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11:00
I'd lean toward starting just in general with getting people interested in questions of universal computation and what it means to make a more powerful machine. I'd take it pretty slow. No rush, a mixture of history and some exercises comparing what it means to have more or fewer operations available to you (can you multiply if you have a loop and addition? etc.)
I'd encourage casual work with a broad spectrum of abstract machines, including Turing Machines. I actually find Turing's own words to be rather easy to absorb, but if you had several classes and homework it could be made even easier to demonstrate. hostilefork.com/2005/06/20/turings-thesis-in-his-own-words
Try and get people wondering to themselves if substrate X could be used to achieve the same results as substrate Y if you applied a transformation... if that transformation could be described in a turnkey way... use very simple machines to introduce this pattern of thought.
(Do so without jargon like "substrate" and "transformation" of course.)
@HostileFork loops are imperative ;-)
I'm not opposed to putting in a mix of ideas, but I'd not want anyone getting out of a serious first level computer science course and not be able to grasp lambda calculus concepts, even if they didn't know that's what it's called.
I don't care if they can write a single line of compilable code, or "know" that semi-colons go at the end of lines, or know what a .so or a .DLL or a .lib are.
If any of that is in the course, in fact, I think it's a crappy first course.
@HostileFork I like the first two pages so far...
I believe computer science education, at least at the introductory levels, needs a similar level of "throw it all out and start over"
The 101 course needs to be timeless, and that means no Java or Pascal or anything. I'm sick of people parroting nonsense like digital is "1s and 0s" instead of making a distinction between discrete symbolic processing (at any # of symbols) and analog. I'm tired of computers being presented as typewriters attached to televisions.
If you want timeless, you can't use any programming language. You have to use pure math.
11:12
I found that it's easy to play "The House of the Rising Sun" on electric guitar. Especially when I switched on distortion. Only belatedly, after 20 minutes or so, did I think of the neighbours. He he. :-)
Why would you switch on distortion on that song?
It lends itself very easily to improvisation. Guitar can sustain much better with distortion. Also better "drive", so to speak.
When I was in high school I had a brief musical collaboration with some people who really only knew that song. So we decided to parody it with "House of the Raisin Bun"...about a pastry shop (that had spoiled many people's diets and led them into a depressed slothlike state of ruin).
I think the improvisation thing has to do with the simplicity of the chord progression. It's like when I was a student, we used to improvise to Sade. Very loud. ;-)
what exactly is LL(1) Grammar ?
11:16
@IntermediateHacker @Johannes is just studying that...
Im not at that position yet! xD
@IntermediateHacker The 1 stands for 1 symbol look ahead, and one of the Ls stands for "left".
An LL parser is a top-down parser for a subset of the context-free grammars. It parses the input from Left to right, and constructs a Leftmost derivation of the sentence (hence LL, compared with LR parser). The class of grammars which are parsable in this way is known as the LL grammars. The remainder of this article describes the table-based kind of parser, the alternative being a recursive descent parser which is usually coded by hand (although not always; see e.g. ANTLR for an LL(*) recursive-descent parser generator). An LL parser is called an LL(k) parser if it uses k tokens of looka...
> An LL parser is a top-down parser for a subset of the context-free grammars. It parses the input from L eft to right, and constructs a L eftmost derivation of the sentence (hence LL, compared with LR parser). The class of grammars which are parsable in this way is known as the LL grammars.
@AlfPSteinbach Apropos sustain, there is an old video of Santana moving around the stage to find the "sweet spot" of feedback where he can sustain a single note for minutes. It's amazing. But that was back then...
@FredOverflow Turns out both Ls stand for "left" :)
11:19
what parsers read input from right to left?
Arabic ones.
@JohannesSchaublitb I don't know, Arabian parsers?
@FredOverflow : you're thinking to write any variadic templates tutorial like tuple class ?
for beginners
11:21
@MrAnubis What? No. Why would I want to do that? Aren't there already tutorials on that?
Also, Microsoft compilers don't support variadic templates yet :(
The comparison is not LL to RR (because if you just change direction it's isomorphic)
i'm gong to update my FAQ about dependent names for c++1x
It's LL to LR.
i couldn't find any good one
LR builds a right derivation
11:22
@MrAnubis Why do you think you need variadic templates? Unless you're a library author, you probably don't need to worry about them.
