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11:00
ahh, that's more pleasing on the ear. Took that crappy 'came with the case' fan out of the equation and I have much less noise (when not drowning it out with music.
Just to keep an eye on temps
Is it a good idea to always declare noexcept when you think a function may be noexcept (even with conditional noexcept), or is it only really worth it for specific functions?
I don't know, like swap or constructors.
user1804599
No.
user1804599
Only for functions for which you are sure they must not throw.
user1804599
11:07
Not "think may be".
@Jefffrey You should in principle always declare a function as strictly noexcept as you can.
but in reality it's not always worth the hassle writing out the noexcept condition.
user1804599
def spawn(body: => Unit): Thread = {
  val thread = new Thread(new Runnable { override def run() = body })
  thread.start()
  thread
}
user1804599
Literally the best method ever.
@Puppy I see, but having a function declared noexcept as opposed to not, will possibly make the compiler generate a more optimized code?
Say if the function is run many times in a tight loop or something.
did your profiler determine that this method was a hotspot?
11:10
@LightnessRacesinOrbit :( pizza no
@Puppy No, but I'm writing a library, which could be used by anybody (probably nobody ever, but still) and I would appreciate if someone made it as fast as possible by default.
then write a sample use case and profile that.
That might even be more work than just write the noexcept specification.
user1804599
We can be sure that your algorithm will halt very quickly if your noexcept function throws!
true, but you actually might get useful results.
user1804599
11:13
@Jefffrey But maybe noexcept makes it slower!
that would only be true if optimizer bug
Oh, ok. So it may be slower. Just wanted to know that.
Maybe not.
@Borgleader 1 week, 2 days and 6 hours yep
user1804599
Does the compiler order the evaluation of arguments so that noexcept ones are evaluated later? :D
yes, it's definitely only true if optimizer bug.
11:14
@Jefffrey From what I have observed in generated assembler listings, adding noexcept removes some labels and allows creation of bigger basic blocks because there is no intervening exception cleanup code, in the call site, not in the function itself.
since you can always treat at codegen time a noexcept function as if it's not noexcept if you want to.
user1804599
Why?
user1804599
You have to insert code or metadata that makes the program terminate if there's an uncaught exception.
Wait. If a noexcept function may throw, the program compiles?
user1804599
You can't just not do that.
11:15
@rightfold But only in the function itself. The caller can assume no exception being thrown.
user1804599
@Jefffrey Yes. Checking this statically is literally the halting problem.
program termination is not exactly observable behaviour from the perspective of the program.
as-if basically makes it a non-requirement.
@rightfold Anyway, try it yourself. I am giving you what I have seen.
and furthermore, compared to inserting code to destruct locals and such, calling std::terminate is nothing.
@rightfold Well, you mean that the compiler could loop forever in trying to find a solution?
Because in that case the compiler could already loop forever while running template metaprogramming.
user1804599
11:17
Well, since computers have bounded memory, it's possible to solve if you have a lot of time.
@MarcoA. some would call it luminous
So I'm not sure I see your point there.
user1804599
Throwing is a form of halting.
You solved the throwing problem!
user1804599
You want to check statically whether something will halt for any input.
11:17
@Rapptz I got how it works now, awesome :D
user1804599
That's literally the halting problem.
@rightfold It's not dependent on the input.
user1804599
Then the input is considered the empty tuple.
I'm just assuming the compiler goes into the body of the function a checks if any of the functions called are not declared noexcept.
Java does this already, for example.
Doesn't sound too bad.
user1804599
It may do that, and issue warnings, yes.
11:18
it may do
but it certainly doesn't have to
user1804599
It would be incredibly stupid to do it but it's allowed.
How so?
I think that it may be extremely useful to check this at compile time as oppose to call std::abort or std::terminate if that happens, at runtime.
the compiler can't prove it either way at compiletime in the general case.
cue halting problem.
Also I'd rather have my compile hang on forever, than to see a call to one of those two functions to be honest.
user1804599
There's no noexcept(auto) yet, so you'd pretty much run into boilerplate or Java.
