@AndyProwl Oh, good to know, I was checking for talks that were already done before and have videos, so I know what to pick and what I can surely watch later on
> An address isn't a strong reference to an object; since C++ is not a garbage-collected language, the values of B, C and D disappear as soon as the statements they are used in are executed.
I've added that after a while. Maybe you haven't refreshed
@thecoshman C++ isn't a simple language in this regard. There's no point in oversimplifying the ownership semantics explanation. If she doesn't know what an rvalue is, there's a lot of places that explain it properly, in detail and with better examples.
@BartekBanachewicz in a splay tree, accesses perform splays always..so all operations are UPDATES right? i'm concerned because i want to make a splay tree partially persistent but it looks like you can't query previous versions without modifying them (the splay).. so a splay tree is no good for partial persistence? (if you know about partial persistence)
@BartekBanachewicz persistence is ambiguous but in the context of data structures persistence is in the inside! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistent_data_structure. I don't think you know what I mean..
@saadtaame persistence is about what's on the outside. It's perfectly fine to mutate the datastructure for performance reasons, as long as it results in the same "value" at the end
> their operations do not (visibly) update the structure in-place, but instead always yield a new updated structure.
@R.MartinhoFernandes partially persistent to be precise, fully persistent data structures allow change in past versions.. i don't know if i should conclude that splay trees can't be made partially persistent or not (i think they can if you don't want to mutate but that'd be inefficient).
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes a tree of versions..there are generalizations to DAGs of versions and generalizations where nothing mutates at all (functional)..
@Rerito You don't have to. You access old versions by keeping a reference to them. It doesn't matter that they're old: you keep references to all the versions you need, regardless of age.
@Rerito version objects? A node is not a sortable object. It's very simple container that "affords" one or more links
The sorting is the responsibility of the container. Which keeps a reference to a root node and knows how to operate on the tree keeping all invariants
In fact all trees can be viewed as generic linkable nodes + a set of algorithms to make the "organism" behave as a datastructure with useful characteristics
You were troubled with the semantics of the non-existing notion of "version"
@Rerito Who said there's no ordering? It's just that the tree doesn't store versions as elements. The tree is-a version (the elements are sorted, stably even in the case of splay trees)
@Rerito the whole tree is a version. normally there is only one version = what the tree looks like now.. we were discussing: what if we want an update operation (insert for example) to create and return a new version but allow for access in the old versions of the data structure.. so you can look in the past and print the tree at version X.
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== History ==
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@AndyProwl Well, if the compiler decides to optimize a load cycle away, the only way for a library to specify otherwise is to mark it volatile, no? I mean, short of going full atomics.
@sehe volatile may solve the issue in this case, but my guess would be that the correct solution involves atomics, relaxed memory model, barriers, etc. - which I know nearly nothing about so shutting up
First off, hide the hot network questions. I should be learning how to fix a javascript error, not why Vader didn't talk with R2D2 for a long time. Turns out he actually didn't have the opportunity, such a shame. If only they had Facebook profiles...
Everytime you enter the website, it will ask ...
@sehe Wait, just to clarify, are you talking about how the library implementation of weak_ptr::expired() should use volatile to compensate for the compiler/optimizer bug, or how the OP could declare its variable as volatile to workaround the library/compiler/optimizer/whatever bug?
> Mathematics and sex are deeply intertwined. From using mathematics to reveal patterns in our sex lives, to using sex to prime our brain for certain types of problems, to understanding them both in terms of the evolutionary roots of our brain, Dr Clio Cresswell shares her insight into it all.
Is there something wrong with me if mathematics doesn't turn me on?
@AndyProwl In general, unless told otherwise, the compiler doesn't have to assume the existence of any other threads. So anything that doesn't explicitly use atomic load/stores or loads from memory address marked volatile is fair game for the compiler to reorder and optimize away.
@sehe volatile can be reordered just fine, just not with regards to other volatilememory accesses. But it can be reordered around non-volatile memory accesses just fine
@sehe Right. volatile does not entirely help with reordering though (non-volatile reads/writes can be reordered with volatile reads/writes), so in a multithreaded context I don't expect it to be the solution. Fences and relaxed memory model perhaps.
As demonstrated in this answer I recently posted, I seem to be confused about the utility (or lack thereof) of volatile in multi-threaded programming contexts.
My understanding is this: any time a variable may be changed outside the flow of control of a piece of code accessing it, that variable ...
Also, I'm not saying there definitely is a compiler bug. I'm saying that the loop being optimized away may be the result of (a) a correct library implementation + a compiler/optimizer bug or (b) a correct compiler/optimizer behavior + an incorrect library implementation.
@AndyProwl And my point is, you don't have to look at the library implementation. I just looked at the specification, and it says nothing about the thread awareness of expired() so, it makes sense that a library implementation that doesn't care about that is correct by definition.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Means that it will not alter the inmemory representation of the weak_ptr object, that's nothing stopping the compiler from optimizing away loads in a loop?
@FredOverflow I was wrong. It is a marketing blurb, but it's apt. The content accurately matches that description. And it's not even useless. (at 30% in)
@wilx See, I made a joke about her being a woman myself, but it was clearly a joke, and given that her talk was about sex, I felt excused for doing so. Yet I was conscious about it, and it took a while for me to make it.
You, OTOH, commented in what seems full earnest about the robe of a speaker who is giving what you yourself call an interesting talk. And I believe you would do this about a male speaker. That is some form of sexism, and I know that women in tech are very annoyed by this attitude of judging them as a woman, rather than an expert in their field.
@sbi I do explain my surprise. And amusement. And yes, I've given that dress a very detailed look myself. But I have no hard feelings about her wearing that. Anywhere
@sbi I did not judge the speaker. I judged her dress. It is not pretty. Please do not confuse the two. I actually think the woman is quite pretty. But her dress is not.
@wilx Again, you seem to miss the point. Would you ever comment on the handsomeness of a male speaker? And whether it's amphasized or destroyed by what they wear?
Java design: 'To ensure that the process does not terminate early, construct an object instance where the ctor has an infinite loop': http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28112235/java-socket-programming-connection-refused
@FredOverflow The video was funny, and then I read the comments a bit and stumbled upon this:
> it's because women are judged by their sexiness ... look at the way clio is dressed .... do you think she would have got the gig if she had talked about how boring math influences our lives and not mentioned sex .... I bet a lot of the guys watching this heard BLAH BLAH BLAH and were imagining how they would bone her ... I was :)
> For purposes of determining the presence of a data race, member functions shall access and modify only the shared_ptr and weak_ptr objects themselves and not objects they refer to. Changes in use_count() do not reflect modifications that can introduce data races.
@sbi I would unlikely comment on man's dress unless he was either nearly naked or dressed like a clown or something similar. I commented on her dress because I am interested in women and pay more attention to how they look than how men look.
@wilx "I didn't judge Scott himself. I judged his hairdo (I've never like Jeff Beck's hair styling, or He-Man for that matter)." - so far so good - now hold on tight: "ACTUALLY I think Scott [himself, ed.] is quite a cuty" o.O
@R.MartinhoFernandes Ah. It takes some time, but I think that says the implementation is obliged to be thread aware, which would make that optimization a bug, not a defect in the specs. Awesome
@wilx I think @sehe's message explained quite well that this isn't about what people wear, but if you judge them by their looks. And it is demeaning to judge a female mathematician by how she looks or what she wears or how she's done her hair. You would not do this with a male speaker.
@sehe I don't understand how to read "Changes in use_count() do not reflect modifications that can introduce data races". Doesn't that imply that use_count() is not thread-aware?