« first day (1634 days earlier)      last day (3541 days later) » 

08:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes Robot for mod
No.
@sehe Nah, gotta investigate.
@R.MartinhoFernandes why no?
No desire, no time.
after all this site has done for you :P
it's quite literally clothed you!
illegal global destructor
what. oh. spurious }
08:05
@райтфолд Hmm, thanks. I'll look at your PR later, too.
struct globe { ~globe(){ steal_all_the_things(); }};
@райтфолд Not lots. Any breakage will be quite simple to fix, anyway.
@R.MartinhoFernandes is Ogo 'ready to use' then?
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes ok!
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes You already answered that yesterday, though. :P
user1804599
08:34
When Ogonek works again I can get rid of ICU so that I can actually throw exceptions on invalid data. :P
@Puppy Oh, that was Python? I thought it was pseudo-code ;)
@sehe Not yet, but I have been pondering for a while if lexing in parallel would make sense.
user1804599
Python is executable pseudocode and Perl is executable line noise.
You borrowed that from somewhere, didn't you?
¬_¬ I get being polite, but ffs can't you just ask the question rather than insisting I give a token "I'm fine".
user1804599
Yes!
08:37
From where?
user1804599
No idea!
I think it was some Channel9 video.
Maybe the C+ lol one with the Haskell guy.
user1804599
Python is executable pseudocode even in that APIs tend to be horribly unspecified and imprecise!
stored_enum<Enum, UnderlyingType> vs stored_enum<UnderlyingType, Enum>
@райтфолд so you're saying... don't use it as the script language for a game :P
user1804599
08:39
Use it as a last resort.
@MomotapaLimpopo the former, I like to think underlying type can be derived from the enum, it at least reads like that.
@райтфолд But Guido is such a nice guy!
user1804599
I'm gonna make Mill's write-file function atomic by default.
@thecoshman Thanks! Anyone else?
08:42
@MomotapaLimpopo to be fair, both look fine. But if if 'underlying type' is optional, I'd put it second.
I really never wanted to do source control management at all and felt that it was just about the least interesting thing in the computing world (with the possible exception of databases ;^)
Gotta love Linus :)
@fredoverflow TIL Linus has alien contact.
user1804599
Writing files atomically is easy and underdone.
user1804599
The only API I know that does it is Foundation's.
@thecoshman Not optional.
@райтфолд No and yes
08:43
@MomotapaLimpopo then either form is fine, if anything the second might be nicer
user1804599
People have said that Git is only for super smart people. Even Andrew Moron said Git is "expressly designed to make you feel less intelligent than you thought you were."
user1804599
lol
@thecoshman It's been usable for a while, just not fully functional.
@fredoverflow Yes, it most assuredly does.
@fredoverflow Except databases? Is there a difference?
08:44
it's easy to lex and parse in parallel
although with parsing you have to kinda stitch together the ASTs after the fact.
user1804599
Unless parsing depends on semantic analysis!
@fredoverflow le shitposting face?
Linus how could you?!
@райтфолд Ooops. Guess I did so while really tired, which would mean at any point during the weekend..
@fredoverflow what
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol... ok then.
08:45
@Puppy I assume you mean "on the fly"
@R.MartinhoFernandes DBs tend not to track history... maybe...
@sehe You know, living in the many-core age and all...
I have no idea to what you are referring.
@fredoverflow right. you're joking
What's so hard to imagine about the Lexer and the Parser running in parallel?
08:47
oh wait
you mean literally running the lexer and the parser in parallel on a single file, as opposed to running the lexer and parser over N files in parallel?
Yes, and I remember that you hated that idea when I first brought it up :)
that's because it's crazy and pointless :D
I'm 95% convinced that indeed it is :)
I'll go with stored_enum<Enum, UnderlyingType>
But still, someday I'm gonna implement it and measure how much it sucks.
user1804599
08:48
A lexer is a parser.
@MomotapaLimpopo what's that
A stored enum
@райтфолд ...said the guy who parses context-free grammars with regexes ;)
@fredoverflow ... with nonius, right?
user1804599
08:49
The distinction is quite silly, actually.
it's really not that silly.
