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21:00
i wish xul was better documented
it should have been a standard
that would have been nice
@sbi It has deteriorated? I never saw him type differently.
@AlfPSteinbach I once considered rewriting it on top of Poco XML library. Poco provides a full DOM implementation. I could then create bindings to JavaScript. However, I never found the energy to do so.
@AlfPSteinbach In case you would look at the code. I know it sucks :D It's embarrasing.
@FredOverflow you can do i/o by time coding, e.g. frequency of execution of first instruction in program
@StackedCrooked i just looked at the header. i admire people who sit down and create a thing like that, showing that it's possible. or exploring the idea.
sbi
sbi
@RMartinhoFernandes When he came here first, he'd type properly (as in the newsgroups). When he came back after he had disappeared for a while, it was suddenly worse. What's happened, @Alf?
@AlfPSteinbach I was jobless at the time. It was definitely a fun project.
21:08
@KerrekSB I wish people would just say "objects are stored wherever the implementation wants to".
Is the stack a C++ specific or an OS feature?
it's usually hardware implemented
and very common, if not universal
stacks existed as functional memory as they are now for a very very long time
Hardware implemented? In what device?
With Knuth's MIX assembly language u stored the return address right into the routine's return instruction, b4 calling it. Look mom, no stack! :-)
21:15
@AlfPSteinbach does it support multithreading?
recursion?
Recursion isn't really an assembly-level feature I think.
why wouldn't it be?
Of course it supports recursion. It's Turing-complete.
21:17
rly? how can it keep more than one return address?
Remember that you can always just fake it by maintaining your own stack of return addresses.
asm is not turing complete
@Abyx Er, it has access to memory cells.
@Pubby almost Turing-complete (if you ignore the infinity stuffs). Good enough?
How can one build a Turing complete programming language on top of something that is not Turing complete?
since when is a language defined in terms of hardware?
21:19
You can't.
they're defined to be turing complete, but obviously they can't be in practice
@Pubby Ok, then explain why "asm" (you could also say what flavour first) isn't Turing-complete.
?? as you said, lacking infinite stuff
@RMartinhoFernandes If asm isn't turning complete then how can you write a compiler for a Turing complete language?
you just add some unbounded external memory
21:21
@StackedCrooked You can't.
@RMartinhoFernandes Then what is the missing ingredient?
you just add some unbounded external memory
@StackedCrooked when we say a language is turing complete, it's BS. It's turing complete if you run on it a machine with infinite memory. But any practical implementation won't have that, so it's not strictly speaking turing complete
Oh, I see now.
21:23
but it's close enough. As long as you don't actually run out of memory, the effect is the same as if you'd had infinite memory
"With Knuth's MIX assembly language u stored the return address right into the routine's return instruction, b4 calling it" - return instruction can't keep more than one return address, isn't?
So in reality Turing complete programming languages don't exist.
yes they do, the implementations don't though
@StackedCrooked well, there's nothing in the C++ standard saying infinite memory is disallowed, afaik
although pointer sizes might get a bit tricky
@Pubby Hence the "in reality" at the beginning of my sentence.
21:23
@Abyx MIX has access to memory.
Store the stack of return addresses there.
@RMartinhoFernandes instructions are in memory
sizeof(void*) would return infinity. I think this might lead to UB.
but for most languages, the specification is probably turing complete, since it doesn't say anything about having limited memory. It's only the implementations that aren't
@Abyx Just like variables are.
@StackedCrooked 4 ? 8?
21:24
What's your point?
I don't see how C/C++ could have variables of infinite size
@StackedCrooked yeah, probably. C and C++ are probably bad candidates for a "technically turing complete language"
malloc(sizeof(int)) would allocate infinite bytes???
@StackedCrooked You can still access infinite memory. You're not required to have it all accessible through a simple pointer indirection all the time.
it don't get this sentence - "stored .. into the routine's return instruction"
21:25
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm just making a joke. The point of making jokes is outside the scope of this discussion.
Just add some virtual memory scheme and unbounded hard drives.
@Pubby Ints don't have to be infinite size. Just pointers ;)
Xeo
Xeo
@Pubby To address infinite memory, you need infinitely large pointers. :)
infinite confusion :(
@Xeo You don't need the ability to address it all at once!
21:26
I thought C required size of pointer to be constant
@Xeo but turing completeness does not require random access memory. So a segmented memory model of some kind could be allowed
A circular memory model might just work.
you could probably come up with some kind of trickery where, say, pointers have a fixed size, and can address the N bytes nearest the instruction pointer. So you have a "small" window of memory visible at all times
but you can slide the window, to access all of your infinite memory
@Abyx In MIX you would write something like JMP 0 for your return statement. And when calling a routine you would do SET $address_of_the_JMP_operand_of_routine, $address_after_next_instruction; CALL $routine.
