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user1804599
09:00
Is he an askhole?
No. Just incompetent
@Mr.kbok roboplatform?
or you're talking lower level?
yes, roboplatform
user1804599
I want to write a tool in Go.
I want to make a monopoly strategy tester, because I have to make a point with a colleague :)
Ven
Ven
09:05
@sehe I like that you answer, though, I can learn stuff from it :D
What do you guys think of this scenario: github.com/rmartinho/nonius/issues/12? /cc @Rapptz @Jerry
I get the feeling it's fundamentally misguided. The way I see it, since the language fundamentally doesn't let you skip the destructor, skipping it in the measurement has no practical value.
@Ven Cheers (me too)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd say he needs to just do emplacement and measure that, or settle for heap construction. (And do the delete outside the measure)
@sehe Can't emplace.
Can't heap construct.
Well, he's fucked
It's a factory function that accesses a private ctor.
09:09
I read the story
2 days ago (I'm somehow subscribed to notifications :))
I'd say do some shenanigans with aligned_storage.
^ that, but apparently he can't.
Well, I'd say, refactor yo' code for testability.
In this case, testability include benchmarkability
@Griwes Can't. Construction is out of your reach.
@sehe That
@R.MartinhoFernandes optional<foo> foo; meter.measure([&]{ foo = some_factory_function(); });?
09:12
Hm, no matter how I edit it, that message looks odd
Basically I agree with refactoring for testability
@AndyProwl (drop the ^, it'll be clear)
You can "disable" RAII by moving the original object to an outer scope.
oh, yeah
Shouldn't that just work in this case?
@Mr.kbok mmm, okay.
09:13
@Griwes Then you get assignment instead of construction
i am kinda ending my Hearthstone spree I think so I could code something up
@sehe This sentence sums up my uni work in a nutshell.
:D
@sehe Nah, there's no assignment, since the optional starts empty.
@BartekBanachewicz didn't you quit again?
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait, which optional
09:14
quit what now?
uni?
What he wrote above.
lounge
I missed the optional part.
It was optional, duh.
@Griwes I wonder how much reliable are the optimisations that relies on.
09:15
@sehe you confused me!
:D
I really don't like to consider that sort of thing, but this is the sort of work that really needs to.
@Griwes looks decent. Isn't there the inplace thingie (in Boost) to get even closer to ideal? /cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
I'll have to play around with it.
@sehe No idea.
In-place factories (docs). No idea whehter it applies. Haven't used it
09:16
Without some heavy optimisations, that will replace the cost of the destructor with the cost of the placement copy/move.
@sehe Those require intrusive interface changes.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah :F
I don't understand why optional would help not destructing the object
It would take it out of the measure call
@AndyProwl It'd destruct it after measurement ended.
Xeo
Xeo
@AndyProwl It would help not destruct it during measurement.
09:17
@Griwes Oh, got it
I'm basically using optional as a container there. :P
Three time's the charm
but isn't the return value of the function destructed anyway?
Xeo
Xeo
And four time's the sham?
Anyhoops. I think it's the problem of the ticket submitter, not something the library should/can solve
09:18
@AndyProwl Kind of, but if his types are sane, they are cheaply movable... :P
I mean, in foo = some_factory_function();, there's no copy elision and what some_factory_function() returns must be destroyed, no?
@Griwes oh, ok, if the object is cheap to move and moved-from object is cheaper to destroy then it makes sense
Yes. But again, if it can be cheaply moved (so in the way every move should be... -.-), it shouldn't matter much.
@AndyProwl Ah, good point.
@AndyProwl I can't imagine how the first condition could be true without the second also being true. :P
wtf brain
@Griwes Yeah, but the unwritten assumption is that the destructor is costly enough to disrupt the measurement (which is not necessarily the same as "expensive")
09:20
Even more interesting. Why is destruction significant. If it is, it does make a lot of sense to benchmark whatever goes on there separately.
The interface is not designed for testability
@Griwes Makes sense
The big difference is that in real code, while a call to the factory will force you to incur the cost of destruction, there you can incur it after some other work: { auto x = f(); work(); }
@R.MartinhoFernandes Sure. But then, if the object is moved from, it should be cheaply destructible.