@fredoverflow indeed, someone had to eat the poisen berries before others knew it wasn't a good idea.
they employ quite different algorithms
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes Scala with Nonius! Should be possible with JNI?
@райтфолд It's important in the context of a system that has two chained parsers.
08:49
@R.MartinhoFernandes stop watch... stopwatch? stop-watch?
user1804599
What are chained parsers?
The ones that got sent to prison
@райтфолд Functional composition? One parses the output of the other.
@райтфолд Just because you love Scala does not mean you have to abstract over everything.
@райтфолд that's it
08:50
All my attempts at using nonius have led to Overflow Error
what am I doing wrong
:(
@fredoverflow what's so hard about realizing there's no gain? just more cost?
@Rapptz All?
Do the examples work?
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yes, but you can also treat bytes as tokens and it will work just fine.
I'll try those next
@Rapptz It's when you want to store an enum class on fields of different widths.
08:51
@райтфолд Yes, that's what the first parser does in such a system. The distinction between that one and the second one is important.
for whatever reason
user1804599
@fredoverflow :[
VS set_union is broken.
user1804599
I don't get why it's important.
@R.MartinhoFernandes No.
08:52
@Rapptz Hmm, interesting. Boost version?
clock resolution: mean is 11.6849 ns (40960002 iterations)

benchmarking to_string(42)
collecting 100 samples, 3 iterations each, in estimated 1173 μs
PANIC: clock is on fire
Error in function boost::math::erfc_inv<double>(double, double): Overflow Error
@райтфолд Because they have completely different output types.
user1804599
It's important that the input of the 2nd one and output of the 1st one are compatible.
Well, boost, compiler, OS, etc.
08:52
Windows 8.1, GCC 4.9.2 MinGW-w64
uh.. forget boost version lemme check
user1804599
But what I'm saying is that you can incorporate the two directly, instead of writing them separately and then composing them.
you could do, but why would anybody want to write one giant monolithic component instead of smaller separate re-usable components?
@райтфолд That's irrelevant to whether the distinction is useful.
@райтфолд I call it "Odersky syndrome".
user1804599
It would be less flexible but it's certainly possible.
08:53
hey bby u wanna see my giant monolithic component
3
without compiling any code
how do I find out my boost version
user1804599
@fredoverflow inb4 abstract packages
@MomotapaLimpopo oh yeah, talk dirty
nobody said that it wasn't possible
we said that it was silly and pointless :p
@райтфолд The distinction is trivially useless in a system where the two don't exist. It is a fact, but so is 2+2=4.
08:54
@thecoshman aye sweet seducer rite??
also, it's much easier to provide some operations, like basic syntax highlighting, with them separated.
@Rapptz It's in some file, don't remember which.
@райтфолд lol
Xeo
Xeo
mornin
1.57
boost/version.hpp
08:55
@Xeo Mormons? where!?
How do you test for code that should fail compiling (SFINAE)
I have mingw at home. I'll check at the end of the day.
Xeo
Xeo
@Rapptz I leave the version number in the folder name ("boost_1.57.0") and symlink it to a "boost` folder.
user1804599
I don't like syntax highlighting.
@fredoverflow YES. One doesn't simply imagine "magic concurrency" without doing basic logic checks
user1804599
08:56
@thecoshman s/m//. Everywhere.
yes, but you like Perl and therefore your opinion doesn't count :P
@MomotapaLimpopo SFINAE can only be used to check for expressions where substitution fails, which is a subset of compilation failure.
Xeo
Xeo
@райтфолд orons?
@MomotapaLimpopo If you're using traits for the SFINAE just invert the condition.
other than that no go
08:57
@Xeo oreos? yes please :D
user1804599
@Xeo Did I pass the case-insensitivity and global flags? No.
@sehe Again, I'm just curious to implement it and see the performance difference myself. Would you rather see me waste an evening in the Lounge instead? ;)
@райтфолд oooh BURN @Xep
How you doin' @Xep?