11:22
I still don't understand what the halting problem has anything to do with this. The halting problem states that it's impossible to know if a program terminates. Here it's a matter of checking if a limited number of lines contains a function that is declared noexcept.
that is not the same as proving that it is noexcept.
just because a function isn't declared noexcept does not mean that it is not noexcept given the runtime conditions of calling it.
I didn't ask for that.
@Jefffrey Lots of false positives - e.g. every push_back in a noexcept function will give you a warning
I'm fine with it failing and telling me: "Hey, you declared f as noexcept, but f contains a call to g(), which is not declared noexcept".
which would be practically every single noexcept function.
11:24
And how is this not awesome again?
because half of more of all functions in the Standard are not noexcept when they could be.
Otherwise noexcept doesn't really mean anything. At least at compile time.
all it means is that I, the programmer, have declared this function to be noexcept.
it does not mean that it's realistically within the bounds of the compiler's power to do any sort of checking on that assertion.
But we agree that the compiler could theoretically check if it contains calls to noexcept functions anywhere and stop the compilation in that case, right?
@Jefffrey Every function written before C++11 would be unusable in noexcept functions.
11:27
And that has nothing to do with the halting problem, correct?
user1804599
@Jefffrey Yes that is possible.
user1804599
Use libclang to implement a tool that does it.
Yes, see Java exception specifications.
@milleniumbug Yes, and why didn't they add noexcept to standard library functions when needed? It was not a breaking change.
user1804599
lazy/overlooked
11:28
Now it is.
@Jefffrey That would be a useless non-feature and break Standard conforming programs.
@Jefffrey Because C++ standard library is not the only library in the world.
the false positive rate would be completely infeasible.
@Puppy I agree that introducing it now is stupid. I was just asking if that was feasible.
no, no it is not feasible in the slightest.
11:29
@milleniumbug Not sure I follow.
@Puppy Why not?
well, let's see.
a) you have a bunch of completely conformant libraries which are going to fail this check because they call functions that don't throw but aren't marked noexcept, so you're going to break a shitload of code.
Wait wait.
I said, that it would have been feasible if it was implemented correctly from day one. That's also why I said that I agree that it's stupid to introduce it now.
@Jefffrey Your compiler could warn on that.
hmm
implemented correctly from day one?
There is no restriction that it can't.
11:31
you mean back in 1972 when they didn't have exceptions they could kindly declare printf noexcept for us?
3 mins ago, by Jefffrey
@milleniumbug Yes, and why didn't they add noexcept to standard library functions when needed? It was not a breaking change.
user1804599
In 1972 everything was noexcept!
because there's no guarantee that they don't throw.
it's perfectly legal for printf to throw.
Not without UB
@Puppy Then don't mark it nothrow.
11:32
@Jefffrey Which they didn't. Along with every other C function and the vast majority of C++ functions in the stdlib.
Yeah, and then don't mark nothrow also any function that calls printf.
right.
so it would be effectively impossible to make any function noexcept.
And make noexcept meaningful and relevant at compile time.
That's bollocks.
printf can't throw without UB.
11:33
why not?
@Puppy How so? operator[] of std::array is a nothrow as far as I know. When would it throw?
@Jefffrey You can't mark the code that isn't yours with noexcept. Consider <windows.h>, Boost libraries, Qt, ..., any library that you or the committee haven't written.
@Jefffrey Indexing past the end of the array is undefined behaviour. A conforming implementation could define it to throw.
It cannot throw because of its specification
which, from memory, is exactly what VC++ does in debug mode.
11:35
UB is completely irrelevant.
@milleniumbug Right, but if they added noexcept correctly to the standard library, then those libraries would have no noexcept specification at the beginning, and everything would still compile.
or maybe that's an assertion.. I forget.
@Jefffrey Except all the other C and C++03 libraries which would also need updating.
