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18:00
the problem with checked exceptions isn't that checked exceptions are bad, per se, it's that the vast majority of the work can or should be automated
@FredOverflow not necessarily. I suggest ducktyping. How and when that is handled is an implementation detail. ;)
but Java doesn't provide the necessary power to make that happen
@RMartinhoFernandes I've heard it more than once.
@Mysticial Isn't cout/endl the worst part of C++? Why did you pick that? :)
So, can you give me reason why SQL is not good anymore?
18:00
@DeadMG How does that interact with runtime polymorphism?
well, obviously an override can only throw what the base throws, or less
point is, I hate having to repeat myself. If I say this class has a foo function, then I want it to be usable in any situation where a foo is expected. I don't want to have to write a separate interface saying first "oh, this is what something that has a foo looks like, and then say "oh, and this class, which has a foo also implements the interface which says it has a foo
@FredOverflow apart from vector<bool>
@jalf A programmer saying "X is an implementation detail" is like a mathematician saying "X is trivial" :)
@Xaade I don't think SQL is not good anymore: youtube.com/watch?v=b2F-DItXtZs
@FredOverflow yup :)
18:01
@FredOverflow It's not like I'm actually C++ code. But given that I use VC++ to write C code, cout is very convenient for debugging.
Computer scientists are allowed to say "X is trivial" too
it's not just mathematicians
It's a lot easier to use than printf().
@DeadMG That's one of the things that sucks so much about Java's checked exceptions.
@Xaade SQL only has three letters, and now four letters are slowly taking over the world.
@RMartinhoFernandes Huh..... is that I don't believe SQL is not good, or I don't like SQL.
18:02
there's nothing different about "you can only throw what the base class specifies you can throw" compared to "you can only return what the base class specifies you can return"
@Mysticial I'm not C++ code either, but I'm writing C++ code :)
@Xaade Sorry, missed a word :)
@Mysticial ... If you compiled using a C++ compiler, you wrote C++ code.
@DeadMG It makes my life so much harder.
I can't write an IFoo that reads data from a file without a bazillion of boilerplate, because of the damn checked exceptions.
@Xaade In Windows I compile as C++. In Linux I compile as C with default GNU extensions.
18:04
the problem with that isn't because of checked exceptions, it's because you had to bullshit around with an interface, for one
So it's both C and C++.
@RMartinhoFernandes Since when does C# have checked exceptions?
@Mysticial I would rather die.
and secondly, if you want, you can simply deduce the exception spec of reading from a file and then use that
@RMartinhoFernandes Ok, so it's all a joke. Sorry, I get very frustrated when I hear, "X is so lame... (ignore than X used to be badass, I've never heard that ever in my life)"
18:04
@FredOverflow A struct with virtual ... = 0; everywhere, non?
@FredOverflow Dammit, that's just an ingrained naming convention. I was talking Java.
say... you could say that the base has the same exception spec as a given derived implementation or free function which performs the work
@KerrekSB And don't forget the virtual destructor!
besides
@FredOverflow OK, yes.
18:05
@Xaade Speaking of lame, LAME 3.99 is out.
@KerrekSB :-P
@DeadMG And what about all the other derived implementations?
if you're very desperate, you could ask the compiler to deduce the throws spec, which would effectively be the union of the throws specs of all the implementations
I understand that Y obsoletes X often enough in the industry. But when people assume everyone agrees and gives no reasons, it's really frustrating to understand what's actually good. I wish people would rather say, "X is obsolete. It was good back then, but this is better." instead of "You use X, my gah, are you mad. X is horrorific, and only lame people use X."
hehe checked exceptions
18:06
@DeadMG What if I don't have all the implementations?
the bitch exceptions
@RMartinhoFernandes Then you have bigger problems than merely specifying the exceptions. Like, for example, an ABI boundary.
fundamentally, you cannot consume code where you don't know what it throws
checked exceptions don't change that fact
I can hardly learn enough about one technology, before I'm lame for using it.
@DeadMG Yes, I can. In library code: void do_stuff(foo& f); // uses f in there and in some application struct throwing_foo : foo { /* implement virtuals and throw blah_error */ }; void blah() { throwing_foo t; try { do_stuff(t); } catch(blah_error&) { /* handle it or something */ } }. When is the throws spec of do_stuff determined? When I compiled it, or when I compiled the code that uses it?
when you compiled it, obviously
18:13
But then it won't get blah_error in its spec.
Because throwing_foo didn't even exist when it was compiled.
well, if you want to defer the exception type to runtime, then use a base class
that's what they're for
That still sounds painful.
in your example, you know it throws blah_error, because you wrote a catch for it
you just didn't write a throw spec for it
that's not the same as consuming code where you don't know what it throws
Yes, but how do I write the functions that throw it?