@райтфолд What about that kind of syntax highlighting where identifiers are uniquely highlighted? Like foo and bar having different colors?
08:58
I could do some basic debugging if you want
user1804599
@fredoverflow no idea
Boost.Math is header only right?
@sehe well have either you or @Fred sat down and worked though the logic of lexing and parsing to see how much could be done in parallel?
@Rapptz I suppose it works if you run without analysis, right?
@R.MartinhoFernandes how do I check that?
08:59
@Rapptz Yeah, only Chrono isn't.
@Rapptz Invoke the runner with --no-analysis
user1804599
I want some stuff like timezone shit in C++.
@thecoshman It can only be done in parallel if the lexer goes ahead of the parser really
yeah it works with that flag
stud timezone
in theory the lexer could be lexing N extra tokens whilst the parser is parsing the current token.
user1804599
09:00
The queue overhead will probably be greater than the benefit otherwise.
"probably"?
considering that it's trivial to parallelize lexing and parsing already for an embarassingly parallel speedup by simply processing multiple files in parallel
@thecoshman HAHAHAHA. Well. Have you sat down and had a coffee today?
@Puppy sounds sequential to me. What about the lexing, could you lex multiple things in parallel?
@fredoverflow good point
@sehe Is the Pope a bare shit in the woods?
09:01
Yes, yes, he is
yes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes example1 and example2 works
@Puppy well that does then give you file IO problems (maybe), but I guess again, it's easy enough to have one thread reading files and dishing them out to lex+parse threads
but any example using the macro doesn't
09:03
Oooooooooooh.
That's really weird.
@thecoshman Well, you obviously can't lex and parse faster than you can pull input into the lexer.
@fredoverflow why can't you compromise a little - only spend half of the time on the implementation & the other half on sehe, we don't want sehe to be 'unbearable'
@Puppy What if the files aren't independent? Like one contains a base class and the other a derived class?
I actually read a wee article about this "belief" that you should avoid lots of small IOs as in some cases 'slurping' entire files into memory can really nurf performance. Obviously it's going to depend on what you are doing and so on.
@fredoverflow Lexer and parser don't give a shit.
in fact, they couldn't give a shit even if they wanted to.
09:06
Constipation?
not enough information
you'd have to perform semantic analysis to determine what the bases of the type are.
@Rapptz Hmm. I don't see what's different between the two :S They both use default-initialised configs.
yeah iunno
Have you implemented a parallel compiler? Then I'll just take your word for it.
I'll look into this some more
09:07
@fredoverflow Yes.
@Puppy cool
Not sure how to debug the macro version though
all you have to do to lex/parse multiple files in parallel is stitch together the ASTs into one at the end of parsing.
lol
then just give that unified AST to the analyzer and Robert's your father's brother.
09:08
what
@Rapptz The only thing the macro does is register the benchmark in a global variable.
g++ -E gives really ugly files that don't compile on their own
tut tut robot global mutable variables
@MomotapaLimpopo retarded way of saying a saying
09:09
@Puppy It's a main skeleton.
where'd the rest of the body go?
I.e. I provide the program itself, the user provides a library.
@Rapptz Can you try changing example1 to use global_benchmark_registry() instead of the benchmarks variable?
(and adding benchmarks with the macro, of course)
this takes a surprisingly long time to compile in debug
Merges seemed way easier in CVS than Git to me. What was super simple in CVS is a huge f*cking deal in Git.
I'm sorry, but you clearly mentally unstable and a danger to yourself and others.
I might have a go at playing around with Nonious... but I think I need to look at sorting out a test framework first :\
09:13
@Rapptz I think that's because the HTML template is rather large. I'm thinking of providing a version without it for faster compiles.
yeah I've noticed it's pretty big lol
JS included too
Xeo
Xeo
@Puppy I reckon you won't have time late into the evening today because of work tomorrow?
With -O0 the to_string(42) example works but not to_string(4.2) :v
thought it was maybe -O2/-O3 causing the issue
@Rapptz And because of VS I had to provide it as a series concatenable short strings, which I'm pretty sure also hurts compile times a bit.