@FredOverflow gcc supports
@FredOverflow it's just i see them as very cool feature
but I forgot the details. hence I'm reading the book :)
@JohannesSchaublitb where is your FAQ ? , link?
35
Q: Where and why do I have to put "template" and "typename" on dependent names?

MSaltersIn templates, where and why do I have to put typename and template on dependent names? What exactly are dependent names anyway? I have the following code: template <typename T, typename Tail> // Tail will be a UnionNode too. struct UnionNode : public Tail { // ... template<typen...

@JohannesSchaublitb aah i've already read it twice , would be awesome if you update it
11:36
@FredOverflow : sizeof even doesn't works -> int x[10] ; int* z=x; sizeof(z) ;
i'd have been thrown out of interview due to this mistake
:)
all gone?
hi
sizeof would print the size of the pointer -> 4bytes
You had this is an interview?
here comes my enemy -> avada kedavra :P
xD :) Don't forget my Explliarmus! haha
arrhhh...
11:44
@LewsTherin i 'll have my interview soon
Oh, good luck dude! :)
it's always good not to make mistakes there
@LewsTherin Thanks
I don't think they make the interview questions too hard. Welcome :)
@LewsTherin so what's up ?
Nothing much...just trying to get Oracle working
It refuses to work lol
11:46
lol, you know the spell for it :P
Yes, I do xD
but it might be easier to use reparo lol
Damn, I have to go
talk to you later :)
see ya:)
@LewsTherin Depends on the system, sizeof could also return 2 or 8 for pointers.
12:00
@FredOverflow you're awesome
@FredOverflow : so on which c++ project you working?
hi, which C++ 3d game engine would you guys say is best for a beginner?
Irrlicht which im trying only has gfx and basic collision, and Ogre is just gfx
is there any one that has most features with a good userbase?
if in an interview someone would say that pointers are 4 bytes, I would reject them
they shall say that the size is implementation defined
@JohannesSchaublitb : suppose that you taking my interview and i am fresher -> what interview question will you ask?
you guyz teleport at some regular interval of time? , all suddenly gone?
I'm here
I don't think anyone at the time here does game programming right
5
Q: Help in choosing a 3D game engine

Sujay GhoshI am not new to programming, I am quite good in C++, Windows SDK , VC++; but I am new to game development . I want to start this as a hobby in developing a desktop game . I have found several engines, but I am not sure whether it does the initial job I am looking at . Initially I want to do th...

12:11
wahaha
thank
you
oh wow
thanks too
@FredOverflow suppose that you taking my interview and i am fresher -> what interview question will you ask?
@MrAnubis byteswap(0x12345678) = 0x78563412. Implement byteswap.
Ahah. I barely know C++; i just know the basic syntax and functions; it's not that hard if you know PHP just there's more ;)
12:14
@FredOverflow this is freshers question? 0_o ( i am doing the problem)
What exactly are you applying for?
c++ programmer job , but i just came out of grad
I'd expect any C programmer to be able to solve that.
We teach that in the first semester.
any any c++ programmer should be able to solve that too
I agree agree agree.
12:17
char* x= 0x12345678;
char* z= 0x12345678;
std::swap(x,z);
will that work?
won't even compile.
Integers aren't char pointers.
template<typename T> void byteswap(T(&x)[4]) { swap(x[0], x[3]); swap(x[1], x[2]); }
You can't pass 0x12345678 to that template.
This all looks like line noise to me :P
@FredOverflow i never came accross such problem
anyways i'll comeup with my own solution , tested one
12:19
byteswap(*(unsigned char(*)[4])&(int const&)0x12345678)
where should i find such problems? any book ?
endian conversion
Oh, you mean in general?
i just flagged your question
80
Q: Programming Puzzles

cmccullohWhat is a good source of programming puzzles (book or website)? Either for a team to solve together as a group (on a weekly or semi-regular basis) or for interview candidates? Or just for someone to do alone as an exercise?

@JohannesSchaublitb erm... less ugly, please :)
12:23
@FredOverflow Thanks
anyway, here is my solution:
unsigned byteswap(unsigned x)
{
    return (x << 24) | ((x & 0xff00) << 8) | ((x >> 8) & 0xff00) | (x >> 24);
}
the problem is that this has no symmetry
I never asked for symmetry.
The beauty is that you only need 16 bit constants.
If you said (x & 0xff0000) >> 8, you'd need a larger constant.
why is this beauty
Because 16 bit constants generate smaller assembly code.