I don't remember the exact syntax. It's something like that.
It's self-modifying code.
But that's just one possible trick to do this.
is MIX/MMIX a good dialect for learning asm?
sbi
sbi
21:29
@jalf I'm old enough to remember programming such shit.
@RMartinhoFernandes OK, but how it can call itself? It will overwrite former return address
Xeo
Xeo
I really don't get why int* p = new int(); int* q = std::move(p); doesn't leave p with 0.
you could just have an infinite sizeof(char)
@Abyx Store a stack of return addresses somewhere else in memory, and before returning pop from it.
@RMartinhoFernandes but it's not SET $address_of_the_JMP_operand_of_routine, $address_after_next_instruction; CALL $routine
sbi
sbi
21:30
@Xeo Because it doesn't need to, and because it would cost runtime?
@Abyx Like I said, that is one possibility. That one does not work for recursive functions.
But that is not the only way of doing functions in MIX.
@Xeo I wrote an eviscerable template for that!
Super handy for moving OpenGL object handles.
in x86 call/ret isn't the only way to do functions too
(and I suppose by infinite sizeof(char) I really mean, sizeof(char) == 1, but an infinite number of bits in a byte)
@Autopulated CHAR_BIT cannot be infinite either.
@RMartinhoFernandes Oh, nvm then.
21:34
@Xeo p is kinda destructed after move, to it's UB to check if it's 0
No, it's not.
why? it holds copy of q ?
int* p = new int(); int* q = std::move(p); if(p) std::cout << "blah!"; does not invoke UB. It may or may not print "blah", but it's not undefined: it cannot order pizza.
Just once I wish a bug would bring pizza to my door.
what is value of p then? copy of q?
Xeo
Xeo
21:37
@RMartinhoFernandes I thought of doing a pointer template. It actually default initializes to 0, moves the rhs (leaves it at 0) and does something else that I'm currently forgetting but that I wanted for builtin pointers
jibber jabber
Objects moved from have an unspecified but valid value. There may be some more specific rules for scalar types though. I don't know.
that's the word I was looking for
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Also, in memory of BUILD conference this year, that template should be called organ_donor.
Why?
I used eviscerable because I wish std::move was std::eviscerate.
21:39
How about std::pillage? Less horror-flicky.
I like saying "eviscerate".
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Didn't you watch the Herb's BUILD video on Channel9?
So do I, but that's not the point
@Xeo Nope.
Linky?
He made analogy to organ donorship
Is that even a word?
21:41
"donation".
You're the native English speaker.
It's way more fun to make up words
Ok, downloading.
No, English is not my native language. I was born speaking Badass.
Did someone link to this recently?
17
A: What are Aggregates and PODs and how/why are they special?

R. Martinho FernandesWhat changes for C++11? Aggregates The standard definition of an aggregate has changed slightly, but it's still pretty much the same: An aggregate is an array or a class (Clause 9) with no user-provided constructors (12.1), no brace-or-equal-initializers for non-static data members (9.2),...

I'm getting some upvotes on it.
21:44
I can downvote it if you want
Xeo
Xeo
No, someone edited something in it
Atleast that's what I thought I saw on the frontpage
> edited Dec 13 at 20:48
> edited 8 hours ago sje397
Xeo
Xeo
That's what I meant
One of these days I should answer that dude that asked for more explanations in a comment. I keep forgetting :(
Xeo
Xeo
Heh
21:47
You should all bow before my rice cooking abilities. I'm awesome.
Xeo
Xeo
So, I know someone in here also watched Carnival Phantasm. Was that you, @StackedCrooked?
It's me
@Xeo Me too, but I've only seen the first ep. I hesited to continue watching and play Tsukihime first.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Good choice
@Mysticial Ah, watched the EX Season extra yet?
@RMartinhoFernandes There's a difference between "infinite" and "arbitrarily large"
21:49
I almost forgot about that show until you just mentioned it.
DLing it now
Xeo
Xeo
I should warn you though, @StackedCrooked, Tsukihime takes a great deal of time to explore all routes.
damn... only 480p
@Xeo Good idea. I shall start playing it tonight then.
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, DVD extra
@Xeo What genre is it? RPG, adventure..?