@Xeo let me just confer with my list of Shit To Do.
09:18
took me 15.8s to compile under debug (i.e. -g -O0) if you're curious :p
I could spare a couple hours at least today I reckon
but after lunch or so I've gotta make a start on this list
report_stream() << "\"" << escape(kv.first) << "\""; // TODO escape
Xeo
Xeo
@Puppy Well, I'm busy from 5 to 9 (at least), I think. Which is why I asked about the late hours.
I might be able to get in an hour or two after 9
@Xeo Not 9 to 5? :P
:22528745 CSV. But it could be anything with "-delimited strings, really.
user1804599
09:23
oh boy
er Starbound
where are all my fucking characters?!
Xeo
Xeo
lol
@Puppy You wrote Starbound slashfic?
Xeo
Xeo
mine're still there
no
09:26
robot what function does the actual analysis?
debugging this big header without tui is not that enjoyable
@Rapptz bootstrap is the top-level.
Well, there's analyse but that's merely a driver.
nothing in the log about any problems.
but my characters are all just gone.
@Puppy How do you do semantic analysis? Visitor?
Warning, self boasting incoming:
lol no.
09:28
Yes, LOG4CPLUS is successfully used to log information from DIP, the protocol that is used by the entire CERN infrastructure and LHC experiments to exchange status information, and even the LHC Handshake (the "3...2...1... go !" equivalent of the LHC startup sequence).
4
you can't do any remotely complex semantic analysis that way.
@Puppy So what do you use instead to munch on the tree?
\o/
analyse_samples might have some interesting logic, too, but I'm pretty sure it's the bootstrap that uses boost::math::quantile.
@fredoverflow Tree parsers <3 ANTLR <3+:<
@fredoverflow You need to create a corresponding semantic tree.
09:30
@wilx Awesome! Grats!
ah for fuck sake! I still haven't booked flights to London yet.
@Xeo Apparently it is theoretically possible to recover them so give me a few minutes
oh wait never mind, I already did.
seems that Starbound keeps quite a few backups by default
which is nice.
@wilx I will henceforth personally hold you responsible of any mishaps at the LHC that may destroy Earth and its surroundings
@MomotapaLimpopo Hey! It only does the logging, not the running! :D
09:33
@Puppy Okay so you need multiple classes per "logical node", one for each translation phase?
Yeah I figured that out long ago :)
I was just trying to find out which one of those two caused the issue.
And I just found out.
@wilx your involved in LOG4CPLUS?
prob_n == 0 atm
which is then internally multiplied by 2
and 2 * 0 == 0 which is Overflow Error
@fredoverflow Nah. Some logical nodes like expression nodes don't need distinct classes since you can get away with visiting them. And you don't need logical node classes for lexing or codegen.
@thecoshman Yes. I took over some years ago and I am the only maintainer currently.
09:34
AST tree, semantic tree, codegen tree, and LLVM IR's in-memory representation is another tree, are all separate trees.
@Rapptz Hmm, what's point and what do the samples look like?
@wilx excuse me whilst I find my extra large scepticism hat...
resample is full of -10
(gdb) print resample
$10 = std::vector of length 100000, capacity 100000 = {-10, -10, ... }
09:35
well I'll be
@thecoshman What are you sceptic about in this case?
point is also -10
Xeo
Xeo
@thecoshman good point
@wilx that you are maintainer of it :P
Xeo
Xeo
hm, 140 bucks for reasonable trip length and times
09:36
@Rapptz Yeah, would be expected. It's the mean.
@Xeo no there's a sentence I don't hear that often
(Note to self: there's a bug when all samples are equal)
@Xeo what dates you thinking?
Xeo
Xeo
arriving Sunday, 07.06., 4pm. leaving Tuesday, 16.06. 11am
that's pretty much the cheapest I can get without having 13h trips with overnight stay
@thecoshman lol, why would I be lying?
09:37
@Xeo 7th -> 16th right?
@wilx vOv
Xeo
Xeo
ye
I think in order to fix you'd just have an if statement around prob_n?
