« first day (1428 days earlier)      last day (3749 days later) » 

20:00
Is there a scenario where converting your if-else statements to switch-case statements would be disadvantageous?
If it makes the code less clear, yes
@Borgleader: But performance-wise, no?
o.o dont event ask me about performance of a switch case until youve benchmarked that its a problem
im serious
o.0
...I'm just going by what the article is saying.
user1804599
lol, wut
20:02
im saying you shouldnt care
@thecoshman did you falled down the stairs and died?
I just wanted to read up on pros and cons, man...
user1804599
Why does this work.
They seemed so similar to me. That's why i was curious about the justification.
@NoobSaibot Yes. For example it would be weird to use a switch on a boolean.
20:04
@NoobSaibot At least in theory, it could. With an if/then/else, you can order the comparisons depending on the likelihood of each occurring. With a case statement, the compiler could end up doing the same, but without good information about relatively likelihoods.
@StackedCrooked: 1. You have a picture of my god as your avatar.
@StackedCrooked: 2. What do you mean by "weird"?
@StackedCrooked: But not disadvantageous?
WTF. GNU libc has a function strfry (stir fry?) which does entirely frivolous things
@LucDanton eeek :D
@NoobSaibot it won't make a difference in performance. The generated machine instructions will be the same.
20:06
@JerryCoffin: Oh! So it's possible the compiler could make it so the application checks the most least likely event first?
@NoobSaibot Not in reality. This stuff is of (marginal) interest to compiler writers.
@sehe It's for destroying passwords in memory, if I had to guess.
Of course not, why would they make it to leak source information. Pretty good thought though.
pretty much everyone uses a jump table for larger switch/case or if/then/else.
I'm going to assume it's a joke
20:07
@NoobSaibot The least likely possibility would probably only happen by accident, but there's a good change it wouldn't pick the most likely.
you have a typo
user1804599
RequireJS is so nice.
I should be required for all JS development.
@Puppy The decision is usually based more on density than size.
@Puppy: Jump table, eh...interesting.
20:09
@JerryCoffin Depends on what you're switching on and what jump table implementation you're going to use. For the in-assembly integral-argument jump tables, then probably.
for example, I replaced a large chain of dynamic_casts with a jump table.
@NoobSaibot wut. If that's not in the WP article, you should deffo call it quits
@Puppy There's a bug report against it: sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=4403
@sehe: Could you rephrase please?
@NoobSaibot you can let the compiler output assembly. you can experiment with variations of if/else vs switch and check how they produce different asm
@JerryCoffin: Just so i understand you...
but also benchmark
20:11
@NoobSaibot You're focusing on marginal things. Unles you are implementing a compiler, don't bother. And if the Wikipedia (WP) article doesn't even mention jump tables as an implementation strategy, then it's even more useless to "learn" this from
and then ditch the benchmark results and go for the most readable solution
2
the primary disadvantage of switch is that the scoping is fucked up and it hardly applies to anything.
and it's better to replace with an in-source jump table.
@JerryCoffin
switch(Initialize(something) {
            case 0:
                Fail_Function();
            default:
                switch(someother_check(something)) {
Don't switch if you only have one case and a default.
That's silly.
@Puppy highly questionable. This, without context, is a ridiculous claim
20:13
@NoobSaibot a switch with 2 cases is dumb, use if else
I don't have to worry about the compiler mixing the order of those two cases, right?
@StackedCrooked Also, the lack of ) is sillier
@NoobSaibot Nope. That's the realm of the language specification
@NoobSaibot you probably need a break statement in case 0.
@NoobSaibot Given that there are only two cases (in the outer switch statement), there's not much it can get wrong there, no.
@LucDanton no, I just marked a 3*3 column as up/down stairs...
20:14
@StackedCrooked: I just read it's not necessary.
What did you read?
@NoobSaibot depends on what you want to achieve
@NoobSaibot break is not a no-op
@StackedCrooked a bit of WP and probably some even more questionable sources
20:15
@NoobSaibot Yes and no. If you don't have it, execution will "fall through" to the next case statement. If that's what you want, then a break isn't necessary.
@thecoshman Is that working out?
@NoobSaibot Break after return is not the same as break.
Is this a good thread title?
C++ Random Int Distrubtion Variable won't change per for loop sequence?
@NoobSaibot First learn how switch works before worrying about performance.
20:17
BECAUSE OF
Wait! Some of your past questions have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from asking any more.

For help formulating a clear, useful question, see: How do I ask a good question?

Also, edit your previous questions to improve formatting and clarity.