Can I throw stuff that violates the throws spec?
they wouldn't be "checked" if you could
18:15
Then the virtuals I override in throwing_foo need boilerplate to throw blah_error!
that boilerplate exists anyway
it's just written in some documentation file instead of in the code
and checked by the compiler
Worse, it cannot effectively throw blah_error. It needs to throw something else that is valid according to the throw spec.
it's better than throwing random types where the caller didn't even have a definition of the type and can't possibly catch it
@RMartinhoFernandes If blah_error is part of the spec, then it can throw a blah_error
How do you implement exception handling?
@DeadMG But how can it be a part of the spec? When the virtuals in foo were compiled, there was no blah_error.
18:18
@RMartinhoFernandes That's patently not true, because you're catching it in your calling code.
blah_error is a specific error from my application. foo is from a library.
@FredOverflow LLVM provides instructions for it. I don't have to implement most of it.
well, your problem is no different to having foo declare bar as returning int and you want it to return shared_ptr<float>
i.e., the derived class violates LSP, as it is not a valid Base
It's more painful to do it like that.
what are the other users of that interface going to do with an exception they can't possibly catch?
they're going to get buttfucked is what
the compiler telling you you're being an idiot is a good thing, not a bad thing
But my point is that I'm not being an idiot. I know what I'm doing.
18:20
so what
there are other users of the Foo interface, and they need to know what they're doing, too
and you're trying to lie to them
@jalf My struggle to convert locks with stm in my project is making me realize that the Law of Demeter is important. (I used to think it overdid encapsulation.)
Basically, any interface you design with checked exceptions needs throws SomeGenericException and the implementers needs tons of crap to use something as basic as files.
what if do_stuff involves calls across a C nterface, and it needs to catch and translate any exceptions to error codes?
Pain for purity.
now it can't
@RMartinhoFernandes Who says my file libraries are exception-happy?
18:23
Well, replace files with something exception-happy.
Database, network, whatever.
ok
well if there's an error, then either the called function deals with it, or it lets it propagate
and the caller must be able to handle it
that means the caller has to know what it is in the first place
else you're just calling abort()
Right. And how do you propose propagating it?
You can't just let it fly. That violates the throws spec.
you can't let it fly anyway
and pretending that you can is just ignorant, because you can't
no. lots of code uses catch(...) in main loop
18:25
the users of any given interface X need to know what exceptions it throws
the fact that you write it in syntax instead of a documentation webpage is irrelevant to the fact that it has to be written
You need to wrap it in some generic exception type, and then if I want to handle it, I need to unwrap it from that generic exception type.
no
either you specify it, or you shouldn't be throwing it
it's exactly like static typing- if you don't know the type, then you shouldn't really be trying to operate on it
Ok, so pain it is.
and subverting the system should be painful and explicit
if legal at all
@Mysticial: Does a compiler automatically reorder SSE intrinsics to eliminate data dependencies? Or do I have to do that myself?
18:27
@DeadMG shall you specify bad_alloc ?
Guys, didn't we agree on just getting rid of exceptions in favor of continuations? ;)
@Abyx bad_alloc shouldn't be checked in the first place.
@FredOverflow Yes it will re-order them just like everything else, but different compilers are very different in their ability to do this.
@DeadMG Are there unchecked exceptions?
78
Q: how to achieve 4 flops per cycle

user1059432How can the theoretical peak performance of 4 floating point operations (double precision) per cycle be achieved on a modern x86-64 Intel cpu? As far as I understand does it take 3 cycles for an sse add and 5 cycles for a mul to complete on most of the modern Intel cpu's (see e.g. Agner Fog's ht...

18:28
how to achieve +78*5 per question =\
The OP mentions huge performance differences between GCC and VSC on the same code.
@RMartinhoFernandes Thinking about it.
> Ideally, you want both 3DNow and SSE optimized versions of certain algorithms in your program (in addition to a non-optimized version, for testing or portability). But you certainly don't want to litter your code with conditional statements to choose the right version to use at runtime. Compiling a separate version of your program for each processor variant is obviously the optimal solution performance-wise, but it's a tad inelegant (and it's easy to get the different versions confused).
> Using the Strategy design pattern, we can create a single monolithic application which runs the appropriate code on all supported platforms, without the additional costs in performance or code readability of abundant conditional statements.
LOL, a text about SSE and inline assembly also mentioning Design Patterns? :)
If so, I can just do like I do in Java (and lots of people do, including notable library and framework designers): make all my exceptions non-checked and just write my code without the compiler screwing with me.
I just discovered that Google has a voice input option. Cool
18:30
The other thing to be aware of is the CPU instruction re-ordering.
meh
Sometimes you have to know how to "reuse" variables to trick things into working well...
honestly, the deduction is going to be more than good enough in the vast majority of cases
@Mysticial But I have no influence on that, right?
