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08:12
damn I died.
:(
SO uh
Anybody use OpenCL?
The Uganda Prince does.
Momotapa or his twin EnglishMaster/
Additionally, do you think the OpenCL C++ binding should be attuned to C++11 or 98?
08:17
Pick C++03 as a compromise.
obviously C++11.
Did you have an alternative for numeric::? :)
Well, what’s the package/library/thing for?
standalone :(
given my current naming scheme that'd make it decimal::decimal
08:20
The Data.Map.Map of C++.
C++ actually calls it std::decimal::decimal128
@Rapptz i like opt parse btw
@MomotapaLimpopo Wat wat
Hopefully soon to be std::experimental::decimal::decimal128.
@Cinch The official OpenCL C++ binding sucks terribly. I am in the progress of making a glorious C++11 one.
@Jefffrey Wat wat wat wat
08:21
@MomotapaLimpopo Are you going to submit that to Khronos?
No I'll put it on GitHub.
Khronos does not maintain the C++ wrapper anymore
@Cinch command line parsing is something I'll never be satisfied with but optparse is close enough
@Rapptz Aw u silly jokester <3
@MomotapaLimpopo QQ
But Vulkan and SPIR-V!!!
How is that related
08:24
it'll be under related pages in Wikipedia
@MomotapaLimpopo They both use it as an intermediate right?
SPIR-V, that is
and a C++ for SPIR-V or something something is supposed to come along
Oh I think you're conflating the OpenCL C++ bindings with the OpenCL C++ language
The bindings is what is deprecated
@MomotapaLimpopo Ah....
Okay
I want to be on it
I'm really interesting Vulkan
Ugh..
WTF Why the hell is a simple program just 1.6kb?
pretty tiny
@Rapptz No that's hideously fat
08:30
oh noes, the kilobytes
you're gonna be pretty disappointed from here on out
Like omg "libgnu-dw2-0.dll doesn't exist on this comp" WTF
it's going to start eating up my gigabytes of free space
"libc++-0.dll doesn't exist"
my geggabytes
08:30
"libgcc-ver0.dll doesn't exist"
I'd only need to make about 100,000,000 copies for it to make an impact
I mean wtf MinGW-w64
@MomotapaLimpopo thanks
But I'm compiling for windows right now mannnng
Inferior Windows race detected
08:32
@MomotapaLimpopo lol now those executable sizes are weird
I'm disappointed in MinGW static linking
they were clearly not linked statically.
I'm like "STATIC DAMN YOU" and MinGW is like "k bitch u my bitch you don't get dem static today. shocking i kno cuz"
don't statically link the stdlib
08:33
I like to statically link the stdlib.
How do you expect to statically link a dll
it's a .a too
@MomotapaLimpopo No I'm trying to link the libraries I need to
> libc++-0.dll
i.e. I need the dwarf exception support static linked into the program
08:34
How is linking a difficult step in a man's life
there are license implications with static linking
@Rapptz unfortunately
@Rapptz wait a minute
@MomotapaLimpopo It's Cinch™
If I statically link to GNU code does that make me the license?
this is where you finally realize that you're using an inferior toolchain that basically nobody else uses unless they're literally forced into it
08:35
@Puppy Duh.
I'm inferior
I'm Cinch, what don't you get today dawg?
@Cinch Yes you become the license, makes perfect (li)sense
the sstdlib is LGPL which is not the same thing as GPL.
@Puppy lel
@Puppy I know
3/10 made me reply
08:36
I use static linking all the time from VS and it's dead simple.
No Microsoft
I'm glad you're judging the difficulty of a task based on Cinch's experience.
@Rapptz (lol)
I'm not
Also why does MSVC EVEN
Ugh windows
08:38
5 mins ago, by Momotapa Limpopo
Inferior Windows race detected
@MomotapaLimpopo I have Ubuntu. I have salvation in my heart, brother.
@Puppy libstdc++ is GPL with linking exception
Great.
isn't that just LGPL?
Ubuntu was invented in Africa :proud:
08:39
So that means I CAN'T staically link to libstdc++
Only just dynamically
user1804599
Hello.
try libc++ they're MIT
@райтфолд Hi
user1804599
libc++ is great.