@LucDanton seems to have just dug the top few layers as down stairs...
vOv I was just following this noob tut
@thecoshman If that’s the case, then you have dorfs stuck in a stairwell no?
@Chantola "per for" sounds like "Perforce", so it's clearly horrible and evil and you should be ashamed for posting it here.
@Chantola No need to mention the language, the tag system is here for that.
@StackedCrooked: It just seemed like there was two different sets of keywords performing the same function. I was just curious if performance was the only difference.
20:18
Fair enough @Jerry
C++ Random Int Distrubtion Variable won't change per for-loop sequence?
@LucDanton no... I think he just dug the top layer as down stairs...
@Chantola Did you read @LucDanton's comment?
@LucDanton ok I'll delete that then
@Jerry Yeaaah
Is that it>
Thanks, all. I got a lot of useful information here.
@Chantola It is that.
20:20
@thecoshman If the layer you’re starting from has down stairs, you should be able to see the tiles below (otherwise it’s just dark). Did that work?
@Chantola Other than that I find the title a bit vague, so that’s not a good sign.
@sehe I kinda disagree. Switch has fucked-up scoping and fallthrough semantics, and user-defined jump tables are immune to these problems. I'd prefer a user-defined jump table by default, personally.
@Puppy Show me 3 trivial cases where you did this in C++ code.
@LucDanton yeah, I can see my top layer as down stairs, the next layer down is down stairs, and then the next layer down is rough-hewn wall...
It's ok to start with one.
@LucDanton do you have any preposition as to how I could change it?
20:22
‘Random int distribution variable’ I can understand in a mathematics context, but in a programming context it’s a big jumble. What’s the relation between the variable and the distribution?
well, you only go to a switch or jump table if the case is already relatively non-trivial.
else you'd just use if/else.
but I have several in-source jump tables in Wide.
@Puppy Ok. I'm all ears for a sample.
std::unordered_map<std::type_index, std::function<std::shared_ptr<Expression>(Analyzer& a, Type* lookup, const Parse::Expression* e)>> expression_handlers;
I use it to map derived AST expression types to semantic expression analysis handlers.
@LucDanton Is this any better? My Random Variable won't change value for-loop sequence ever?
also because now I have a distinct handler for each type instead of one giant function.
20:24
@thecoshman lol, how did the dorfs manage to get out if it’s all down stairs?
@LucDanton Or My Random Variable won't change value at the for-loop sequence?
my secondary motivation was so that the user can add new derived AST expression types at run-time.
@Chantola Are you asking something like ‘Loop variable doesn’t change’? I imagine you’re not picking variables at random.
FYI: Something else i read about that supported my theory that the difference between if-else and switch-case was strictly performance.
Thanks again for clarifying.
@LucDanton well... I think the top layer is where he started, so he can just walk over them... then I presume he can dig the stairs in the floor below him
20:25
@LucDanton Lol I just figured out my own problem.
@Puppy That, however, will not be nearly as efficient as a switch, or even dozens of chained if/elses. Unless you have really large number of distinct type_index participating there. So, that's not (at all) a good demonstration of "preferred by default"
@thecoshman Ah, no he can’t.
@sehe Well, I don't think the compiler can make an assembly jump table on type_indexes, and having to dynamic_cast for every possible if/else is going to be way more expensive than a hash table lookup.
@Puppy That's a totally different ball game and it just necessitates a table-drive approach. That's not a "jump" table, then, it's just dynamic dispatch of sorts
but if you look, the arguments that I raised against switch case have nothing to do with performance.
20:27
@thecoshman If you recall, down stairs replace the floor. So a dorf can’t dig them from above if the wall is in place.
@LucDanton basically what I did was set var1 = dis1(gen) and expected every time I used var1 to change the value, but I tryed doing dis1 equal directly to the equation and it didn't work, and now that I thought about it I did dis(gen) = to the equation and it works so.
not to mention that safety/correctness is a better default than performance.
@LucDanton but he would have dug the top floor first
@Puppy I'm aware of this. However, I'm pointing out that the arguments that you do make are not nearly enough to support "user-defined jump tables by default"
@Puppy not for core language constructs QoI
I didn't realize that safety and correctness didn't justify preferring one solution over another.
20:28
@thecoshman Yup. That’s the down stairs you’re seeing. And in between the next putative down stairs there is a wall. Which you probably want to turn into an up stairs, so that the dorf can navigate. (Even if you e.g. channel to remove the wall your dorf still needs access to the floor to dig the next down stairs.) You want up/down stairs.
19 secs ago, by sehe
@Puppy not for core language constructs QoI
I don't understand what you mean.
In that case, we should just fix switch (that's easy, every other language has done it)
too late.
they tried.
