought, leaving out details which matter in practice, but are exigent to the problem being solved. For example, a system can have several abstraction layers whereby different meanings and amounts of detail are exposed to the programmer; low-lev...
If you don't know what to do just use a linear solution
R-tree could work
user1804599
08:45
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, yeah, good idea.
user1804599
Way easier to implement given that these suckers of a JavaScript still don’t have an ordered set data type.
I have a priority queue
Not a set, but might be what you need.
user1804599
Array will do since it’s linear search anyway. :P
@rightfold TIL about abstraction
hi
user1804599
08:52
I am writing an abstraction with a getPointNear function.
1
A: std::ofstream::write adds characters

deviantfanYou´ll have to specify std::ofstream::binary when opening. Else, on Windows in textfile mode, \n in a program will be converted to/from \r\n when writing/reading the file.

haiku!
user1804599
dat pun
user1804599
08:56
hil
@MarkGarcia I'm tempted to roll it back as too trivial
and also because it ruins the haiku formatting
I want the haiku formatting back! — Mark Garcia 23 secs ago
116
A: Weirdest way to produce a stack overflow

TheDoctorPython import webbrowser webbrowser.open("http://stackoverflow.com/")

dat pun
ohh look, Doge!
08:59
wow

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