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21:00
It also drives home the point how haaaarrrrd it is to thoroughly test library code (kudos to the library teams)
yeah
it's nice I can just plug in my code into their test framework
@sehe That's actually surprisingly hard to hit in normal code since the CPU cache gets in the way.
Was it that simple? I guess they've got booby-trapped iterators
@Mysticial it doesn't matter for normal code
@Mysticial it's a security issue, so attackers will intentionally try to hit it
Though, I could try going in the BIOS and increasing the refresh interval to the point where it becomes vulnerable to hammering.
21:03
There have been demonstrations of successful exploitsAFAIR
I'm trying of an actual use case that would hit row hammering without using clflush.
@Mysticial I don't think it exists
Non-temporal stores might do it. There are plenty of legitimate uses of that. (I use them.)
@sehe yep, they use all kinds of iterators and custom reference types and really arcane shit
Tonight I board a plane for New Hampshire.
I like planes.
21:05
@sehe the stuff they want to support is so arcane, they can't even use std::less for the two-argument sort version
what? You mean in testing
no, the library can't use std::less
you might have some weird reference iterator
that only has a non-const operator<
they have to use operator< somehow
I'll blow your minds in a couple of hours (hopefully); I'm very close to getting a working implementation of resolved_address_of (hello, args...) that will yield the address of the function invoked in hello (args...)! just need to connect the pieces!
21:07
without C++11 you can't perfectly forward std::less into operator<
what
who said anything about perfect forwarding
> For all algorithms that take Compare, there is a version that uses operator< instead. That is, comp(*i,*j) != false defaults to *i < *j != false. For algorithms other than those described in 25.4.3 to work correctly, comp has to induce a strict weak ordering on the values.
Yes... and...
note that it says operator< to compare elements
not std::less as comparison object
I didn't say they had to use std::less.
21:09
I think std::less<> has "special" semantics for at least a number of types. Also, it would be legal to specialize it for UDTs, and as long as std::sort is specified in terms of operator< it cannot not afford to use such a specialization?
I said they have to use operator< somehow.
@orlp Derp. I quoted it for this very reason
4 mins ago, by orlp
@sehe the stuff they want to support is so arcane, they can't even use std::less for the two-argument sort version
and that makes no sense
@orlp Yes. Which made me curious and look it up
@Rapptz what, specifically?
21:10
they can use it
they just choose not to
@Rapptz What's the type of *it?
@orlp typename std::iterator_traits<Iterator>::reference_type
Wrong
Neo
Neo
Hi
it's convertible to value_type
for proxy iterators it might be something else
21:11
Yeah it's reference_type.
And that must be convertible then. Well, makes sense.
Neo
Neo
Can someone explain to me what "programming by intention" means ?
and std::less<ref_type> won't work
@Neo No. We use keyboards
because operator< might only be defined for non-const types
arcane and insane? yes
but it's possible
21:13
Sounds like c++ alright
so they want to support non-compliant code
lel
@Neo But slightly more serious, it's like the opposite of Programming by Coincidence‌​ (IOW don't write something that ended up appearing to do what you think it does. Write code where you understand that it must behave in the way you want it to)
actually the proxy they give you will convert to value_type so I don't even see the issue with std::less here.
void
sort(_RandomAccessIterator __first, _RandomAccessIterator __last)
{
    _VSTD::sort(__first, __last, __less<typename iterator_traits<_RandomAccessIterator>::value_type>());
}
Rapptz has become the local standards lawyer. Who knew
21:18
@Rapptz yep, they want to support arcane non-standard code
libc++ has thrown this out of the window
@sehe huh
Just an observation. I think this didn't strike me as much before.
ugh
We used to have a litb, refp, luc, robot, xeo; Andy, luchian have been at it for some time. Even LRIO sticks to quoting the wellknown sites, these days, I think
@Neo In fact, I think what you ask is exactly described under How to Program Deliberately
@fredoverflow the information density is quite low here. He's at 9:42 and only just mentioned the second point of note. The rest seems almost like socio-babble, really o.O Still watching it of course. F# is on my list of things to learn better
@Neo Hard to be sure what you're asking about. Microsoft did some work years ago on something they called "intentional programming". That had a very specific definition of "intent" that was related to writing the code at a level of abstraction that directly reflected the programmer's intent. For better or worse, it seems to have been dropped somewhere along the line (seems like probably when they decided to push .NET, but I'm not sure).