@Puppy Not if you place nothrow in the header of the standard :3
Anything can throw with UB, even void* operator new(std::nothrow_t, std::size_t) noexcept;
@Puppy You mean C standard libraries?
11:37
what about all of the non-standard ones?
Doesn't C++ have their own version of those libraries?
user1804599
This program can throw:
user1804599
int main() {
    std::cout << "Hello, w\u00
f8rld!\n";
    return 0;
}
@Puppy Well, if you use them, then forget about nothrow. But I see what you mean.
The standard would be an example for all those other libraries and spur adoption.
11:39
I don't use noexcept because it's annoying.
well I agree that the Standard could do more for noexcept.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Problem is that some libraries are C libraries. And cannot even declare nothrow is they wanted to.
I'm simply saying that it's completely infeasible to bolt on checked exceptions after the fact.
user1804599
@milleniumbug Then why do you use it?
@rightfold I don't?
user1804599
11:39
I don't use noexcept because it's annoying but because it's ….
@Jefffrey C/C++ libraries are a thing, actually.
@Jefffrey Well, they do also have to deal with the whole extern "C" thing.
personally I would have made extern "C" immediately mean noexcept.
Or maybe have noexcept blocks.
@Puppy I think that they main problem is actually C backward compatibility. If the standard were to implement noexcept correctly for their standard library, and there would be no other C dependencies, then you would add a new stronger exception guaranteed, which would not break any existing code; and would make new code that adopt it, correct.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Do they use macros to generate C++ stuff in case a C++ compiler is being used?
Some C functions can throw.
11:42
@Jefffrey Or C++03 dependencies.
and then you're talking about a bit of a fantasy program really.
@Jefffrey yes
@Puppy Hmm, such as?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Cool.
literally any C++03 library, ever.
@Puppy Why would that be a problem?
As I said you are not breaking any existing code.
because they're gonna have a shitload of noexcept functions that are not, in fact, marked as noexcept.
11:43
Oh yeah, I see. Sorry.
so any function that you have that depends on them, directly or otherwise, is going to be not noexcept.
@Jefffrey As I said, you can't issue an error, but you can issue a warning - there is no restriction that compiler can't - that warning could be very useful for noexcepting existing code, but it would give many false positives, so it probably should be optional.
You can fix that with very little glue, though.
@Puppy That would make people press for a C++11 update on those libraries though. :P
so what?
people press for Python3 but it's been years and how many libraries are still Python2?
you can't just update all the libraries.
11:45
Yeah, I know.
user1804599
Many libraries support both Python 2 and Python 3.
80% of scientists use py2
Do clang and GCC warn you with -Wall?
I can check myself, but maybe some of you know this already.
and also
politically there's a lot of cases that IMO should be noexcept but people don't want them to be.
user1804599
Python 3 breaking shitloads of crap is one of the few good decisions made in the design of Python.
11:46
for example, memory allocation.
user1804599
Python 2 is horrible.
so every function you have that allocates memory or uses a string can't be noexcept.
This 20TB SSD RAID might just be enough for @Mysticial
@Puppy str.size() uses a string and would be noexcept
well, technically.
11:49
I mean, you are claiming that it's easier to just ignore that some functions may throw. Well yeah, it's also easier to ignore that there are types, but that doesn't make your program any more correct.
no, what I'm saying is that it's completely infesible to go back and fix it now.
I agree.
and it's also completely infeasible to have programs where you never ignore that there are types.
some operations like memory allocation are really inherently typeless.
I agree on that too.
boost::any would be impossible without type erasure.
I guess.
erasing it and ignoring it are two different things
user1804599
11:51
@Jefffrey that's because its job is doing type erasure.
user1804599
It's like saying new is impossible without memory allocation.
Yup.
I'm just pointing out that we would lose on such a useful tool.
@Puppy If you are erasing a type you are ignoring it. No?
Or what do you mean by "ignore" then?
no.
you're just making the type more flexible.
ignoring the type is void*.
And void* is not type erasure?
no.
user1804599
11:54
No void* is a pointer type.
user1804599
Type erasure isn't a type.