12:26
you rely on it having 32 bits anyway.
at least on SPARC and x86
hm
good point dude
thanks dude
but I wonder whether compiler optimizes both into a byteswap assembly op
bonus points if the person knows that
12:27
extra bonus if he says "ahh, my compiler can optimize that!"
his own compiler? hire!
BTW I found the mouse dead under a towel at late night
it still moved its eyes a bit, but I think something was wrong with it. i put it outside
@MrAnubis next question: implement std::string int_to_string(int); without using any library functions.
impossible...
they would at least have to use std::string's copy constructor
:)
I mean you are not allowed to use itoa or stringstreams or boost or something.
12:32
return i == 0 ? "0" : (int_to_string(i / 10) + ((i % 10) + '0'));
Doesn't work with negative numbers.
If I could only ask one interview question, this int_to_string function would probably be it.
You can discuss lots of corner cases and platform specific things.
You can also discuss why you would want to return a std::string instead of a char*.
And of course, I would ask for a couple of interesting test cases.
12:49
now my question is ... what is "wrong" with my int_to_string, if we don't care about negative numbers?
there is something "wrong" with it
with what it yields
You're doing pointer arithmetic instead of string concatenation.
Welcome to Undefined Behavior Land!
@JohannesSchaublitb As you mentioned yesterday if i < 10 then i/10 is not guaranteed to be 0 in C++03.
@FredOverflow i don't do pointer arithmetic
@StackedCrooked He corrected himself later. It is guaranteed.
@JohannesSchaublitb Sure you do. "0" + something is pointer arithmetic.
I don't do "0" + something
12:55
Oh wait, the return type is std::string, nevermind.
He's doing something like std::string("0") +
I will give a hint: 8
Something with octal numbers I guess.
You are concatenating on the wrong side?
I will solve it: It always starts with 0 !
so int_to_string(10) actually gives 010 !
12:58
Actually, the code doesn't compile with a huge template error message.
i think it should work
@FredOverflow
std::string int_to_string(int num)
{
std::string d;
while(num){
int x=num%10;
num/=10;
d.push_back(x+'0');
}
return std::string(d.rbegin(), d.rend());
}
except it always starts with 0
error: no match for ‘operator+’ in ‘int_to_string(int)() + ((i % 10) + 48)’
@MrAnubis that'S wrong. it will yield "" for 0
you need to make it a do-while loop
12:59
i tested it in gcc 4.6 then posted the code
you didn't test the interesting corner cases
@FredOverflow I don't understand why there is this compiler error.
me neither
@FredOverflow dammit :)
i forgot it promotes the char :)
right :)
13:01
Aah
return i == 0 ? "0" : (int_to_string(i / 10) + char((i % 10) + '0'));
At least it compiles now.
std::string has a push_back member function? Cool, didn't know that :)
the last one is the consequence of your implementation defined result value
since you overflow int
@FredOverflow hmm that would be news to me. I thought you have to use append
I'm just gonna use my own string_with_hookers_and_blackjack.
13:06
I recommend settling on the UNI thing
UNIcode, UNIlang, UNIsex, UNIversity
UNIverse
UNIfied string theory!
we just have to define the UNIlang
13:09
UNIcode would be a cool name for a programming language, but the name's already taken :-/
There's no UNIcode, there's only Unicode.
i wonder, If one jumps up on the moon, is there danger that you could fly away and never come back?
if not on the moon, can this happen on space stations like ISS?
Implementing a programming language with lojban might be cool.
@JohannesSchaublitb Err... gravity on the moon is about 1/6th of the earth, so no.
But from the ISS, I would say yes, definitely. Not enough mass.
but could you jump that high that when the moon attracts you again, you could fall down and die?
13:12
The impact when you land will be the same impact when you jumped off.
You will have the same speed.
If you jump so hard that the impact of the jump makes you half-dead, then you will die on landing.
it must be fun to jump 6 meters up
@StackedCrooked LOL
@JohannesSchaublitb You can't jump 6 meters up on the moon.
13:14
i can jump 1 meter up on earth
so i should be able to jump 6 meters on moon
Gravity and highest jump don't work linearly.
Plus you'd have to wear a heavy space-suit on the moon.
But you get to 1 meter because you are lifting your legs.