Xeo
Xeo
21:51
Also, it's kinda addicting. I had 2 weeks holydays earlier this year in school and wasted all of it with all-nighters and sleep deprivation on Tsukihime.
what's this 480p garbage in the world of 1080p :-P
poop...time to take my kid to the ER...you guys have fun.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Visual Novel RPG
Never done that before.
Xeo
Xeo
Oooh.
Then you should maybe install the non-ero version. :P
21:53
@KerrekSB I was trying to say that the language itself does not prevent the usage of infinite memory. If you can provide infinite memory, you can use it in C++.
@Xeo I'm not ready for the full version yet? :D
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, I found the search term is:answer isaccepted:0 + either body:any suggestions, body:please help, or body:thanks to be a great flagging source.
@StackedCrooked If you never played Visual Novels before, every Visual Novel will be kinda hard.
@Xeo I use the review tools, "first answer".
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes That doesn't find as many as I found through those searches.
@Xeo Ok. I don't really know what to expect now..
21:55
@Xeo It finds enough for me to waste all my daily flags, when I'm in the mood for flagging.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Visual Novels are like books with pictures for the most part. There will be points in time though, where you are asked to make a descision. Usually, if you make the wrong descision, or a series of wrong descisions, you get what's called a "bad end", meaning you failed the novel. There are several ends for most VNs.
TYPE-MOON VNs are known to be quite hard on the player with those descisions
Can you save and restore the game?
Xeo
Xeo
Even one wrong descision and you could play yourself into a "bad end" (what usually constitutes your death in TYPE-MOON games) for over half an hour without knowing anything.
@RMartinhoFernandes You can never provide infinite memory, though. At best you can provide arbitrarily large memory.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Sure, you can save your current state at any point in time.
21:58
@Xeo That's cruel!
Does anyone have GCC 4.7? Does it come with <codecvt> and <cuchar>?
@KerrekSB Sure. You're missing my point: C++ is not the weak link here; reality is.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked That's TYPE-MOON. :)
Also, Visual Novels are known to contain low to high amounts of sexual content.
@RMartinhoFernandes No, also C++ is.
Any pointer value is finite.
You don't need all of it accessible through a pointer at the same time!
Xeo
Xeo
21:59
@Stacked, that's why I said you should maybe install the non-ero version. :)
Hm, wait, I withdraw my statement.
@Xeo I don't really understand, but I'll take your word for it..
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Well, your usual goal in Visual Novels is to capture the hearts of the heroines.
@StackedCrooked en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_novel should be worth a read.
Sounds like you're reading a book, but have to guess what the author wrote.
@sbi you mean hardware with infinite memory?
22:02
@KerrekSB Arbitrary arithmetic pointer! Thankfully you have infinite memory to store addresses to infinite memory.
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes lol, no. You really get all the information you need, but you need to think like the main character you're playing. Wrong descision can quickly knock you out. :)
sbi
sbi
@jalf Segmented memory. I remember overlays in Turbo Pascal. Ugh.
@sbi oh right
still not quite the same thing though, in that you have a finite number of segments, and each of them is accessible
argh annoying eczema
but yeah, segmented memory was my first idea. Then it occurred to me that having an infinite number of segments probably wouldn't solve anything
Xeo
Xeo
22:04
Anyways, afk dying from laughter (aka watching Carnival Phantasm).
@Xeo have fun
@DeadMG Ugh, why did you make me google that?
well, if you didn't already know what it was, I guess
You have one of those things?
yeah
it's rather irritating at times
22:06
@LucDanton OK, I'm happy that memory can be infinite, but I believe only countably so. Any C++ program, being a finite piece of text and only having finite loops, can only ever see countable amounts of memory.
@KerrekSB but a C++ program doesn't need to be able to see your entire memory space
while(true) see_next_piece_of_memory();?
at least not at the same time
@KerrekSB There's nothing necessarily finite about C++. You could infinitely JIT more code.
@RMartinhoFernandes That's UB
22:07
@KerrekSB It is?
Can't have infinite loops.
@DeadMG That's platform-specific.
you can't?
meh, it's more than possible
22:08
Not since C++11.
@RMartinhoFernandes implementations generally are ;)
@LucDanton you're thinking of infinite loops with no side effects, I believe
not infinite loops in general
I think there are one or two more requirements as well
Why did they take infinite loops away from us? That's cruel.
it's a pretty specific case
most message loops are infinite
covers for (;;); but not much else
22:09
Isn't it that all loops must terminate and all functions must return?
@DeadMG There has to be a break condition in the loop body though
How can I write my idle thread then?
longjmp never returns
@DeadMG No they're not. If they were, you would need to crash the process to stop it.
22:10
@jalf I don't remember that distinction, I'd better read up on that again.