21:30
@JerryCoffin How is that different to just offering multiple levels of abstraction and then the programmer just uses the one he intends to use?
user1804599
We have one F# system running in production.
user1804599
Guess who wrote it.
Complexity requirements on algorithms are a minimum right?
You can have a standard compliant algorithm that is faster?
I was unaware that 3 eur more can benefit the taste of gin so much
I'll get the most expensive next just out of curiosity
user1804599
@Rapptz They are upper bounds.
user1804599
21:38
So if the standard specifies O(n), an O(1) algorithm is obviously a fine implementation.
I didn't know the Intel C++ compiler was C++14 and C++11 feature complete
user1804599
Not allowing it would be moronic even by C++' standards.
user1804599
@Rapptz Me neither.
@JerryCoffin Is it comparable to literate programming by Knuth?
Shame you have to pay for it
21:42
@Rapptz O(1) is a subset of O(n), so it's allowed even if they don't talk about it specifically
@orlp Yeah I figured but I wasn't sure if they explicitly disallowed it.
assuming you don't break any other guarantees to get O(1)
Ven
Ven
@райтфолд I think I've seen a talk saying it was bad, tho?
If the standard requires an O(N) algorithm in <algorithm> A O(1) would be suspicious.
Ven
Ven
from herb sutter
user1804599
21:44
The standard shouldn't specify complexity requirements at all.
@CaptainGiraffe sounds like a memory-runtime tradeoff
@райтфолд why not?
Yeah std::sort should be O(n!)
user1804599
Because there's absolutely no reason to do so.
@orlp No, not strict O(N) to O(1) not really.
@райтфолд what
21:45
@CaptainGiraffe An example of such tradeoff is O(1) size on strings. The standard mandates this, but I wouldn't be surprised if there are other places where the standard doesn't require this
user1804599
Implementors are smart enough to figure out the fastest possible implementation by themselves.
@райтфолд There are plenty of reasons. E.g. lets not use vanilla quicksort for std::sort mmkay.
@райтфолд The point is not what the implementors need to know.
user1804599
And complexity is not observable.
@райтфолд cough
user1804599
21:45
The standard should only specify what is observable.
@райтфолд it's about what tradeoffs they're allowed to make
otherwise you might see std::string that uses strlen for size()
@райтфолд Complexity is very observable. If you implemented all std::map with say boost::flat_map then some programs would suffer BADLY
@райтфолд That is just a ridiculous statement.
user1804599
The standard should at most describe what constitutes a well-formed C++ program and what the behaviour of every well-defined well-formed C++ program is.
Good we don't have lobster committee members
21:47
not if you want to attract the performance crowd
user1804599
@orlp can't.
user1804599
strlen stops counting when it finds NUL.
fair enough, std::list that loops for size()
that existed/exists
not since c++11
21:49
Precisely
36
Q: Is list::size() really O(n)?

foraidtRecently, I noticed some people mentioning that std::list::size() has a linear complexity. According to some sources, this is in fact implementation dependent as the standard doesn't say what the complexity has to be. The comment in this blog entry says: Actually, it depends on which STL you ...

user1804599
@orlp Whether it does or not should be based on how often size() is used in practise.
@райтфолд wrong
user1804599
If people use it very often then the implementor may choose to cache the size.
@Rapptz Just reference.
user1804599
But it should definitely not be required by the standard that it does so.
21:49
@райтфолд Right. People will run away screaming when this is your policy. That's exactly how PHP is designed, right
@райтфолд ... think more
@LucDanton Yeah I noticed that already but was too late to edit.
reference, pointer, value_type, size_type; who cares about consistency?
user1804599
May 26 '12 at 0:12, by Radek 'daknok' Slupik
Also: think less.
Think maybe a bit more, or a bit less, or the same.
@райтфолд Yeah. Because all programs will send regular statistics reports to the library maintainers, who will then live-patch all deployed programs using signed trusted updates.
21:51
but I think complexity guarantees are important for the standard library, because the user knows what he can expect
Which then break scalability for a minority of other programs (which might be the s/w running the life support of your family member)
@orlp That
if he disagrees with the tradeoffs chosen he can use his own algorithm/library
And that
The lobster is just misguided here. Badly.
user1804599
@sehe Pretty sure Apple does that. :D
No they don't.