It's something you do when you run of registers. And it's something that compilers (especially VSC++) will do very aggressively
18:32
but I'd rather view something like bad_alloc as a terminate-the-process error, not an exception condition
Even though you only have 16 registers, you (or the compiler) can write your code to utilize all 32+ renamed registers in the processor.
> x86 doesn't have enough registers for this to compile well.
Why the heck does x86 only have 8 registers? Who designed that piece of crap? :)
Even though the compiler will move your instructions around and rename your variables, I find that scheduling it manually in C code will tremendously help the compiler in getting that "optimal" solution.
@DeadMG bad_alloc is non-exceptional case when you are trying to resize 1Gb vector
meh
then upgrade to 64bit
the fact that you're exhausting the limitations of your hardware is not something that an exception can protect you from or allow you to recover from
18:37
What about function objects?
me? I can, by my users may use win2k
@Mysticial What do you mean with scheduling in C?
How do those interact with checked exceptions?
Speaking of portability, I've found that "your mom" jokes just work on every platform.
2
18:37
is there something about initializing a std::string I don't know?
then tell them to stop trying to use hardware from 10 years ago to handle data sets from today
@keithlayne You mom works fine on every platform.
I thought std::string mystring; was enough?
@RMartinhoFernandes How would they be any different to any other kind of function
@TonyTheLion Initialize with 0 will crash your app.
18:38
@TonyTheLion It is, if you want an empty one.
@DeadMG that's what I want
@RMartinhoFernandes That's what I said. No, wait, that's what she said. No, wait. I'm confused now.
an exception cannot protect you from the fact that you've exhausted hardware resources
but the string in my struct is showing <BadPtr>
regardless of why you don't just get better hardware
18:38
@StackedCrooked Take a look at the "4 flops per cycle" question I linked. You'll notice that both my code and the OP's code plays with "scheduling" in C.
@TonyTheLion Usually means that you didn't initialize the struct properly, or have a bad pointer to it.
oh maybe I have to init my instance of the struct
> If you decide to compile and run this, pay attention to your CPU temperatures!
@Mysticial I can overheat my CPU with your code?
@DeadMG program can clear cache for example, or say to user "we are out of memory, please close some documents"
that's what replacing the new_handler is for
18:40
anyway, program can't just call terminate() -> abort()
@DeadMG It hurts when writing some looping function that takes a lambda. The function needs to take a lambda with a throws spec that accepts anything. Otherwise you can't pass it lambdas that throw (and don't tell me it's wrong to throw from inside a loop!).
@StackedCrooked I overheated 2 of 4 computers I had... Granted, one of them was a laptop and the other was overclocked... meh
in any case program can't call abort(), IMO
@RMartinhoFernandes That's what throw spec deduction is for.
I throw whatever this lambda throws.
@Mysticial I can understand about the overclocked one. But the idea that certain software could overheat my CPU would be worrying. I'd expect that this is controlled at bios level or something.
18:42
LOL, if I start my program with debugging, I get 305 fps. If I start without debugging, I only get 280 fps :) Must be some weird cache/alignment issue I guess.
@DeadMG Ok. I still have a nagging feeling it will be either not as useful as you want, or too painful, but I'll reserve judgment until you get to that part.
It gets better: if I insert a meaningless comment into the source code, the performance characteristics reverse: now without debugging is faster :)
well, you will only get pain if you try to subvert the type system by throwing unknown exceptions
@FredOverflow Package the debugger in the installer!
most users and code will never have to explicitly deal with them at all
18:44
@StackedCrooked That benchmark I wrote puts a VERY unrealistic load on the processor. It was written *with the intention* of using as much power and producing as much heat as possible.

Most PC vendors don't design their hardware to handle such a load since very few *legitimate* applications will sustain such a load long enough to fry a system.
Xeo
Xeo
> What's a forward declaration? – Holland 3 mins ago
only if you write an interface that is to be used by dynamically loaded code
Xeo
Xeo
Fuck that, do any of the new C++ coders actually read a book or atleaste a tutorial somewhere?!
@Xeo not only C++
@Xeo No one reads fuck these days. You just grab some random hello world tutorial on the web and then become a help vampire.
18:46
@Xeo Is "forward declaration" a real C++ term? Isn't it just "declaration"? :)
it is for classes
@Xeo I would never suggest reading C++ tutorials.
class x; is a forward declaration, and class x { shit; }; is a declaration
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes That's what the code in the question looks like.
@FredOverflow It's not in the standard document, but it's standard terminology of C++ programmers.
18:46
Yay for literate source code, brought to you by the people who bring your coffee.