@Puppy Noooooo
08:39
@Puppy Difference is the interop/substitution requirements
they're not MIT
Is it really?
hmm
Also if you're interested:
08:40
UIUC iirc
yes, I think they're technically BSD or something which is basically identical
glibc is LGPL and I don’t know about the other support libraries GCC might use
hm
libcxx.llvm.org dual license
user1804599
libc++ is both MIT and UIUC.
08:40
lol
user1804599
I wonder whether there is software that does provide warranty for some reason other than the author being a moron.
@LucDanton libm.a?
or technically part of glibc?
user1804599
I don’t recall. There might even be more than one libm!
TIL
I for one would like non-(L)GPL math libraries
08:43
Sigh.
Unfortunately Windows will not be dying anytime soon
So I wish there was better LLVM support on Windows
@Rapptz Myself I want a sandwich.
damn french
always hungry for bread
user1804599
Lol, this defect:
user1804599
> shared_ptr's get_deleter() should use addressof()
user1804599
How about deprecating unary operator& overloads.
08:52
Un sanlouiche
@MomotapaLimpopo intriguing, but possibly decadent
I'm bored.
:(
How's that meta-ninja
So I meta-ninja from Naruto today
You better believe it.
user1804599
@Rapptz work on Mill
08:58
>
> C++ is a mistake :D:D
It's time to go to war with Chat.Python
@Cinch sauce
@райтфолд Too much code breakage as usual
in Python, 2 mins ago, by Antti Haapala
C++ is a mistake :D:D
user1804599
Alright, time to get Ogonek to work.
I'm so sad that I cannot do Google Summer of Code
09:01
why?
So are we all
it's run by Google.
@Puppy But Google!
It rhymes with Moogle
you're talking about the same guys who came up with G+ and tried to force everybody on to it to use their other services, and who published the Google Style Guide
And we know what that means:
09:03
I've seen no evidence to suggest that Google is staffed by programmers of any particular quality.
@Puppy And we're also talking about the company that has worldwide impact
@Puppy Doesn't matter--they are the next Microsoft
yeah- the worldwide impact of selling your personal data without your consent.
Anybody use SWIG before?
I'm kind of amazed at how you went from OpenCL to linkage incompetence to GSOC to SWIG
nope
09:04
@MomotapaLimpopo Okay minus the SWIG i've lost interest
@MomotapaLimpopo Time not spent reading manuals is time spent in the Lounge.
Lounge<Ignorance>
@Cinch Yes, briefly.
user1804599
user1804599
Because it's default-constructing a const POD.
user1804599
09:09
Although I'm not sure whether that's a clang bug or not, since the diagnostic says "const," not "constexpr."
could be a C++14 change, they did introduce a couple of breaking ones for constexpr
@Puppy Isn't the big one that constexpr isn't intrinsically const?
user1804599
Ah, I see.
user1804599
I'm using C++17 lol.
@райтфолд 17?
Who the hell has C++17 done already?
09:11
nobody
@Cinch That’s a misunderstanding.
@Puppy (right?)
but they can implement the proposals that are already accepted and hope that they don't change that much.
@LucDanton From the conference video that's what it seemed like
user1804599
#clanglife
user1804599
09:12
cf. MSVC
@райтфолд #g++masterrace
Those are the exact symptoms of a misunderstanding.
inb4 #stallman++
Introducing the new alpha-dominance compiler, stallman++
personally I prefer Clang over G++ but both have their fair share of issues and bugs.
I can't get Clang to work on Windows so yeah.
Where's that awkward turtle meme?
09:13
I have a project that JITs LLVM IR output by Clang and runs it on Windows.
Variables declared constexpr still imply const. Non-static member functions declared constexpr don’t imply a const this-qualifier anymore. constexpr functions are unrestricted and may involve non-constexpr variables.
with full stdlib/EH support.
@Puppy I don't even know what IR means
and I can't even compile with LLVM so I'm screwed
@Puppy: Do you have any Wide users?
And I have no reason to switch today
09:14
nope
Is Wide even finished?
I have to wait until Clang supports MSVC exceptions before I can bootstrap
@LucDanton hm?
Btw
afaik they have to be literal types right?
which is Close Enough™?