21:52
Dunning Krueger might have a case study here.
I don't think so. It's just another case of righfold DeadMG-ing
There are wellknown weak areas in the standard, and bouts of overreach. But in general complexity requirements are vital to language adoption here.
@sehe Wow, that answer is a tremendous amount of bullshit.
Hell. Even LINQ has complexity requirements (and these turn out to be crucial for even C# "level" programs)
@райтфолд do you know rust?
user1804599
@JohanLarsson Kinda.
21:53
@JohanLarsson FeO
@Puppy Oh. I should probably look at it then
user1804599
I stopped learning when I found out it dealt with errors by returning them.
what it basically boils down to is "In the interests of a few who could simply use a different implementation with the characteristics they need, we should gimp the generic interface or take away the only property that makes lists remotely interesting"
@orlp Fe2O3?
@JohanLarsson close enough :D
user1804599
21:55
A la CGoHaskellJavaScript.
@райтфолд just checkin'. Don't think I have seen you write much about it.
user1804599
It has a few nice parts, such as traits.
user1804599
The module system is horribly broken and pretty much requires WET.
wat is wet?
user1804599
Write Everything Twice
21:56
I'm not terribly impressed by Rust the language as a whole
We do not mention Rust here.
but I'm immensely impressed and intrigued by the borrow checker
user1804599
The ownership system appeared obtrusive, although I have little experience with it so I can't comment on it much.
It gives a few people PTSD.
user1804599
I hope it won't catch on like Java did.
user1804599
21:57
And it probably won't since it's hard to get to from Java and C++.
user1804599
(And lacks exceptions, lol.)
I gotta say
the moment you say "No exceptions", I walk away
user1804599
Speaking of exceptions, I should figure out a way to encode them in my instruction set.
@Puppy Do you always do that?
@LucDanton Without exception.
user1804599
21:59
Currently you can throw exceptions but you can't catch them, similar to Rust.
I can't figure out if you're making some kind of joke or not.
@Puppy He was trying to make you say "No exceptions."
oh.
user1804599
I should look at how CIL encodes try/catch.
well "No exceptions" and "No exceptions" are clearly different things.
user1804599
22:00
As for the interpretation of try/catch, I can simply make the interpreter recursive.
user1804599
So on entering a try block, I literally execute a C++ try block in the interpreter, and call the interpreter from that.
@LucDanton lol
user1804599
Like, try { return (*this)(); } catch (…) { … }.
I'm bored, AMA.
user1804599
22:01
Need a stack for it anyway, could just as well use the call stack.
@райтфолд catch(MillException& e)
user1804599
Also wanna catch C++ exceptions.
@Rapptz What is the precise air speed of an unladen swallow?
user1804599
Will probably have three catch clauses.
@Puppy European or African?
22:02
European, obviously.
user1804599
One for mill_exception, one for std::exception and one for everything else.
can't let those dirty africans in
@Puppy ~11 meters per second
continentism
@Puppy Except when they're not
Exceptception
22:03
> One line you should add to every makefile (blog.jgc.org)
hype
@Rapptz that was a depressing post
were you not entertained by this clickbait
Ven
Ven
do people not use gcc *.cpp -Weverything anymore? hah.
it's not physically clickable.
that makes it minimally effective as clickbait.
@Rapptz I feel violated
22:04
@Rapptz me niehter
@Ven GCC doesn't have -Weverything
user1804599
Let's see how Python does it, with the wonderful dis module.
 print-%: ; @echo $*=$($*)
here you guys go
@Rapptz lacks shell quoting
Ven
Ven
22:05
@Rapptz aww, but how do you do -C++98-conformant-pedantic ?
user1804599
Aaaaa I get it.
@orlp subtle
user1804599
Have an instruction Try that takes an offset to jump to on exception, and an instruction Untry that clears the offset. Keep a stack of these offsets.
user1804599
That's pretty easy.
people who don't think noisy warnings exist have never seen the clang warnings using -Weverything
user1804599
22:06
lol -Weverything
I suppose "clears" is lobster for "pops" here
user1804599
Yeah.
Way to be imprecise, hipster
user1804599
And "stack" means "call stack".