@Jefffrey It's one way to achieve type erasure.
@rightfold void is actually the lack of a type, but w/e.
@milleniumbug I see. What other ways are there?
@Jefffrey void is actually an almost unit in C++; even tho it was supposed to be a zero / un-inhabited type;
@ScarletAmaranth AFAIK many actually despise void exactly because it's not unit and has many edge cases in polymorphic functions.
12:08
@Jefffrey absolutely - but it's a TYPE
Yes, for the language specification it may be a type, but semantically it represents no-type.
semantically it represents something that is un-inhabited (even tho void() inhabits it which is just dumb) - it doesn't represent "no-type"; it's a type that has no values
@Jefffrey No, it is not.
I don't know why "no." and "No, it's not" and similar statements are so in vogue here. It just kills any form of decent discussion, in my opinion.
it's a TYPE that no value can obtain
it doesn't represent "no type"
12:18
@ScarletAmaranth It's not even a complete type.
hello guys
@Jefffrey yeah, and can't be completed; in C++ at least - I agree it's sad; but as you can see, even you say it's a "type"
and it represents a type semantically
@Jefffrey I would elaborate but I must leave.
void is a type: fact, you can pass it to templates, for example, you can decltype void expressions, and everything in between.
@ScarletAmaranth I said that yes, void may be a type for the language, but semantically it represents the lack of a type. But this is more of a philosophical discussion than a pragmatic one.
Ok, I'm tired of scanning the standard for "void" in search of a section specifically dedicated to void.
Also it sounds like noexcept is more dangerous than anything.
it's a nice idea but not really done properly IMO and I'm not sure if it ever could be in C++'s ecosystem
12:26
throwing from noexcept is fun
Like, if a library writer screws up, and marks noexcept a function that internally may actually throw an exception, that has deep repercussions in your code. Like you can never non-abort your program if an exception happens.
If it was not marked noexcept, then you catch the exception.
that's good because many places require noexcept for a reason.
like move constructors.
you cannot recover from that condition.
Oh right. The std::pair example.
ah right, I had to leave.
12:28
bai
@Jefffrey aligned buffers of sufficient size, class templates with virtual functions, function pointers - see this question for more
sbi
sbi
@R.MartinhoFernandes When I say "all over Twitter", I mean it's all over Twitter. Yes, I am that simple.
@sbi Meh, I saw that you were trolling.
sbi
sbi
4 hours ago, by sbi
And you can't tell you've been trolled after it's been spelled out to you either.
@R.MartinhoFernandes At last!
I did mean it, though, even though it wasn't true.
12:44
@Jefffrey Aligned buffers of sufficient size are my favourite now, they can solve so many problems. They were underutilized for a long time, because before C++11 it was hard to create one portably.
(not dynamically allocated)
morning
@Jefffrey Classical example of exception-unsafety.
Jon Kalb says this is not safe because the order in which the arguments are evaluated is not specified, so it could evaluate new Foo(..) then new Bar(..) and then smart_ptr<Foo>(...) and then smart_ptr<Bar> but I don't understand.
The order in which the arguments are evaluated is not defined, but each argument is evaluated fully once, no?
@Jefffrey Not if new X() throws an exception
12:50
@sbi You meant what?
Consider that if new Bar() always throws an exception, you leak or don't leak memory depending on unspecified evaluation order.
@milleniumbug Ok, but if in smart_ptr<Foo>(new Foo(f)), new Foo throws, then there's no leak.
And similarly in the smart_ptr<Bar>(..) case.
user1804599
If you need to depend on the order of evaluation, use this utility: github.com/mill-lang/mill/blob/develop/mill/src/… and github.com/mill-lang/mill/blob/develop/mill/src/…
And if it is evaluated, then it's inside the smart_ptr, so even if the other throws, then the stack is unwinded and the other smart_ptr goes out of scope and gets destroyed.
user1804599
Example: call<int>{f, 1, 2, 3}.result.