@LucDanton I know I want up/down, that's what I first told him to make
20:29
backwards compatibility issues.
the existing switch is fucked up, and no QoI can prevent the fact that they're implementing a fucked up feature.
how do you fix switch? remove fallthrough?
a user-defined jump table is far more reliable.
....
and honestly, one hash and a couple comparisons really isn't going to fare that badly against if-else chains.
@thecoshman There can’t be down stairs on top of down stairs, if you started from straight above with no access below. Remove designations.
20:30
The two issues cited were scoping and fallthrough semantics...
(Unless a dorf volunteered to jump down.)
@Puppy I couldn't care less. A fixed switch has far more applicability than user-def jump tables.
yes, it's applicable to fucking up your program.
...so, I stare confused by the discussion, because those are remedied by scope and break
If you move the goalposts by getting "backwards compatibility" involved, well, yeah, I understand that. But it's not what I was responding to
20:31
I do understand you have to actually add the scope and the break; but if you do this idiomatically it's fairly easy to see.
no, I merely mentioned that they can't fix switch because of backwards compatibility.
@LucDanton welp, she managed to dig two layers of down stairs, from the top down
it's not really part of the debate.
@thecoshman You’ll have to dig a new stairwell to access the stairs below then :Þ (Then you can build up stairs to turn the tile into an up/down stairs.)
a user-defined jump table can function for virtually key type, so it's far more applicable than switch/case, it doesn't do crazy scoping shit, or default fallthrough shit, or any of that stuff, and guaranteed O(1) performance and lack of repeated condition evaluation is great too.
20:33
@LucDanton yeah, just going to start another stair well
there's nothing to recommend about switch/case unless you're in some super duper tight loop and your key type and values happen to meet what the compiler can efficiently make into an in-assembly jump table.
@Puppy interesting, then. So, you dismiss my QoI arguments based on this sidestep and claim it's not really part of "the debate". My point is that if a language offers a core language feature like "switch" then using jump tables (like in your samples) would be an awesomely bad QoI choice for many languages
If you disagree, I don't see why you're not using Java or C#
I got stuck, really stuck.
@Puppy Which is 95% of the cases where I'd even consider using switch in the first place.
@JohanLarsson Lube, olive oil, soap
right, nobody uses it in any other case because it's so broken.
user1804599
20:36
So happy am I.
@sehe does it work for streams?
@Puppy That's true. O(1) performance is a marketing fluff there, though
@sehe No, I'm dismissing it because QoI can't change the fact that all the broken things you can do are totally legal and they have to implement all the program breaking.
you can't implement a broken feature to be non-broken.
I wasn't discussing broken language details. I was discussing whether user-defined jump tables were always superior.
Sure you can... add scopes and a break statement
20:37
well, on the bright side, my dwarfs can get down nice and fast :S
@HWalters Still have the goto to wreak havoc (limited, I guess)
user1804599
switch in Go is funny.
Only if you put it in :)
@sehe The fact that one option is broken is definitely a good reason to recommend the other option.
My point is, this is ludicrous. In the general case.
20:39
well, in the general case, it would be nice to have a switch that works correctly.
but since C++'s doesn't, you gotta use what else you can.
Just do it. Write a mechanical translation of each switch into your user-def jump table. I'll watch while Rome burns
not really possible.
Sure, but you can use C++'s switches just fine... and address the concerns you raised
@Puppy And there are better options than the user-def jump table. Q.E.D.
@sehe Like what? Using broken switch?
@HWalters You could do, but that involves manually fixing every single use of a broken feature and manually verifying every time you come across one that it isn't a broken use. Not a good solution.
20:42
Or using appropriate branching constructs that the language offers. At, perhaps, make the thing static, consider linear scan for builtin type keys in a 'smallish' list (and PGO!).
(gnu has a deliciously evil thing with goto [dynamic_label] if I rememeber correctly)
@Puppy: You're mixing more things in
^
15 mins ago, by sehe
@Puppy That's a totally different ball game and it just necessitates a table-drive approach. That's not a "jump" table, then, it's just dynamic dispatch of sorts
"every time you come across one" implies you're either looking at your own code, or you're using someone else's code
@sehe This language doesn't offer any branching constructs other than switch/case and if/else. if/else doesn't particularly scale, especially when user-defined types and conditions are involved, and there aren't really any other branching constructs.
If it's someone else's code, it doesn't matter what you do... they will have their code written. You can certainly complain about bad code. But they could, in theory, write good code...