@KerrekSB What's [[noreturn]] for?
no, nothing says that they're ever executed
if you break the loop on a certain shortcut, or button press
then nothing stops the user simply never pushing tat button
@KerrekSB the compiler may assume that all loops terminate. And "infinite" loops usually do. They usually have some kind of side effect which will eventually terminate them
@jalf That goes in favor of his argument then. You can't have non-halting programs in C++.
@RMartinhoFernandes Well, for special things like exit and terminate...
22:11
@RMartinhoFernandes sure you can, as long as it is possible for them to terminate.
I want my infinite loops back.
@RMartinhoFernandes Right. I want to say something like that a program that outputs all digits of an irrational number cannot be well-formed C++
Even though it could conceivably written with a finite (actually quite short) amount of code.
@RMartinhoFernandes It's a bit of Standardese to 'bless' some optimizations. It doesn't affect semantics of non-pathological programs.
white(not_key_pressed()) output_next_digit();. Kill all humans capable of pressing a key beforehand.
Spoken like a true robot.
We would only need a countable amount of steps, but that's already past a well-formed computer program. We don't have transfinite programs :-)
So if we wanted to address uncountable amounts of memory, we'd basically need to be able to perform one such long loop each time we want to form a pointer.
So it's not enough to only form a pointer while nobody presses any keys! :-)
22:17
@KerrekSB Do you really need to address all that memory? Gimme an infinite memory tape "file" and I can use fseek to move back and forth like a bra*nfuck program does.
I was doing some mips assembly the other day and remembered that it doesn't have a stack.
really? I thought that stuff was standard processor fare for decades
It's very cleaver. The stack is entirely software and it is just by convention that it grows down in memory.
[-]+[.] is a truly infinite loop in bra*nfuck. That's a bra*nfuck program you can't express in C++! (now with side-effects!)
while(1) isn't infinite? Or does that bf code grow or something?
22:25
@Pubby It's not valid C++.
it's not?
@RMartinhoFernandes Moving back and forth only allows you to see a small infinity worth of places, and any terminating program can only see a finite amount of space...
Xeo
Xeo
Woot, epic
I wouldn't have understood half of it if I didn't play Tsukihime and Fate/Stay Night beforehand though.
@KerrekSB But I can use the key-press-after-killing-all-humans trick to use "infinite" loops, can't I?
22:27
@RMartinhoFernandes Is infinite recursion allowed?
Hmm, you can't write yes in C++.
C++ sucks.
@RMartinhoFernandes Adding a 'dummy' atomic operation can do the trick I think.
@RMartinhoFernandes I guess. It's just hard to describe what a program does if it isn't required to terminate. You could say that "eventually it will visit every memory location" or something like that...
@RMartinhoFernandes Just the baby example, start at 0 and add 1 each step. What does this program do? Does it use "infinite space"? In a way yes, since it will step past any natural number eventually
Although at every step it is just at some finite number.
@LucDanton So, you can have non-terminating loops after all? You just have to work harder than while(true) for it?
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes What exactly does that do?
22:35
@Xeo Endlessly prints the character whose code is 1. The [.] is the printing loop. The [-] is "zero current cell", and + sets the cell to one, so that the loop never ends.
@RMartinhoFernandes I think that's the trick.
@RMartinhoFernandes It just has to be possible for the program flow to move past the loop.
@RMartinhoFernandes Write it in assembler!
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes And C++11 took the ability from us to do the same thing, huh?
@KerrekSB That's not C++.
Xeo
Xeo
@RMartinhoFernandes Inline assembly!
22:37
Still not C++.
Maybe a non-hosted program doesn't have this restriction?
The implementation may assume that any thread will eventually do one of the following:
— terminate,
— make a call to a library I/O function,
— access or modify a volatile object, or
— perform a synchronization operation or an atomic operation.
[ Note: This is intended to allow compiler transformations such as removal of empty loops, even when termination cannot be proven. — end note ]
1.10 Multi-threaded executions and data races [intro.multithread] paragraph 24
Ah, Luc Danton to the rescue :-)
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton That only disallows empty loops
for(;;) std::cout << 1;
yes is possible after all!
22:39
@RMartinhoFernandes Yiphay!
Xeo
Xeo
WTF is yes anyways?
@Xeo The intention always has been to not affect non-pathological programs anyway.
@Xeo It's part of Posix
@Xeo Linux command that endlessly prints "y" (or its argument if you pass it one).
Xeo
Xeo
Okay...
And what exactly is that useful for?
22:40
My favourite is false, which "does nothing, unsuccessfully". The summary of my life.