@JohannesSchaublitb see here starting at about 4:22
He discusses how the allegedly "low jumps" on the Moon are perfectly normal for the conditions.
So you can't jump much higher than knee-high on the Moon.
sorry ;)
13:24
oh
it must be horrible to accidentally fly away from a space ship xD
you would not feel any hurt but you would knew you would definitely die sloowly xD
Well, you would probably starve to death.
Or die of boredom.
or you could choose to just stop it all and open the protection case
You could piss in the opposite direction and get back to the ISS!
then it would all be very fast. I believe one would die because of boiling blood
lol
Because of the low pressure?
13:29
yeah
but perhaps first you will explode
yeah I think you will explode instantly
I got assigned robot co-operation for my third year project
i.e., flocking and stuff
Well, at least astronauts can't complain about high pressure on the job...
14:07
@FredOverflow Indeed my bad
@FredOverflow Jesus, what the hell is that!?
oh I see
@FredOverflow why do they always add noise
@FredOverflow newscasts and u2b videos. they always add hurtful noise. made by instruments of a sort, i gather.
@AlfPSteinbach lol
suspension I guess
Have you ever watched a horror movie on mute?
14:13
@FredOverflow does that hex number have to start with 0x?
can it be a string as well?
Hex literals start with 0x in C and C++, is that your question?
No, because strings aren't numbers.
I mean to solve the problem, must it be solved with its literal type?
I gon't get it. 0x12345678 is just an unsigned int, what's so hard about that?
It is unsigned or in hexadecimal format?
An unsigned int is an unsigned int. There is no such thing as a hexadecimal int.
Saying byteswap(0x12345678) = 0x78563412 is the same as saying byteswap(305419896) = 2018915346.
It's just a lot clearer what the function is supposed to do in the first version.
14:17
right....
Take the following program snippet as an example:
int a = 15;
int b = 0xf;
int c = 017;
Here is the generated assembly:
movl   $15, 12(%esp)
movl   $15,  8(%esp)
movl   $15,  4(%esp)
So either way it is 15..binary stuff confuses me at times...I never see the underlying number
As you can see, it does not matter at if you use decimal, hex or octal literals. They're the same numbers of the same type.
I'm not sure of the countries of these flags:
@LewsTherin I didn't even show you binary, that would be 1111
14:20
But they look tasty!
@AlfPSteinbach The first one is Australia.
@FredOverflow yeah...ok will try to solve the problem
@LewsTherin Are you also having an interview? :)
Nope. xD but it is practice...my problem solving skills suck
happy coding then
14:25
@FredOverflow I can't solve it without using a string grr
can you explain your code?
unsigned byteswap(unsigned x)
{
    return (x << 24) | ((x & 0xff00) << 8) | ((x >> 8) & 0xff00) | (x >> 24);
}
if you don't mind
Surely your C++ book covers bitwise arithmetic?
If you don't understand what (x << 24) means, simply print x and print (x << 24) and see how they relate. If you don't know what a | b means, simply print a, print b, print a | b and see how they relate etc.
I just checked not the book I have with me...let's say the book I have with me is specialized
A bitwise operation operates on one or more bit patterns or binary numerals at the level of their individual bits. This is used directly at the digital hardware level as well as in microcode, machine code and certain kinds of high level languages. On the simple low cost digital processors used in many embedded systems, bitwise operations are typically several times as fast as multiplication, sometimes also significantly faster than addition, at least in certain technical circumstances. On the other hand, modern processors in high performance segments usually perform addition and multiplica...
happy studying
How can someone be happy studying... sigh thanks anyways
Because studying and learning new things is fun in general?
You can't be a great programmer if you hate learning new things.
14:31
I don't hate learning new things...I just hate it when learning new things is hard because it is explained in a crappy way
Yeah, we hate things after we learn them.
Btw...
 int arr[5] = {1,3,4,5,6} ;

    int (*p)[5] = &arr;
    cout << sizeof(p) ;
}
that didn't return the correct size
p is a pointer, so sizeof will return the size of the pointer.
Maybe you meant sizeof(*p)?
I remember hating to learn how makefiles work.
@FredOverflow yep, that worked...I so need to get used to that
14:33
C++ arrays suck.
Vectors?
@LewsTherin Almost nobody seriously uses pointers to arrays. Why would you want to get used to them?
@StackedCrooked They don't, they just pretend.
