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17:10
@AndyProwl @JerryCoffin don't quarrel, PHP has a solution for any evil. If "goodness" turns to be evil, you just have to introduce a "real_goodness" and you're all set
our politicians are kinda doing the same thing :>
@Mgetz BOOM
@MarcoA. so, goodness, real_goodness and FILE_NOT_FOUND?
@AlexM. when everything is lost, this is the ultimate solution
I often resort to it
> About 50% of virtual calls in Firefox are now speculatively devirtualized during link-time optimization.
so that's saying compiling linking with GCC 5.1 makes using virtual even less of a problem then people like to say it is?
what does "speculatively devirtualized" mean?
17:16
> Write-only variables are now detected and optimized out.
why no warn about bad code? I guess it might just be that this code doesn't read it...
@thecoshman hopefully that isn't applied to volatile stuff
when do they detect if the speculation went wrong?
@MarcoA. It cannot be
@AndyProwl I think it's saying that if it's virtual, but nether used in that way, you can remove the vtable crap...
vOv read
don't look to a pirate for smart talk
@thecoshman I don't think that's what "speculatively" means
@thecoshman lol
user1804599
@thecoshman templates.
17:17
it might mean "when we happen to stumble over one, we try to optimize it.. but don't expect us to go and search for them. We're lazy as hell"
user1804599
Template instantiations result in bad code.
> I only have a few small remarks to make:

In your header file, don't include <iostream>: include <iosfwd> instead which contains the forward declarations for every type in <iostream>.
first time I see someone recommend this
is it legitimately important/useful/w/e?
me too, weird
source
2
A: Implementing a Yearmonth class

MorwennI only have a few small remarks to make: In your header file, don't include <iostream>: include <iosfwd> instead which contains the forward declarations for every type in <iostream>. Also, you only use std::ostream in your source file, so you could simply include <ostream> there. Several times,...