If it's your code, you can idiomatically address the issue such that your "manually verifying every time you come across one that it isn't a broken use" costs effectively nothing
20:44
@HWalters Yes, I'd rather they wrote code that I could see instantly did not suffer from accidental fallthrough or terrible scoping unhilarities. That's the whole point that I'm making. That with a user-defined jump table, you know in advance that those things don't occur so you don't have to check it.
That is, the cost of doing the verification is indeed the cost of reading the code in the first place
@HWalters Your suggested idioms are exactly what "manually verifying" means.
for, while, ?: are branching constructs; shortcut evaluation implicitly does branching; virtual dispatch can be used, catch can be abused
@HWalters Which is exactly what I want to reduce as much as possible.
Not exactly... if someone has a complex construct, they aren't using the idiom... manually verifying their code is correct may be quite difficult
20:45
@Puppy nothing scales, in terms of LoC. If if/else doesn't scale, then neither did your apocryphal unbroken switch
If they're using the idiom, manually verifying it costs nothing
@HWalters Really? Because I'm pretty sure that scrolling through every case and checking to see whether there's a break; is not free.
As for the desire to fix it, that's kind of pounding your fists against the wall. You can't fix the switch.
@Xeo latest mahouka is rather good
@Puppy Which, being true, still doesn't make the UDJT always superior
@HWalters That's what iOS devs thought until they missed a double return.
20:47
@sehe Heartbleed reference?
Nope. The skipped cert key signature verification thing (a month before?)
@sehe Yes, it most definitely does. In the general case instead of in the super-performance-constraint-lucky-key-type-and-values-case, the UDJT does not permit various broken behaviours, so any code reader knows that the code doesn't exhibit them and it can't be changed to exhibit them, so it's easier to both read and maintain. (Also, you get the cases as separate functions for free, which may or may not be an advantage, depending on their size).
I think this discussion needs code samples
nah, it needs an end
20:50
@Puppy Well well. In the general case, outside the "super-performance-constraint-lucky-key-type-and-values-case" I'd say switch was never your guy in the first place. It's just not a core language thing. So, you're simply proposing to drop switch and pretend it didn't have a use case.
10 mins ago, by sehe
Just do it. Write a mechanical translation of each switch into your user-def jump table. I'll watch while Rome burns
@Borgleader Consider it done.
Puppy: If you write an if/else as an alternative, that could equally be broken--by one condition that's written improperly
@HWalters Sure. But it can't be broken by you accidentally going from one condition to the next.
@HWalters I think that's what he meant when he argued that "if/else doesn't scale". Not sure though
If you have indented code, and it has a {, a }, and a break; it's hard to miss the break from a quick scan
@Puppy trolololololol
20:51
no matter if you choose if/else, switch/case, or UDJT, the individual condition code still has to be good.
the question is in what other cases it can be broken.
and with UDJT there are basically none.
but if you're repeating your control flow code for every condition, then you can make a mistake on one of those conditions and break it.
Well yeah, I agree
@Puppy I'm so happy you realized this. Because I was going to post this response:
@Puppy Reviewer: "Your code may lose data." - Programmer "Sure, but it doesn't {use goto|deviate from the specs|take a long time to run|hides a copy constructor with universal reference constructor template|invoke undefined behaviour}".
poor dwarfs are all tuckered out
no control flow construct can protect you from the code you're flowing to being broken.
user1804599
Ugh fuck JavaScript and its fucking object vs primitive cancer.
20:55
all it can do is flow to the bit of code you wanted it to.
@rightfold oops. There goes your happy day. Did you have another date?
@Puppy modulo compiler/processor bugs or quantum accidents :)
When you're doing hello world examples, you don't really get the sense of what switch does.
Now i see what you guys mean by "harder to read". lol
Well, you need to learn what the switch does, how it works, and why it's broken so you learn what all of the debate's about :)
user1804599
Oh wow AngularJS works with getters.
if I have a stream from a socket, how do I pick|know a correct buffer size? //don't even know the lingo
user1804599
20:57
Object.defineProperty($scope, 'copperCount', {
    get: function() { return stats.copperCount; }
});
user1804599
Ugly hack of the year award.
@rightfold great to facilitate Aspect-Oriented programming without any language support, I guess
@rightfold you know there's a javascript chat
user1804599
I do. It's called Lounge<C++>.
indeed.
20:58
derp
TIL KDevelop lives in ~2003. Version 4.7.0 was released today:
> Feature-wise, KDevelop now officially supports the Bazaar (bzr) version control system
@HWalters: I asked the question because they seemed too similar to if-else statements. But take away some breaks, and rearrange some defaults, and things do get confusing.
user1804599
@sehe I didn't know people use Bazaar.

« first day (1428 days earlier)      last day (3749 days later) »