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22:00
Not yet
@DemCodeLines You should totally drop that and use Haskell.
it's so hot in here
user3010322
So take off all your clothes.~
I already did
At least you can do web stuff with Haskell without shooting yourself in the mouth.
@Rapptz Mmmmm.
22:03
Nekkid
You took off your bra as well?
Pick a tag: C or Java. That will determine whether this gets 100 upvotes or downvoted into oblivion. — Mysticial 8 secs ago
Xeo
Xeo
@Mysticial ILUUAGSFILGLFAD
burn it down into oblivion
doesn't matter which language
@Mysticial inb4 he chooses Pascal
@Jefffrey Pants down servers up
22:05
I jizz in my pants
unique.
all the fucking things should be U N I Q U E.
fuck shared.
@CatPlusPlus About that. Let's do Lounge<Chat> in Haskell.
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG The difference between those is whether something can link to an unrelated branch, right?
@Xeo Right.
A DAG can have no cycles
Xeo
Xeo
duplicate the targets of the links and you have a tree out of a DAG!
22:07
ie, no nodes can travel down the tree and then end up at itself again
@Jefffrey Erlang would probably work better
that's not exactly what I'm going to do, but it's fairly close.
user1804599
user1804599
This DAG surely has eight cycles.
user1804599
They are connected by arrows.
zch
zch
22:08
No cycle there
the real problem with having a DAG in this case is that you have no idea whether or not to destroy the local variables of your subexpressions.
@rightfold the arrows show direction
whereas in a tree, you always destroy anything you own- problem solved.
Xeo
Xeo
that's what you meant by shared vs unique, I wager?
user1804599
@TonyTheLion psst no shit
22:09
yep.
your mum
is sexier than you
I've unlocked the foreveralone.jpg achievement in Hate Plus, I wonder what's next in store for my amazing life
> Cooking by the Book
Take an actual honest-to-god IRL photograph of the cake you're sharing with *Hyun-ae, and e-mail it to the developer! cake@hateplus.com
Xeo
Xeo
@TonyTheLion Is she shared or unique?
Just fat
user1804599
22:09
She’s weak.
oh gawd
she's fat, she's weak, she's shared and unique
Xeo
Xeo
oh damn, already past midnight
it rhymes
@CatPlusPlus Why? Also, I'm pretty sure there are more people here willing to help with Haskell than Erlang.
user1804599
She’s also dumb.
22:10
gist-vim <3
user1804599
And raw, const and volatile.
user1804599
She’s so fat she’s like a void.
@Jefffrey Because Erlang fits the domain better, also tools
user1804599
OMG ERLAGN <3
22:12
Also ahahaha nobody will help
So who cares
I've added some benchmarks for your benefit (and my curiosity) to my answersehe 15 secs ago
user1804599
I would for a week or so.
I think I'm overdoing it again
You're overdoing it
22:12
Then let's all help for a week and see what we got.
you're answering questions on SO
that's overdoing it
lol
@sehe No nonius :<
(I love that phrase)
@R.MartinhoFernandes You suck at marketing
user1804599
The joke.
I think you missed it
22:13
@Xeo The real problem is that I didn't know the answer to these questions before I started writing the code that depended on them :P
@Jefffrey I don't really feel like coding outside of work
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't know how to use it :|
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG ow
I should try, but...
user1804599
I should try butt…
Xeo
Xeo
22:13
Just always use shared?
At worst it always has a single reference.
nah
because then you have no idea whether or not to destroy the locals.
user1804599
Use a garbage collector noobs.
user1804599
This problem’s been solved for decennia.
Lounge<Chat> is likely to remain unborn.
@sehe I want to write more in-depth docs (I created a gh-pages branch!), but I think it's quite simple to go by the examples. If I'm wrong, I'd appreciate feedback :)
Xeo
Xeo
22:14
@DeadMG deleter, when it goes out of scope
or check if refcount is 1 manually
the semantic tree is not destroyed when code generation is performed.
If anyone here knows Java, would they please come in here and help me a bit?

Java

Dedicated to the discussion of the Java programming language a...
zch
zch
No
@DemCodeLines You are supposed to move from PHP to a better language. You are doing it wrong.
so refcounting the compiler's tree nodes is useless when telling you whether or not to generate code to destroy the locals at run-time.
user1804599
22:15
@DemCodeLines No, because Java Sucks!
and just to add fun to the pile
Xeo
Xeo
@DeadMG that kinda sounds like a solved problem
@Jefffrey lol
the tree is mutated in-place at runtime
user1804599
22:16
Every problem is solved if you don’t use C++.
so I have to have a bunch of nodes that are like, "Recompute the real node when the inputs changed".