@MarcoA. To me "speculative" means something a la branch prediction, which is odd in this context
@AlexM. It's quite a common recommendation IME but I don't bother too often following it. My bad perhaps
Compilation firewalls and stuff
17:20
@AndyProwl oh I see what you mean, yeah, odd choice of words
@AlexM. Basically, compiling other translation units that include that header file (Yearmonth.h) won't require parsing all those unnecessary iostreams definitions
something on my table has a resonant frequency found somewhere in Cemetery Gates :\
@AlexM. You only want <iostream> for std::cout, std::cerr etc. Whether you want <iosfwd> or <ostream> or whatevs depends on the particular needs.
@thecoshman either that or your phone is ringing
fuck I can’t English
17:23
@LucDanton hate when that happens
I think I got it
also, nice forward-tick
> can’t
> can't
<iostream> is not a catch-all header for I/O. It’s for the stream objects.
@AndyProwl is this your personal website?
@MarcoA. lol, no, it's not. I don't have one
I suck at web
17:30
@AndyProwl ok ok, I just asked because.. you know..
@MarcoA. If you're paying attention, you'll note that Andy is a right-leaning star, whereas SoftSea is a left-leaning star. That means Andy is from some part of the Atlantic, while SoftSea is from some part of the Pacific.
user1804599
You never want any header from the I/O streams library.
user1804599
It's a terrible API.
17:42
@rightfold What do you use instead?
@AndyProwl He switches to a different language.
user1804599
Boost.Asio if I need async I/O.
user1804599
Don't know what I'd use for buffering.
user1804599
Buffering must definitely not be part of all streams. It must be a stream wrapper instead.
@rightfold Even for just logging to some file or printing stuff to the console or streaming into a string?
user1804599
user1804599
I'm gonna get rid of char* in favour of ContiguousIterators.
user1804599
And make memory_stream store two offsets instead of one, lol.
user1804599
@AndyProwl Problem with streaming to strings is that streams are about bytes, not text.
user1804599
So what you'd do instead is streaming to a vector and then decoding the accumulated data.
@rightfold I see. But would you use Boost.Asio for say, simple logging too? Quite often I let my objects take an std::ostream& and insert messages to be logged there
user1804599
17:49
Probably.
Interesting
@ShotgunNinja no... I checked that...
city time!
user1804599
I'd make functions take functions for passing log records to.
user1804599
Like this:
user1804599
struct record {
    time time;
    string code;
    string message;
    record(string code, string message)
        : time(now())
        , code(std::move(code))
        , message(std::move(message)) { }
};
template<typename Log>
void f(Log&& log) {
    log(record("FOO-0001", "Hello, world!"));
}
Xeo
Xeo
17:52
scrap that ctor, and record{ ... }
user1804599
No. I don't use braces for anything other than constructors taking std::initializer_list<T>s.
user1804599
The rules are just too complicated for me to comprehend.
Xeo
Xeo
meh
user1804599
But this is how I'd do logging.
user1804599
17:53
Use std::function if you're worried about template instantiations.
Ok, but this is orthogonal to the iostreams vs asio choice
I mean
user1804599
It allows both!
The design allows you to use both
Yeah
But this still leaves the question open, whether you'd still use Boost.Asio for logging
user1804599
Log filters are just functions with if statements in them.
user1804599
You can compose filters trivially.
user1804599
17:55
@AndyProwl Depends, really.
user1804599
In Mill VM I definitely would since I can't do blocking I/O anywhere at all.
user1804599
In hello world I'd probably go the easy route and use std::cout.
I guess that makes sense
All right, thanks for sharing
user1804599
17:56
Now the question is what the hell am I still doing in the office when everybody left like 2 hours ago
user1804599
It's important not to block thread pool.
user1804599
@AndyProwl fapping
im hungry
I'm not. We just had cake
18:15
@rightfold So... it's a synchronous wrapper over asynchronous API? :D
haha this fitness app thinks breakfast is at 9:45
I'm sleeping then you piece of crap
breakfast is at fucking 12-13
@AlexM. #devlyfe
@fredoverflow how come you got so realistic about project planning, when you're still in academia?
user1804599
@Griwes Absolutely.
@LucDanton what wait. I didn't know you knew those kind of words
18:27
@rightfold fmapping at work? Yeah why not, nobody would notice anyway
user1804599
Only masochists want to use asynchronous APIs.
@rightfold lol
user1804599
Hence I provide a synchronous abstraction on top of them.
pantoona has reached another pinnacle of software engineering.
user1804599
So you can just write io::outln("A"); io::outln("B") instead of io::outln("A") |> flatMap(_ => io::outln("B")).
user1804599
18:27
Like any sane person would want to.
@AndyProwl that's weird. IYAM
@rightfold I'm doing most of my console output with my logger thingy.
Basically putting stuff on a queue and having a background thread actually print them.
user1804599
I can't do blocking I/O.
user1804599
@Griwes I use a single thread for all the I/O.
It's neat - the main program execution just flows forward, not caring much whether it's finished or not.
But I still get "asynchronous" calls.
user1804599
18:29
You don't always want fire-and-forget.
user1804599
If io::outln fails it will throw an exception.
Hi!
@sehe It does sound weird to me, but then again I'm a noob so that means nothing
@rightfold I don't think there's much you can do with such an exception anyway.
@rightfold record{} would not even be uniform. It would just be aggregate init that is already in C89 AFAIK
18:30
(Other than print-and-abort.)
user1804599
Doesn't matter; same goes for io::write(stream, bytes).
user1804599
You typically want to handle the error from that.
@rightfold Still, I didn't have a need for a "controlled" print yet.
user1804599
And you can: try { io::write(stream, bytes) } rescue { : }.
I'll probably engineer some solution once I hit it.
18:31
Rescue?
user1804599
And this uses async I/O behind the covers.
But until then, fire-and-forget is perfectly fine.
@rightfold So the function is special, because it knows its context, or is there a general mechanism that lets a called function know that the caller doesn't care about errors?
user1804599
@Griwes No, all I/O is async behind the covers.
user1804599
But the provided API is synchronous.
user1804599
I multiplex fibers onto a thread pool.
18:32
Oh, ok.
user1804599
They get paused on the start of any I/O, channel or locking operation.
Ah I just took a look at Mill again. It's progressed
I thought you meant that try {} rescue { : } somehow changed the semantics.
Alright, carry on.
user1804599
Here's an example of concurrent writes to stdout: github.com/mill-lang/mill/blob/develop/examples/manyconc.mill
So is that finally block in there somewhere?
user1804599
18:33
It's incredibly silly but works.
user1804599
Prints X ten thousand times after waiting one second.
@rightfold Is conc::sleep() just a yield, or is there some default argument?
user1804599
It sleeps one second.
user1804599
I implemented that function before I implemented integers, hence.
:D
Fair enough.
user1804599
18:34
I will make it require an argument when I implement duration type.
user1804599
Why .IPP?
user1804599
Because it's included into a function definition: github.com/mill-lang/mill/blob/develop/mill/src/…
user1804599
It's weird and I should change it.
user1804599
I was too lazy to pass all the arguments around.
18:37
Hmm
Mill is very C++ like. What's the goal?
user1804599
That's C++ code, not Mill code. :v
I took a look at Mill
It's still
like any other language created by rightfold
Mill's purpose is to pave the way for the next language
Hmm okay
I do want to start creating languages for fun too just to flex my malnourished wings
maybe he'll end up with a masterpiece by constantly doing new things and throwing them away
18:39
Interesting
@sehe Fuck?
yeah. You don't exactly sling it around :)
user1804599
@AlexM. Noooo! It's awesome! I'm proud of this code: github.com/mill-lang/mill/blob/develop/examples/fib.mill
Well you can have a look at my history.
I suppose I could...
18:41
yay 10 pages of fuck
user1804599
kut
peest
kut end peest.
Popularized by Apple, methinks
user1804599
> Snotneus probeert Greet te verzuipen in Dobberdebat
user1804599
18:46
LOL
Greet?
user1804599
Peroxide-expert.
:D He's a threat because he works with chemicals that can be used to make bombs. On a daily basis
user1804599
:O
18:54
> Add Friends to help you reach your goals!

Lose up to 3x more with the support of friends, than those who diet alone.
wtf
how does that even work
do my friends send me energy
actually what friends
Friends dieting along with you is a motivator, and can dissuade some people from cheating on their diets.
but yeah, what friends
@AlexM. yes

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