I don't think so?
user1804599
22:07
I sure do; much easier to implement.
@райтфолд it's not a stack of calls
You can enter try blocks without stack frames
Lounge Poll: I like to use Makefiles for a lot of my stuff, not just building things. Answer code "make EVERYTHING". I like to use makefiles to compile and build. Answer code "make". I don't like Makefiles . Answer code "unmake".
it's a stack of exception handlers
@orlp he's lazy, he's making each scope block a void-function implicit then
user1804599
22:07
@sehe Doing so complicates the implementation.
@sehe I'm going to laugh when he comes back here asking why he's stack overflowing so quickly
user1804599
@sehe Nonono.
@CaptainGiraffe make MOST_THINGS
@райтфолд Nah, do it LLVM-style. Make Try take two offsets- one for exception and one for normal completion.
@райтфолд yoko ono
user1804599
22:09
@Puppy Why?
because your model is going to have fun with shit like nested try blocks.
and you could do really odd things like conditionally jump over the Untry instruction.
or hell, just never emit an Untry instruction.
user1804599
You could.
user1804599
Currently you can also jump into the middle of an instruction if you want.
all sorts of dodgy shit could go down.
user1804599
And you get either funky behaviour or a bad_instruction exception.
22:10
the LLVM model is much easier to verify as correct and has all of the required semantics.
doggy shit
mostly does down
user1804599
Generating correct code is the job of the compiler.
gosh. What's gone into rightfold. He's serving all those convenient oneliners. He's almost like Cinch.
and verifying that it's correct is your job.
@райтфолд guess who writes the compiler
user1804599
22:11
Me, luckily. So I know what it does.
Wait. Did you get a raise?
@sehe Do you have a favorite unorthodox make command Youd like to share? Mine is "make publish" for course materials in tex ->pdf form.
user1804599
boost::optional<handle> operator()(try_instruction const& instruction) {
    try {
        return (*this)();
    } catch (untry const&) {
        return boost::none;
    } catch (…) {
        push(…);
        tape.seek(instruction.op0);
        return boost::none;
    }
}

boost::optional<handle> operator()(untry_instruction const&) {
    throw untry();
}
user1804599
This should work!
Builds the pdf. A "Built at ##" in the vcs, and transfers it to its web site.
22:14
@CaptainGiraffe not consciously, anymore. I have done crazier things though.
Rightfold missed my question
user1804599
It was cryptic, too.
I was really waiting for him to say "I make 12x your salary". Somehow that's what my neural nets predict as a probable next line.
user1804599
Why would I make such an assumption? I don't know your salary.
user1804599
That's more something Puppy would say.
Well. Making bad assumptions seems to be what you're after today
22:15
it really isn't.
you guys make inf x my salary
I make neither infinity money nor zero money.
floor or ceil?
therefore that's clearly not true.
@Puppy I make 0 money
22:16
comparing monetary penises are we?
@orlp The sum of infinity zeroes is zero.
user1804599
@sehe :P
Jul 16 '12 at 14:09, by AgainstASicilian
"this cretin" probably makes twenty times your salary ;)
Found it
just goes to show how terrifically out-of-date that brown list is.
it should have hundreds of names on it
Ven
Ven
22:18
but the bigger your salary is, the wiser you are, right?
Quite a few questioners asks rightly "Why the downvote! please explain"
I sometimes want to ask "Why the upvote?"
@CaptainGiraffe I tried explaining to them that they were giant pricks who spammed their question in the chatrooms, but I got banned from Programmers for that.
@CaptainGiraffe I don't believe so, but I don't really know a lot about it.
A solvable problem for sure. But in no way a question for anybody else.
should close as typo
22:21
@Ven What's your observation in the field?
user1804599
What's also immensely nice is that I can just use C++' RAII for this.
@sehe It's full of plants.
Ven
Ven
@sehe I don't work in IT
@CaptainGiraffe At least until I looked at it, I was almost tempted to up-vote it just to be obnoxious.
@райтфолд RAII is just generally immensely nice.
22:22
@CaptainGiraffe it's kinda obvious just looking at it if you point out which line's wrong
I'm just curious if he actually used the debugger. I would not dream of upvoting that Q.
user3010322
@Puppy General Purpose Undo! \o/
You should let the students freedom :)
Am I the only one here that really doesn't use the debugger?