@Xeo How do you mean?
Xeo
Xeo
Somebody should have had the same problem for their language
yeah, I asked the Clang guys but #llvm isn't the most active right now.
user3010322
 fatal error C1045: compiler limit : linkage specifications nested too deeply
user3010322
THSI IS A BOGUS ERROR
22:20
although frankly
user3010322
I FILED THE BUG FOR THIS WHEN I LEFT MICROSOFT LAST SUMMER
user3010322
WHY IS IT NOT FIXED YET FML
coming from the guys who have things like ~T() { assert(false); }.
@DemCodeLines we say it "J**a" here. because otherwise it's fucking offensive.
not sure I want their solution
22:21
what
@Abyx and here I thought we don't censor words...
@HamZa nope we do.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't understand the last example. The first sample doesn't run ("enable threads")
@sehe Compile with pthread.
I should #ifdef that part, I guess.
Xeo
Xeo
22:26
kay, ported the vocabulary from book 1 up to E to my Anki deck, that should be good enough for today. Time for some sleeps.
@R.MartinhoFernandes or add the lib :)
@sehe The last example shows how to test constructors and destructors (it's tricky because you want to make sure the destructors are not included in the measurement of constructors and vice-versa).
0
Q: Are discussions of political standpoints on topic here?

user1068446I'm wondering how politically natured questions should be framed here, and at what point they are off topic. For example, this question: Illegal immigration due to poverty - Is there a moral way to tackle it? appears to be essentially 'What policy should Country A adopt?'. Could one similarly ...

^^ lolwut
@R.MartinhoFernandes is there a "macro" version of "run_for_at_least"?
@sehe Add what lib?
22:27
pthread
@Xeo You should try gamified education
Add it to what?
works pretty well over at /r/learnjapanese
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz I'm having fun so far with Japanese from Zero, not sure what I could be gamifying here
@sehe Not sure what that means. Why would you want a macro?
22:28
duolingo does the strange form of gamification (i.e. SO's lame version of it)
is it duolingo? I forget
yeah duolingo
this compiles to this. with -march=native -O3 it didn't emit a dot product instruction.
ah crap
it just occurred to me there are MANY bugs in the old version of Wide w.r.t. incorrect order of destruction of locals.
user3010322
@Xeo your partial template specialization trick isn't working. :c
bad deadmg
user3010322
At least, not on MSVC
22:31
How surprising.
still, yay at least for rbegin() and rend().
if only I could for(auto&& elem : reverse(vec)).
fuck you non-ranges.
@DeadMG You... you can. You just have to write it yourself and it's entirely trivial.
user3010322
Maybe I do need to make it a full blown class. =/
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD define 'doesn't work'
probably ICEs.
user3010322
22:33
MSVC picks the wrong overload of collection of them
@Xeo doesn't work /ˈdʌzˌənt wɜːk/ phrase MSVC
lol
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD it can't possibly fuck up overload resolution
sscce plx
@Xeo It absolutely can.
especially if it involved SFINAE.
Xeo
Xeo
no SFINAE, just OR from what I know (and what my idea is)
user3010322
Uh
user3010322
That's not realyl an SSCCE
user3010322
But it does tell you what's going on! In comments. Ish. Kinda.
user3010322
Let me try to SSCCE it with some regular, boring types...
Xeo
Xeo
yeah, I see what's wrong
22:36
ah, shit.
this is the part where I rebuild my vtable handling code.
Xeo
Xeo
the userdata<T> is an overload to the base template, and it's a better fit
let's go and ... uh ... work on some other part instead.
yep, that's the wise choice here, go work on some other part.
user3010322
@Xeo Oh. Well, that's not very comforting.
Xeo
Xeo
you shouldn't actually specialise that base template, y'know
just add overloads
that was the idea
You're supposed to be sleeping
user3010322
22:37
Oh.
Xeo
Xeo
so just remove all the template<> before the functions
user3010322
Ah. Got it.
Xeo
Xeo
that's why I called it 'specialisation in terms of overloading'
@Rapptz sleep-typing
@R.MartinhoFernandes I thought example4 style would be convenient. Can I mix and match with run_for_at_least?
I scratched my back.
22:38
Good job.
Be sure to tell the twittersphere.
thanks.
will do.