09:15
@Puppy Is wide finished?
not a chance in hell
Okay
now that I'm working I just don't have that much time left over to work on Wide.
Also is there some sort of extremely minimal scripting language that requires hooks in from C or C++?
Lua.
09:16
@Puppy With no virtual machine
And can allocate nothing
then what the hell did you mean by "scripting language"?
@Rapptz I misremembered 'relaxed constexpr' as 'unrestricted constexpr'.
@Puppy As in, "let's do stuff in C without C"
with minimal syntax or something like that
the people who would voluntarily program C are, by definition, too stupid to realize that they shouldn't.
you're not gonna find shit
09:18
@Cinch Always put all your requirements upfront.
else they wouldn't be in the first place.
@LucDanton Oh oaky
Try:
user1804599
Bunch of Wheels unit tests also fail.
@MomotapaLimpopo Bad. Ty.
Scripting language
Allows for no dynamic allocation at all
Performs all operations by reference
Can write only to empty references it is given
Cannot mutate references it is given
Can recognize structures and functions
Support for enumerated types
09:20
lol wat
@Puppy E.g., Linus Torvalds and all those working on the Linux kernel? :)
2 mins ago, by Rapptz
you're not gonna find shit
"allows for no allocation at all"?
but performs everything by reference?
@Rapptz ikr
those two requirements are completely contradictory.
09:20
Maybe I should write a scripting language
and also, nobody is going to waste their timee on a language with no dynamic allocation.
that would make it completely useless.
even the C nutters dynamically allocate things.
@Puppy It would be literally minimal overhead shorthand for C functions
@Puppy 'no dynamic allocation', 'can allocate'
even better
@Cinch Except you just took out everything that people want from C functions.
@LucDanton I should've said "write" in the first place
@Puppy Like I said, scripting
09:21
no.
people still need shit
A Haskell dialect that auto-fuses everything sounds like a perfect match!
you can't get away with reducing the language to Brainfuck and then just sticking "scripting" on it.
@LucDanton It does, to me.
dynamic allocation is a completely necessary operation for the fundamental workings of every non-trivial program ever written.
and doing everything by reference would directly require excessive dynamic allocations.
@Cinch Yeah it helps not knowing what kind of 'fusion' we’re talking about.
09:23
The point is that it's literally C--
Like "I give you functions, and I give you space"
C doesn't even meet your requirements
there is such a language but even they permit dynamic allocation.
"You read, you do stuff, you write"
as does their superior brother, LLVM IR.
Actually, now that I think about it, it would be pretty damn good for threading.
09:24
It is snowing again. :(
you could always program in LLVM IR if you want.
I want warm sunny weather!
@Puppy what is IR
ask the LLVM Project what LLVM IR is.
they have a giant reference manual.
Or I guess a Rust where you substitute boxing with an error. I hear the Rust compiler encourages modification by plugins.
09:25
yeah but then you can't do everyrthing by reference.
@Puppy Why can't I do stuff by reference?
and you could just link to a standard library that implements dynamic allocation and use it.
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wheels bug tracker is gone! :v
@Puppy ?
@Cinch Because where the fuck would the objects live if you don't dynamically allocate them?
09:26
@Puppy In C or C++ or wherever you grab the stuff from
user1804599
wheels::fun::is_invocable fails horribly on clang but I'm too incompetent to fix it.
It would share memory with the original program with the two requirements:
so literally evey object would come from C or C++.
Puppy being told how to C++ by Cinch.
13
@Puppy Yes
09:26
I see.
so it would not offer addition?
@Puppy Presumably I could bind add to a function pointer for exposure for the script
okeydokey
so what you're saying is, "The script can't dynamically allocate, but every fundamental operation is implemented with dynamic allocation".
@Puppy No, it would be given an empty reference to write to.
which would lead to an incredible excess of dynamic allocation.
All the space would be allocated before hand.
09:28
@Cinch There's no such thing as an "empty reference".
that reference has to go somewhere.
objects require space to live in.
@Puppy Either way the space for the object would be given before hand to the script
@Cinch So you could onlyy write programs whose space is constant?
@Puppy pretty much
btw this is for embedded purposes for an application
so basically you can't write any useful programs at all.