@Xeo It's useful to pipe into commands that ask for confirmation.
Xeo
Xeo
Oooh
I see
that makes more sense
A different matter: Suppose I want to give my private IP address to someone. Clearly I don't want to type this into this Google-forever-cached chat.
@Xeo Well, I guess I agree with you depending on a definition of 'empty' loop.
$ yes | annoying_command_that_does_not_know_what_to_do
22:40
So natually I'd like to engage in some Diffie-Hellmann type exchange with someone
Xeo
Xeo
And I guess there's no corresponding no program, huh?
Xeo
Xeo
$ yes n | annoying_bla_bla
Is there a ready-made Javascript web thing that allows me this? I.e. I press "generate", then paste the token here, etc.?
Base64 encode it!
Joke.
22:41
@RMartinhoFernandes Shhhh!
That was my second level of defense
@KerrekSB OpenSSL perhaps.
After the traditional ROT13 encoding of course
Xeo
Xeo
@KerrekSB Double ROT13 to be sure.
I seem to recall TLS is similar to Diffie-Helmann, but memory is hazy.
@LucDanton Hmm... just a sequence of command line commands?
Well, any secure scheme really, I don't mind....
Or even semi-secure.
22:42
@KerrekSB I know OpenSSL provides a variety of command line utilities but I've never used them.
Really, the basic DH would be fine, as long as the result isn't overtly visible
I'm silly. I was about to ask why you don't just connect directly to each other and then share the IP.
I clearly need sleep.
Mmmh I think I thought of SRP instead of DH.
@RMartinhoFernandes Very good
I was going to ask if anyone here wanted to play a round of Ur-Quan Masters Super Melee, when I hit this stumbling point.
So now I will probably write a website for a minute first.
Hm, can Javascript do arbitrary-precision integers?
4
Q: Is there a bignum library for JavaScript?

David CaryIs there a bignum library for JavaScript that I can include like <script type="text/javascript" src="the_bignum_library.js"></script> ? I think my users would prefer to enter numbers in a web page and wait a 7 seconds for a result, rather than download an executable and click thro...

22:46
Neat
(Also scarily fast.)
Excuse me while I go and write something unrelated ;-)
@KerrekSB I like super melee, although I'm not very good at it. Got a full fleet of avatars destroyed by a pro's single ship.
@KerrekSB Hey, that's my thing!
I love when leaving SO's tab for a moment to google, I end up back on SO.
@RMartinhoFernandes Being scary?
A bit that too.
@Pubby We need to talk
Does anyone have a list of good Diffie-Hellmann base primes?
22:48
Little kids are commonly afraid of me. I don't know why.
I don't care at all whether those are reused
Xeo
Xeo
@Kerrek what exactly are you trying to do?
I.e. primes p such that p - 1 = 2 q with q prime
@KerrekSB IIRC there's a RFC for that.
@Xeo I want a quick, safe private data exchange
Xeo
Xeo
22:49
4
Q: Determining the source of an included symbol in C++

GregI am currently working on a project which forbids the inclusion of C++'s STL. One of the compiled files we are using lists the following symbol: _Xran__Q2_3std12_String_baseCFv I believe this relates to STL strings. Am I incorrect in thinking so? If not, is anyone aware of an effective way of...

So I'd say [12345667; 9392], and you'd have some secret info
Xeo
Xeo
> a project which forbids the inclusion of C++'s STL
Whyyyyy
OEHGEÇRKHggerhlgealrighekalrgh
Xeo
Xeo
I just don't get it.
@RMartinhoFernandes That's what she said!
22:50
What was her nationality?
Who can pronounce that?
my "secret exchange" website will be called "sexchange.html".
I cannot guarantee that this document and/or the site it's hosted on are reliable ;)
Oh, those are large.
22:51
@LucDanton Should be trivial to check! Subtract 1, divide by 2
OK, we could just hardcode some primes and refer to those.
Even better.
@RMartinhoFernandes The 'official' source gives off a neat aura of authenticity.
Well, the document may not be reliable, but you can't get more reliable when it comes to sources of RFC text.
Xeo
Xeo
I still don't really understand that private / public key pair stuff
We're not supposed to.
@KerrekSB SEO?
@RMartinhoFernandes Of course!
OK. the plan: p is taken from a list. g is user-provided, and can be small (like 5).
a is also user-provided and should be large (i.e. g^a should wrap around)
22:59
9999999999999999
The the public datum is [p, g; A = g^a]
Then the second party computes B = g^b. Finally, we can use g^(ab) to modulate our payload data

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