Liar
hmm
user3010322
you are copy assignable if you are copy constructible and move assignable.
user3010322
22:40
Wait
ah, whatever, I've stacked way too many refactorings already, let's fix this later.
user3010322
I can't igure out
user3010322
the noun form. ;~;
@sehe As is, run_for_at_least is internal. I'm not sure how useful it would be with its current semantics.
I see you might want to count iterations in a certain amount of time, but then it needs more fine-grained control.
True
22:41
As is it might end up running twice as many iterations than are needed to achieve that total (which is fine for heuristics purposes, but not so good for actual measurements).
I'll add a feature request.
argh.
@R.MartinhoFernandes i'm not sure myself how this feature would work. I'd usually want to compare implementations side by side, somehow trying to scale to the slowest of them (limit the total elapsed time)
fuck myself.
I defined a local variable as T t = init; instead of auto t = init;
Permission granted.
what was I thinking.
22:45
You wanted a conversion?
nope.
T was exactly the type of init.
Not anymore, right
precisely.
and then VS cried at me because the new type of init is totally different.
and I'm like, "Fuck you, puppy, the one time you don't use auto."
thank God that mistake is impossible in Wide.
@sehetw if I was on the std::committee, I would remove stringstream altogether.
Arhem. I'm pretty sure he confused "being on the committee" with "being the committee" momentarily
Yeah pffsh who needs conversions
Or in-memory streams
22:50
> You mean "if I were the committee" then? :) Anyways, what's your gripe with stringstream? Or is it a generic iostreams jab? replied
user3010322
Democracy is equal to dictatorship in the mind of a narcissist.
or backwards compatibility
argh some Coke went the wrong way, it was just like throwing up
Bet you didn't use auto again?
Democracy is dictatorship that doesn't get anything done
@ThePhD So ... deep (mind if I steal?)
22:52
2deep
@ThePhD I did something similar for parsing Tcl objects (TclObj*). If applied to lua it would look somewhat like this.
@sehe Currently, everything runs as little time as needed to be at least some factor of the clock resolution — there's a constant somewhere; I think it's 1000. Though it is all based on educated guesses as I can't predict the future, duh. (This actually makes everything take forever to run with MSVC's clocks because of their stupid precision.)
I've ordered too little food today
user3010322
@StackedCrooked Ooh, shiny!
user3010322
@sehe Go nuts.
22:53
Damn, that i += i++ question got an answer from Eric Lippert.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh. That's so subtle I didn't even notice
I suppose what you want is to replace that clock_resolution * minimum_ticks bit with something scaled to the slowest?
user3010322
My twitter never does anything anyhow. :D
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus I have half a pizza left over, come get it
@sehe It's actually a bit more complex than that. Gore here: github.com/rmartinho/nonius/blob/devel/include/nonius/…
22:54
If you are going to use overloading then you should design it so that unintended overloads are impossible.
At least that's what I do.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not sure anymore. I'll just get a bit more miles under my belt first
Otherwise it's just way too scary.
I need to make that goddamn budget one of these days
Also probably try cooking again
@sehe Oh, to be clear, what runs for that "as little as needed" time is one sample. It doesn't scale down if you increase the number of samples. That would be dumb.
user3010322
.... Hm.
user3010322
22:57
This is peculiar.
@sehe Ok. Let me know when you're more certain. I want to add different scheduling schemes and I guess what you suggested would fit nicely in that, so I'll wait before I start designing it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm only talking about arriving at the "right" number of iterations to have a sensible comparison of different functions
@sehe What would that be? I just make sure each sample is meaningful on its own. What would make it more or less comparable?
(Not necessarily wanting answers now; just giving you an idea of what I'm interested in knowing)
user3010322
template <typename T>
struct get_return {
	typedef decltype( stack::get<T>( nullptr ) ) type;
};
user3010322
Is, uh.
user3010322
23:03
Is something like this legal?
user3010322
where get is a free function
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, you're right. I usually aim for "human friendly" numbers (i.e., big enough to "visually" compare (usually order of magnitude 1s) but not so big that running the benchmarks is boring :))
@ThePhD I don't see why not.
user3010322
Hm. It seems to keep picking the wrong function to use, and thus gives me the wrong return value...
user3010322
Bleh. Oh well.
23:04
what is the return type of stack::get<T>?
user3010322
It's that long list of functions I posted earlier
If the overload is ambiguous I guess it will fail.
user3010322
Damn. :c
user3010322
I gotta figure out how to make it pick the right one.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lolwut "PANIC: clock is on fire"?