09:30
Or rather the language would ensure that each script would require only a set amount of memory to successfully run
@LucDanton Now try a function that just, I dunno, returns i + 1.
@Puppy Can’t add references.
That way I can simply keep running as many scripts as I want and everything should still work
As long as I have the memory
not sure what the status on + and/or auto-deref is though
which is exactly the situation you already have with every other script language.
09:31
@Puppy (not Python + C++)
sure you do.
(at least with Cython)
you can run as many Python scripts as you want and everything works as long as you have enough memory.
and as a bonus, the language is not shit.
well.
somewhat, anyway.
7
Q: True multithreading with boost.python

jspencerI'm trying to test a multi-threaded C++ DLL. This DLL is supposed to be thread-safe. I have it wrapped with boost.python, and I'd like to create multiple python threads to exercise the DLL through the boost.python wrapper. I'm actually trying to cause threading problems. What I can't seem t...

There is no more than 1 Python state allowed
09:33
per virtual machine.
you can careate as many Python VMs as you want.
I literally don't really want a VM though I want 0 overhead.
same deal for Lua.
I already have Lua integration
well then congratulations, job done.
user1804599
ugh "vendor/ogonek/include/ogonek/text/text_core.h++:59:30: error: call to 'decode' is ambiguous" lol
09:34
if you want to lower your overhead you need something like LuaJIT, which is spankingly fast.
at least in terms of executing the script.
@Puppy Were you being spanked fast? I cannot imagine spanking being fast. It was always painfully slow.
lol
j/k
@Puppy Actually thank you
I thought LuaJIT had something to do with Java
The acronym never really registered with me
@MomotapaLimpopo Why read names when you can be in the Lounge?
@Cinch You were probably thinking of JavaScript.
user1804599
Nope, Ogonek isn't gonna work.
09:39
@райтфолд Fix it!
user1804599
No, it uses that silly EnableIf<…>... trick all over the place.
user1804599
And clang somehow still doesn't support it.
QQ no LuaJIT for Lua 5.2/5.3
@Cinch LuaJIT, unsurprisingly a JIT for Lua, is basically the basis for the design of virtually all fast interpreter/JITs today, as far as I know.
@Puppy Unforunately it has poor support for 5.3 and 5.2
09:43
wasn't really that impressed with 5.2
5.3 seems OK though
@Puppy Only because you find calling a debug function more annoying than lexical scoping, dummy!
user1804599
> Illegal input is replaced with U+FFFD. Otherwise, errors result in a bogus string. Calls u_strFromUTF8WithSub().
user1804599
lol fuck ICU as well
@LucDanton er... yes.
@райтфолд Hence why I told you to look into Ogonek.
The package.seeall nonsense is a direct result of not having lexical scoping, amongst many symptoms of doing it wrong.
09:48
I've never seen that function before
If you define module(..., package.seeall) function foo() print(lol) end and require that module somewhere else with a lol in scope then foo prints that.
any lol or just a global lol?
A lol in scope. E.g. if you’re defining a module then the module’s scope.
I’d better recreate to get the details right, it’s fiddly stuff.
well that's pretty terrible really I think
flying to koln is surprisingly cheap :O
I might visit this summer, hmm
09:56
So the wisdom was to not use package.seeall. But that has its own annoyances. package.seeall might be an awful cure but getting rid of it doesn’t remove the disease.
people using the JS snippets to post C++ code
it's terribal
user1804599
31
Q: I am nervous about ever asking a question again, what should I do?

The Mother of Joseph BeuysYesterday I asked this question: NSURLConnection.sendAsynchronousRequest - XCode 6.2 got data, but 6.3 beta does not. Why? I did it badly and was criticised, which was entirely fair. I was an idiot. By the end of the process it felt like a big, pointless mess, and so I deleted the post as it s...

user1804599
hahaha
user1804599
lol, let request: NSMutableURLRequest = NSMutableURLRequest() when Swift has type inference. Moron confirmed.
@Puppy Right. Load the module into lua, call foo() and it prints nil. Do lol = 3, call it again, it prints 3.
09:59
@райтфолд my solution was to never ask questions again
it worked

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