@DeadMG A class with a body is a definition, and a class without a body is only a declaration.
@DeadMG Both are declarations.
oh yeah
rofl
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow A definition is always a declaration, no?
Yes.
Or maybe not.
18:48
we definitely need another language %)
Out-of-class member function definitions are special.
what do you think I'm doing?
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB Close vote for "Not constructive".
well, technically, I'm playing Starcraft 2, but ...
@Xeo I'd vote for "migrate to Zoo". I sometimes like to watch Java people...
18:49
it's ridiculous to have 1356 pages of standard and no one remember them all
@Abyx Welcome to SO. What needs to be remembered?
@KerrekSB, "what is declaration"
"Just ask every question you need to ask so we can farm rep." :-P
Oh wait, I just found two forward declarations in the C++ standard:
3
template <class T> T&& forward(typename remove_reference<T>::type& t) noexcept;
template <class T> T&& forward(typename remove_reference<T>::type&& t) noexcept;
18:51
;)
Xeo
Xeo
lol
@Xeo Many of them have done a little Java or C# and due to familiarity of the syntax they assume that they can program in C++ as well.
@StackedCrooked I'll never get those people. If a language is not different enough, why should I bother learning it?
This guy's idea of a temperature converter is to store all three quantities independently. Neat.
@Abyx Mine only has 1353 pages, am I missing out on the 3 most awesome pages ever? ;)
18:52
@Abyx Chapter 7, "Declarations"
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB apperently time costs him more than storage!
@FredOverflow um... last two are empty
Xeo
Xeo
Or maybe not, since he needs to calc all three every time.
@Xeo I like the "no input" approach. We convert anything. We don't even need to ask you.
@StackedCrooked oh, interesting, you're still working on that? But yeah, I guess it'd need some pretty well encapsulated (and simple, probably) code to be able to just replace one type of abstraction with another
18:53
@RMartinhoFernandes I admit that I am guilty of it in the opposite direction. I sometimes need to program in Java or JavaScript and I just figure it out as I go along.
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB Hello JavaScript!
Dang, I'm hungry, but my legumes still need another 30 minutes to cook...
@StackedCrooked Are you aware yet that JavaScript has lambdas? ;)
@Xeo Yes, 20-10 is 10, but 20+10 is 2010. Yum
@jalf I've started working on it and ending up reverting all my changes in frustration. Many times. :D
@FredOverflow Of course. It's the one feature that makes the language bearable.
Xeo
Xeo
780
A: Strangest language feature

Chandra PatniJavaScript truth table: '' == '0' // false 0 == '' // true 0 == '0' // true false == 'false' // false false == '0' // true false == undefined // false false == null // false null ...

18:54
@KerrekSB You're lacking some quotes. JavaScript can actually do simple math, let's be fair.
@FredOverflow However, I'm not confident about my understanding of the this pointer inside lambda's. I always play on the safe side and use named variables.
I think I'm gonna start working on my own language. It will be incredibly pure, because it will only support NOPs and GOTOs.
4
@Xeo Weak typing does that.
@StackedCrooked What's to worry?
@StackedCrooked ah, let me know if I can help
18:56
@FredOverflow NarrowC?
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB NOPC
@FredOverflow Subtract and jump if less then or equal to zero!
@KerrekSB I'm only saying that I can't condemn people for trying to use C++ without learning it properly first when I'm doing the same thing in another programming language.
@FredOverflow what are you going to call it?
Xeo
Xeo
I wonder what's the minimal number of language features you need to be turing complete.
18:57
@StackedCrooked No no, I meant what's to worry about the this pointer?
@jalf GNOOTPO, an interleaving of GOTO and NOP.
I believe it's possible to tweak clang to make usable language
Xeo
Xeo
@FredOverflow That sounds a bit like GNUPOO
@StackedCrooked But you don't try treating JavaScript like C++, do you?
@StackedCrooked yeah, I think it's pretty natural. Looking on the bright side, with SO we have a very useful channel for communicating to them what they need to read/learn
18:57
@Xeo I believe it was sequention, selection and iteration. However, I don't know how pure functional languages fit here.
(By the way, all C++ classes should also come with an auxiliary that pointer, just in case you need to point at something else.)
@Xeo The GNU implementation of the POO language? Yeah, I guess I could just call my language POO...
@RMartinhoFernandes So, has anyone looked at this cppscript thing? Is it good?
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB I found it interesting to read.
1 min ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@FredOverflow Subtract and jump if less then or equal to zero!
18:58
By the way, POO is an anagram of OOP!
Everyone noticed that before.
@KerrekSB Sorry, not me. Surprisingly enough I've actually been busy writing code this week!
@FredOverflow How do you say "a class or function declaration that is not also a definition"?

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