23:06
FUCK ME! I've just breathed in some bits of curry and birds-eye chillies. I sorta sneezed, which involves rapid breathing in first, and it got down my trachea. This must be what dying from lung cancer feels like:(
@sehe That's a fatal exception.
lp0 on fire (aka Printer on Fire) is a semi-obsolete error message generated on some Unix and Unix-like computer operating systems in response to certain types of printer errors. lp0 is the Unix device handle for the first line printer, but the error can be displayed for any printer attached to a Unix/Linux system. The message does not reliably indicate whether the printer in question is actually aflame. History The "on fire" message probably originated in the late 1950s, when high speed computerized printing was still a somewhat experimental field. The first documented fire-starting ...
And a reference to this.
Unforeseen exceptions.
ehehehe
bad_alloc, whatever.
Prepare for unforeseen consequences
But only in the framework code.
23:08
womp womp womp
Enabling pthread fixes it :)
There are foreseen exceptions?
Any exception thrown from the test code gracefully aborts the benchmark.
I thought "clock is on fire" was a calibration diagnostic, because it semi-directly followed the resolution diagnostic
lol
@sehe Ah, yeah, that's a common cause. I use threads to speed up some of the analysis, but I should really #ifdef it to single-thread if not threading is available, or to #error maybe.
23:10
@R.MartinhoFernandes paste.ubuntu.com/7418687 was the output.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Or maybe not enable it at all, since virtually everything that touches the heap (i.e. virtually everything) will interfere with threads? (among other more subtle factors)
@sehe The analysis is all done a posteriori.
The actual measurements are all performed in a single thread.
You mean, the threads are only used in analysis phase. Ah. That makes more sense.
Now I can breathe again, (thought it's painful), I should goto bed. BFN..
@R.MartinhoFernandes Should I still worry about observability/optimization? e.g.
NONIUS_BENCHMARK("measure boostJoinAndFormat", [](nonius::chronometer meter) {
    A const& a = fixture();
    meter.measure([&](int i) { a.boostJoinAndFormat().size(); });
})
Or should I add the size()s to a volatile variable and return it?
holy crap, a 855MB precompiled header
23:14
@sehe Yeah, I can't do magic. However, in that case just returning the value would do.
If the function has a return value, I capture it in volatile.
And by const&? I mean, otherwise you incur the copy of the result value too. What would a std::string volatile const& amount to (oh god that hurts)
I don't think I can do more than that.
Or is it simply a good idea to return a primitive value (a "hash" proof-of-work if you will)?
@sehe By reference, yeah.
@melak47 meh. With Spirit I've seen much larger. I also stopped using them. Too much fuss for little gain
23:16
@sehe That would pollute the measurement with the hashing
@R.MartinhoFernandes nah, not a strong hash, just something that varies with the actual result (so the work cannot be optimized out)
This is actually the sort of thing I want to put in the docs.
You should :)
I mean, what use is a state-of-the-art benchmark framework, if people could use it wrongly
That would result in meta-silly benchmarks. And a lot of <sad-face/> here
Well, if simply returning it works for you, just do that and the framework deals with it nicely.
Otherwise you have to make stuff volatile accordingly.
Well, my point is, what if that string is 6 megabytes, and I return /it/ instead of .size()?
23:21
If the function you're testing already returns such a string, you want to include that in the costs.
I rely on inlining and RVO to not make that cost double by returning it from the lambda, which I think is fair and reliable.
You've got a point.
Lo and behold: my first ever nonius encounter: paste.ubuntu.com/7418738
user3010322
int& my_lvalue_reference = ...;
auto result = my_lvalue_reference;
// decltype( result ) == int& ???
Basically, I'd say don't jump through hoops to make your benchmark into a return — just sprinkle volatile as you would normally, I guess — but do take advantage of that ability if it is trivial to make it a return.
@ThePhD auto strips references.
user3010322
@Rapptz ... Oh. Well, fuck. =/
23:24
@R.MartinhoFernandes Is there a way to repeat benchmarks for a "spectrum" of parameters? (In this case, varying container size)? (see e.g. this paste.ubuntu.com/7418750, where I'd like to compare the 3 implementations for different sizes of fixture)
user3010322
auto&& does or doesn't strip references?
@sehe That's something I want to make easier in the future. Right now you have to do as in example1 and generate them programmatically.
@ThePhD you're specifying the references there
> I just received an ultimatum, improve my SQL server skill set or I'll be fired. Need help. (self.learnprogramming)
user3010322
Lol.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does that help? I mean, I'd say the compiler can perfectly optimize x out here:
    meter.measure([&](int i) { volatile auto x = a.boostJoinAndFormat().size(); });
23:25
@sehe No, it can't. That's what volatile means.
huh. It's pretty evident that x will never ever be observable. The mere fact that it's value cannot be "assumed" (enregistered) is not relevant to this usage-pattern of init-only, right?