12:52
@Jefffrey The news are evaluated first.
user1804599
@Jefffrey in f(g(x), h(y)), it may evaluate the expressions in this order: x, y, call g, call h.
@milleniumbug That is completely out of order.
^ what rightfold said
user1804599
So it can translate to auto a = x; auto b = y; f(g(a), h(b)).
The standard says that "The order of evaluation of function arguments is unspecified.", which means that in f(a, b, c) for any generic a, b and c, any of those three can be evaluated in any order. But if it picks something like a -> b -> c, then a is fully evaluated, then b is fully evaluated and finally c is fully evaluated.
@rightfold That's terribly stupid.
user1804599
12:55
Well, the only reasonable order of evaluation of non-lazy/non-by-name arguments in an impure language is lexical LTR, so yes it's indeed stupid.
@Jefffrey Which matches the fact that the order is unspecified.
is anybody here good at seeing what type of encryption this looks like?
W0IolXsWmN4N9Pmc0QS6NiEHaDU=
@R.MartinhoFernandes I mean that there's no actual order of execution of arguments, because each argument may be partially evaluated, or start evaluation in an order and end evaluation in another order.
my first thought is base64
base64?
user1804599
12:56
@DaPounder No.
One thing is "unspecified", another is "no order whatsoever".
user1804599
There is an order.
user1804599
And the order is unspecified.
nope
With "unspecified" you imply that there's an order, but it's not said what that order is.
12:57
@MarcoA. could it still be base64 even when a salt is present
@Jefffrey Remember sequence points and stuff.
@DaPounder base64 is not a fucking encryption
user1804599
@Jefffrey There is an order.
yep, it's an encoding
*scheme, sorry
@rightfold Actually, not because the term "order" now becomes ambiguous. What's the order of evaluation?
@milleniumbug i know but do decode it can it still have a salt
user1804599
12:58
For each pair of expressions (a, b), either a is evaluated before b or vice versa.
Is it when they start evaluation or when they end evaluation?
cause the data passed through this api has both a sign containg that though base64 and a salt
user1804599
If you don't want an order you need some sort of non-deterministic or multithreaded evaluation strategy.
Because a could begin evaluation before b, but b could finish evaluation before a.
12:59
@DaPounder Encryption and decryption requires a key
So what does "order" means now?
user1804599
"X is evaluated after and only after Y has finished evaluating."
@milleniumbug so if i have the base64 and the salt i could decode it?
user1804599
Which one is X and which one is Y is what is unspecified.
This makes me so angry for some reason.
13:00
@DaPounder By the fact base64 isn't an encryption, you can decode it.
but base64 is reversable
@DaPounder Yes?
Probably because I don't see the point of not specifying that each argument has to be evaluated atomically, not at pieces. I'm sure there's a reason for this though.
base64 is just a representation of binary numbers. Just like "five" is a representation of 101 (it's 101 in English!).
might be base64 encoding for a sequence of bytes that doesn't mean anything to you (e.g. hash function result)
user1804599
13:02
@Jefffrey leaving the order unspecified allows for optimisations that would otherwise not be possible.
@Jefffrey Avoid raw new
I'm fine with unspecified order. I'm not fine with partial order of evaluation.
user1804599
Then don't use C++.
user1804599
Use Mill. :3
As in f(new a(a1, a2), new b(b1, b2)) I'm fine that b1 and b2 can be evaluated in any of the two possible orders, and similarly a1 and a2. But not that new a(..) can begin evaluation, and then b(..) begines before a(..) has finished.
user1804599
13:04
That doesn't happen.
user1804599
The point is f(g(new a), h(new b)) may first evaluate new a, then new b, then do the other things.
You just said that it does.
user1804599
There won't be two expressions evaluating at the same time.
user1804599
That would imply the lack of an order.
Are you trying to troll me or something?
That's precisely what I just said.
user1804599
13:07
You said that b begins after a has started but before a has finished.
user1804599
That's concurrency. Expressions are evaluated serially.