I'll probably do similar
@Puppy You mean the expressions don't store their types themselves, but compute them on demand from their children?
or er reassign it
Xeo
Xeo
09:38
@StackedCrooked: Got your Unconference dates fixed yet?
I really should look to meet up with my Aunt whilst I'm over there
@Rapptz The "all samples equal" case, yes. It's a degenerate case. But the resample is broken.
anything else you want me to check?
or is that enough info
@fredoverflow Well, in the semantic tree, you don't really need "expressions" like AST expressions.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked: Got my potential route here - both go over Brussels.
09:39
@Rapptz Nah, seems good. Thanks a lot.
@thecoshman See sourceforge.net/projects/log4cplus and click the "Brought to you by: wilx" link. You should see my full name there. I present myself as "wilx" here and there and my full name on SO is consistent with that on SF.
Can you add an issue in the tracker, with that info?
Sure np
@wilx indeed
@Rapptz Ah, wait, what about the samples (not the resample)?
I wanna know if the -10 come from the sampling or the resampling.
09:40
@Xeo not really a route...
how do I check the sample?
is it the iterator pair?
@wilx I also am Momotapa Limpopo on a few dozen websites
Xeo
Xeo
Hm. That reminds me, I need to get in touch with Tony, since I was planning to crash at his place for the duration of the Unconference.
@MomotapaLimpopo OK...?
@Rapptz Yeah, the pair that gets passed to resample.
09:42
@wilx ok!
Well, you can never rule out elaborate hoax, I guess.
I'm guessing that's before the bootstrap function
@Xeo yeah, I thought he was just taking a break, seems to have quite altogether
you got his number?
Xeo
Xeo
Nope
presuming he hasn't changed it, I can text him to get in contact if you like.
though try twitter first maybe...
Xeo
Xeo
I got him on Steam though, I guess I'll try catch him there when he's online
@MomotapaLimpopo oh, another myth bought the farm, then
:D I can't have you go without unexprained idioms
09:47
(gdb) print samples
$3 = std::vector of length 510, capacity -1 = {Cannot access memory at address 0xa
:s
thanks gdb
Length 510 sounds broken :S
You sure you're past the line?
It obviously won't work before the initialisation :P
I assumed so
but I guess I wasn't
?!
I typed n not s.
heh
didn't reproduce itself this time
09:52
is samples supposed to be full of the same values
except for.. one
No.
Well, unless the benchmarkee is insanely consistent.
Are the values negative?
That's broken :/
The fuck is wrong with the sampling.
TIL about cmder
@Rapptz cool
09:54
?!
@Rapptz oh my god
@R.MartinhoFernandes Are they supposed to be positive?
is that a console emulator for windows?
it's just ConEmu
@Rapptz They're execution times.
09:55
Can I kiss you on your buccal orifice
Portable console emulator for Windows gooseberrycreative.com/cmder
That's not misleading at all o.O
I have no idea what to use it for
but I believe that if I show it to my nerd friends I will look smarter
@MomotapaLimpopo just use conemu, konsole2, mintty,...
I'll take it with me the next time I go to college
@sehe it's just a portable ConEmu with git
I don't actually remember why I use it.
Probably monokai.
09:58
When I run your SSCCE from yesterday on my Linux box, the benchmarkee fails.
But the framework is fine.
clock resolution: mean is 23.1992 ns (20480002 iterations)

benchmarking Convert to string
collecting 100 samples, 166 iterations each, in estimated 2.3074 ms
mean: 262.78 ns, lb 259.97 ns, ub 265.65 ns, ci 0.95
std dev: 14.5101 ns, lb 13.0326 ns, ub 17.1691 ns, ci 0.95
found 1 outliers among 100 samples (1%)
variance is severely inflated by outliers

benchmarking Modulus and dividing
Modulus and dividing failed to run successfully
benchmark aborted
sorry was kinda buggy
I fixed it locally
Yeah, but I can't repro the issue anyway :(
firefox keeps on crashing on me
@sehe I use git bash

« first day (1634 days earlier)      last day (3541 days later) »