@orlp nope. not at all.
22:24
Nope. I hate debuggers.
I very very very rarely use it if I have absolutely no clue where the error originates.
Most of the time I just dump in a print statement.
indeed
glad I'm not alone
thought I was being an oddball and that I just needed to learn to use a debugger properly
user3010322
All three of you are monsters.
user3010322
22:25
Debuggers are fantastic.
the time they take makes it not worth it
They are. Like, today, I traced another issue down to Java 6 eating my cookies (literally) without warning/exception
i don't want to step through a loop a few times and see what's happening
i'd rather just print the state and see it all at once
Literally! Did the cookies have a properly displayed fat content?
I did it.. I DID IT
22:27
My software worked nicely. And then it didn't. The debugger + OpenJDK source code were quite instrumental (although I fully admit I didn't start the debugger until I traced the HTTPS traffic and spotted a potentially missing cookie)
it's not pretty, but it works (in both clang and gcc)
@CaptainGiraffe Something like that.
I can't stand my own new avatar ...
@sehe How long did it take?
Cookie specs are unwieldy. Reminds me to post that rfc2109 cookie parser I wrote the in C++ other day
@CaptainGiraffe All day :(
22:28
@sehe all pieces of resolved_address_of (&func, args...) are now done, just need to put the final small pieces today so it actually looks like that call
@FilipRoséen-refp woot. Publish it. I'll review/tweet/share etc. as appropriate
@sehe I will get a blog and write a detail summary on the matter, I will let you know when it is available for public viewing!
/me Pats sehe on the back. Sometimes the stars align.
Yeah. It was a bad week in general
think positive - that one bad week less in life time!
user3010322
22:36
I don't like Javascript.
@sehe My week was good. I had a third c++ course student presenting a project to me. It was locating phones by wireless transmission strength data, not unlike google cars. It was good looking code.
My students writes better code because of you sehe.
10
And did it work?
@CaptainGiraffe You keep saying that. I'm plead innocent
I tried it and it was spot on.
Nice
user1804599
eeee is it possible to take ownership of an exception of polymorphic class type?
22:39
what
user1804599
ah, std::current_exception().
@CaptainGiraffe Triangulation sort of problem? based on the loss rate in the atmosphere
Triangulation sort of bermuda
Yes, and softening it to concrete disturbances,.
@sehe but least to say I'm freakin' excited haha, though I've discovered plenty of (compiler) quirks on the road to get here, that's to say the least
22:41
Deciding which of these decibels is the majora.
@sehe for example, did you know that gcc will instantiate every template twice if it fails to find a perfect match the first time? or that clang is smart enough to evaluate sub-expressions that isn't dependent, even if the full-expression is dependent?
it's weird that this little hack can get so much information out of how the compilers are implemented
@chmod711telkitty No atmosphere, <80 meters <90 yards.
Attenuation I meant
It was more of a path finder.
@FilipRoséen-refp that latter is interesting
22:49
I understand dependent types, but expressions?
@sehe btw, constant-expressions in C++ aren't very "constant" (they can yield different values upon every evaluation, that's how I find out about the clang thing)
you just have to exploit some weird, and probably unintentional, quirks of the standard
they're constant as in 'compile time'
btw, I written code to allow add_dynamic_type<list_tag, int> {}; add_dynamic_type<list_tag, float> {}; decltype (get_dynamic_type<list_tag> ()) x; // std::tuple<int, float>
so much magic going on in this implementation that I'm not sure if I should laugh or cry
@FilipRoséen-refp What problem are you solving?
@CaptainGiraffe the answer to life, the universe, and everything. (making resolved_address_of (&overloaded_func, args...) yield the address of the function that would be invoked in overloaded_func (args...))
22:56
@CaptainGiraffe So, here's my overdue post with the usual trademark overkill
0
A: c++ regular expressions: how to catch vector of submatches

seheAlthough you never came back on the precise nature of the requirements, I want to show you what I came up with to /just/ parse the Set-Cookie header as described in http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2109 §4.2.2 "Set-Cookie Syntax" Note that This is meant as a direct translation of the specs. I t...

But with a nice anecdote added now. I couldn't have added that a week ago
user1804599
I'll get rid of the fail opcode and the fail keyword in favour of a fail subroutine.

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