@orlp this might interest you
@UINT_MIN @johnregehr Nice! I wrote about mine here: http://www.hanshq.net/nibble_sort.html, but your write-up is much better :-)
@rightfold credibility +3
@rightfold credibility -999
@Jefffrey as-if rule
std::smart_ptr<Foo>(new Foo(f)) is an expression, and std::smart_ptr<Bar>(new Bar(b)) is also an expression. And people said that new Foo(f) could be evaluated first and then new Bar(b) evaluated second. That would imply that the first outer expression is not fully evaluated before the second outer expressions if fully evaluated.
Which is the whole point of the discussion.
@milleniumbug What?
user1804599
Yes that's because c'est la vie.
user1804599
13:10
Either write a proposal (which will be rejected anyway) or don't use C++.
blablablabla. Butthurt c++ spec bashing dissecting
Dissecting?
Hi. My name is polar bear
You are basically opening memory leak on every arguments that are build by more than 2 new expressions.
user1804599
In Mill a + b is currently less efficient than infix+(a, b) but otherwise equivalent. :D
13:11
@Jefffrey Yup. What else is new
@Jefffrey Yes. Don't use raw new. That's what I've been saying since 2011.
We are not cherry picking here. This is srs bsness
Sad thing nobody listened to @milleniumbug
@milleniumbug You can't always avoid it.
See custom deleter in std::unique_ptr for example.
@Jefffrey Not sure now what that was about - I thought that a discussion shifted to parallel computations, so I said about as-if rule because compiler can do computations in parallel if it can prove it doesn't break the code.
13:13
I see
@Jefffrey Then you create make_unique_with_deleter() or something
lol
Or when you want to create an std::unique_ptr to a base class.
std::make_unique_but_really<Base, Derived>()
std::unique_ptr<Base> ptr(std::make_unique<Derived>());
perfectly legal
And then you would have std::make_unique_but_really_with_deleter<Base, Derived>(deleter);
right
Maybe std::make_unique should be able to take a deleter?
@Jefffrey That would be a bit hard to do, unless you introduce the tag type
Since the make_unique forwards its variadic arguments to new
13:20
Oh right.
@rightfold Looks unnecessary
FUCK
the mouse just went into my PC
8
what do I do?!
wait what
how
first I...apparently sat on it? on my chair? dafuq.
13:32
Like an actual mouse? The animal?
what the fuck
How did it got into a computer?
do you have the case open?
user1804599
13:32
@melak47 turn off the PC.
user1804599
Then remove the mouse.
user1804599
Then turn on the PC.
brb I guess :p
Did the mouse survive run in with fans
user1804599
Blood everywhere in PC.
user1804599
13:33
Fan best mousetrap.
Not a fan of that solution
2
I'm pretty sure the fans are those that wouldn't survive in that match.
At least according those mouse stories I've heard from London.
It's time to do science
WTF? What ghetto does he live in?
I guess you'd call this a suburb. big gardens on most lots, close to the forest.
13:44
Rodents happen in big cities too
I don't know if I hurt it, it was crawling kind of slowly...I don't want it to die in my PC :(
Will this be good or not?
It will be me, since you have to ask
@milleniumbug just make the deleter the first argument.
@sehe That would make it mandatory.
@sehe That could actually work if we're not deducing the deleter.
Like std::make_unique<Stuff, Deleter>(del, rest, of, args)
user1804599
13:55
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
@milleniumbug What if Stuff has an overloaded constructor that takes Deleter as first argument and rest, of, args too?
user1804599
Don't introduce special cases.
@Jefffrey The additional template argument specifies if the Deleter is in the list or isn't.
So Deleter would default to void and you specialize in the non-void case?
13:58
@Jefffrey Duh. The name would make this sorta implied:
43 mins ago, by milleniumbug
@Jefffrey Then you create make_unique_with_deleter() or something
You can do it as the scoped_allocator_adaptor/uses_allocator<> combo do it
@sehe We were talking about std::make_unique that takes the deleter. Not std::make_unique_with_deleter, though.

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