But if you run into some weirdness with that, anything that would work in a manually written benchmark also works here, i.e., write it into a vector, whatever. That's what the i parameter is for. (it's optional, btw: just [&] { works)
@sehe It's pretty evident it is. That's what volatile means.
volatile means: execute this exactly as it would in the abstract machine.
mmm. need to reread. I believe volatile meant the compiler may not assume anything about the value of the object at any time, but since it knows noting about the variable can escape the scope...
It basically always forces reads and writes whenever a non-optimised program would do so.
user3010322
@Rapptz So... is there a general "match the return type exactly" bit?
23:29
decltype, you can use decltype(auto) in C++14.
user3010322
Or do I just need to do decltype( my_function(...) ) my_thing = my_function( ... );
user3010322
WELL
user3010322
That's terse
user3010322
Awesome Job C++
user3010322
<_>
23:29
caps lock, friend
user3010322
Who thought decltype( auto ) was a good idea? ;~;
The committee.
auto&& should do fine.
If it's an lvalue you get an lvalue reference.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Okay, now for the crown jewels, the quickest way from that output earlier to some kind of graph?
@ThePhD In fact, it's horrible. Obviously should be decltype(auto) :)
If it returns by value you get a temporary bound to an rvalue reference, which isn't very different from having it in a non-reference variable.
It gets lifetime extension and so on.
user3010322
23:32
I guess the lifetime extension doesn't hurt...
@sehe Check -h for command-line arguments. Outputting as csv is the best option for producing any custom output afterwards: runner -r csv -o out.csv
Possibly add -v for progress report.
You can also do -r html -o out.html and it makes a chart itself, but for now that's still very crude.
CSV is the most flexible reporter.
user3010322
<_>
user3010322
I can't
user3010322
I can't keep track of all these return values.
@R.MartinhoFernandes sweet downloads.sehe.nl/stackoverflow/nonius1.html (how can I get all three benchmarks plotted? It used only one for ./test -r html -o out.html -v)
23:39
@sehe Hmm, that sounds wrong.
It should put them all.
user3010322
with
2>          [
2>              T=T
2>          ]
user3010322
WOW, MSVC, YOu'RE SO SMART
user3010322
HOW DID YOU DEDUCE THAT TEMPLATE ARGUMENT SO WELL?!
user3010322
._.
@R.MartinhoFernandes care for the sample bench? just don't flame me for the actual code under test, because that came from an SO question :S coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a610b12e4038836f
Hmm. csv also outputs just 1 data series
23:45
Oh.
You named the benchmarks all the same.
I should add a check for that.
user3010322
<_>
user3010322
Fuck this convoluted shit.
user3010322
Tag dispatch, GO.
@sehe Even if it did output all three you wouldn't be able to tell which is which :P
It's completely your own fault. You shouldn't have answered PHP questions if you're ashamed of this knowledge. :P — Athari 5 hours ago
23:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes hangs head in shame - that helped downloads.sehe.nl/stackoverflow/nonius1.html
I just asked a question about templatizing main in order to have safe command line arguments parsing stackoverflow.com/q/23553723/2567683 . Anyone care to give some feedback?
Yes, ofcourse, I mean as future feature
it'll be too big of a breaking change and it has little to no uses
Doubt it'd happen.
All the command-line arguments are strings.
A template makes little sense.
23:54
a lot of C libraries also export the main function
int main(std::vector<std::string> args) maybe, but there's little benefit.
even C++ libraries do too when they want to hijack it
e.g. SDL, SFML, people who want to use WinMain
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
    std::vector<std::string> args(argv, argv+argc);
    // ...
}
you should recommend propose std::lexical_cast<T> instead
When the workaround is this simple, there's very little pressure to change anything related to this.
23:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes now with 100% more nonius:
Took the opportunity to play around with [nonius] too: source code and results graphs and stats: paste.ubuntu.com/7418821sehe 42 secs ago
OK thnx people!
Lol. Link fixed. Why can't I ever get a comment right the first time
@sehe Still, there was a bit of failure on my part. issues.loungecpp.net/issue/NONIUS-17
Fair enough. Thanks for walking me through things. I will use this next time, instead of my own shabby stuff (but probably not on SO because likely Coliru doesn't support nonius (yet))

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