@FredOverflow I don't know ha..just to understand it
@CatPlusPlus what C++ arrays
I prefer working with a pointer to a memory buffer over arrays.
14:35
I have, over many years, come to hate learning new things that are of practical value. For example, learning about std::vector is bad. Use e.g. std::vector at work, and if you're working in a place with moron micro-managing managers, as most people do, then you're writing "clever" code and soon you're fired or frozen out. I mean there's a reason why the NIH, Not Invented Here, acronym was invented. And of course you can't use that acronym either.
No, makefiles.
@AlfPSteinbach I am confused
Why do you get fired when you use something that works
There are crappy workplaces, nobody knew that.
@LewsTherin Here is how you can learn what the expressions do on your own:
unsigned byteswap(unsigned x)
{
    unsigned a = x << 24;
    unsigned b0= x & 0xff00;
    unsigned b = b0 << 8;
    unsigned c0= x >> 8;
    unsigned c = c0 & 0xff00;
    unsigned d = x >> 24;
    unsigned z = a | b | c | d;
    printf("%08x\n%08x\n%08x\n%08x\n%08x\n%08x\n%08x\n%08x\n", x, a, b0, b, c0, c, d, z);
    return z;
}
int main()
{
    byteswap(0x12345678);
}
Just look at the outputs and you will understand.
I once found a memory leak in code that used arrays (detected by Valgrind). I fixed the code and replaced the array with a vector. One colleague got irritated by this because of the "overhead" I introduced by doing this.
14:39
@FredOverflow danke will test it
You would probably have learned more by writing that yourself.
Just by taking complicated expressions apart and printing the intermediate results, you can learn an awful lot.
@FredOverflow I don't understand why do you use 24?
@StackedCrooked You should've smacked him with a banana.
@LewsTherin What did you see in the output of a?
How does a relate to x? How to you get from x to a?
78000000
14:41
And how does that relate to 12345678?
Do you see any pattern?
@CatPlusPlus I wish I did.
Because we have bananas at work.
How convenient.
@FredOverflow it shifted it to the left
@StackedCrooked Going Bananas
@LewsTherin Yes, by how many places?
oh 24bits
14:43
exactly
See? You can do it on your own!
So you shift by a number of bits depending on what you need
Yes. And since in this case, I want the lowest byte to become the highest byte, I shift it by three bytes (= 24 bits) to the left.
wait is it 24bits or bytes? a 0 is 4bytes..
24 bytes is a lot of bits.
@LewsTherin A hexadecimal digit is 4 bits, not 4 bytes.
0000 = 0
0001 = 1
0010 = 2
0011 = 3
0100 = 4
0101 = 5
0110 = 6
0111 = 7
1000 = 8
1001 = 9
1010 = A
1011 = B
1100 = C
1101 = D
1110 = E
1111 = F
14:48
yeah...but it is an integer, so should it not take 4bytes of memory?
0x2 the same as 0010 the same 2 == 4bytes of memory
0x12345678 takes 4 byte of memory
I think I am confusing myself lol
A single hexadecimal digit takes 4 bits
And since there's usually 8 of them in an int, you get 4*8 = 32 bits in an int.
ok, makes sense
so you start shifting from 8 to the left
What do you mean "8 to the left"?
14:52
the number 0x12345678 ends with 8..so the << operator starts to shift from 24 places to the left
Damn it I need a pen
Yes. The single most important tool of a problem solver is a pen. After his brain, of course :)
nonono
8 is 1000
0x12345678 << 24 == 0x78000000
That should explain the semantics without doubt, shouldn't it?
Shifting by 24 binary places is like shifting by 6 hexadecimal places. That's why the first six digits "disappear" on the left and 6 new zeroes "appear" on the right.
@FredOverflow what do you mean by hex always in 8 ?
so if I declared an int x = 0x8
14:56
@LewsTherin I never said "hex always in 8", what is that even supposed to mean?
@FredOverflow it will be this way 0000 0000 0000 1000
That's only 16 bits, but we have 32.
that is 0x00 0x08
Anyway, why are you talking about 0x8? Where did that come from?
@FredOverflow because 0x12345678 ends with 8
14:58
No
@JohannesSchaublitb So? We never isolated the 8.
Was just trying to understand why he said having in 8 I understand now
It gets padded to fill the 32bits space
@LewsTherin Where exactly did I say "having in 8"? Doesn't sound like me, and I can't make any sense of it.
@FredOverflow there

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