Encapsulation bites again
09:21
All solutions hinge on the proper design of code under test, it seems
I agree
I don't.
I don't see a lot wrong with that kind of code, as general and unspecified as it is.
It is not possible to test in isolation what he needs to test in isolation
@R.MartinhoFernandes There's nothing wrong with it. It just doesn't afford one kind of access that the OP specifically requires.
I can understand why keeping the destruction cost out might be useful: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/23641387#23641387. You might want work() to start ASAP, and have freedom to run all the destruction for however long it takes afterwards.
09:23
#Haskell is getting rid of the fail function in Monad \o/. It will be moved to MonadFail. Finally. Better and better https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Design/MonadFail
can i unfollow my problems
/cc @Xeo @Jefffrey @Griwes
@AndyProwl Yes, it is.
@TonyTheLion I presume this is a joke acount...
@thecoshman yep
its funny though
09:24
@R.MartinhoFernandes Maaaaaybe have another chronometer member to test "factory functions"
@AndyProwl You can do it in a hand-written benchmark relying only on copy elision (which is reliable)
And this is exactly what bugs me.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait, aren't we just struggling with the fact that it's not possible to avoid destruction?
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz "is getting rid of" trying to.
@R.MartinhoFernandes get out the stopwatch!
Ven
Ven
How long was the fight of the community to get applicate as a superclass?
09:25
rip out the stopwatch
@AndyProwl I just want to avoid it during the measurement (though leaking might be an acceptable compromise).
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, hand-written. Well, I don't know Nonius enough and only read the docs a while ago, but wasn't there this possibility of getting the chronometer in your lambda and starting it/stopping it manually, or something like that?
Wait, no, not relying just on copy elision.
Interesting.
@Griwes Foo* foo; meter.measure([&]{ *foo = some_factory_function(); }); not dissimilar (smart pointers for extra credit)
@AndyProwl The fundamental problem is that measurement forces a scope, and a scope forces destruction because C++.
@AndyProwl No, not quite. Starting/stopping manually is fundamentally broken.
09:28
@R.MartinhoFernandes Broken in Nonius or broken conceptually? Because if it's broken conceptually, that should apply for the hand-written benchmark too, shouldn't it?
Just to be clear: I want this to be supported, but I won't allow the sacrifice of measurement quality for it. Manually starting/stopping the chronometer breaks the measurement.
@AndyProwl Broken in practice. I haven't written the hand-written one yet; it's just a vague plan in my head and might not work. Now I realised that is what I should use as a litmus test for viability of any such feature.
@fredoverflow IDGI, this is with safe search off
> This means no matter how abusive, misogynistic, violent, or otherwise reprehensible a Facebook rant is, the Supreme Court says it’s not criminal speech unless the author intended it as a threat and understood that others would take it as such.
interesting
09:35
Even image search is 95% clean there. First page completely mundane
@sehe Maybe he subconsciously added "sack".
@MarkGarcia As philosophers would
@sehe lmao dat name
he was very Honoured to receive that name at birth
Honor the ballsack.
user1804599
09:37
I just wrote a gorgeous AWK function.
user1804599
func field_to_sql_text_null_if_empty(s) {
    if (s == "") {
        return "NULL"
    } else {
        return sprintf("'%s'", s)
    }
}
@AndyProwl you meant AWKward
because that's where the name awk comes from
@rightfold terrible name
Yay yesterday I fixed Bumblebee/optirun on my 2011 Vaio!
user1804599
09:38
@Griwes give me a better one.
@BartekBanachewicz I wish I knew more about the language to keep up with the joke
@rightfold vOv
@rightfold to_dbvalue_optional
@rightfold field_to_sql_text
better
09:39
without null_if_empty
yeah, drop the null_if_empty sheesh
user1804599
No.
askhole
:D
user1804599
APIs should be clear about special cases.
lel
09:40
@rightfold std::transform_if_empty_using_quicksort_and_copy_on_write_however_might_exhibit‌​_some_implementation_based_things_so_you_better_check
7
@rightfold compose (to_dbvalue(null_if_empty(s))
There was a guy who wanted to be explicit in all contexts.
user1804599
@sehe How do you represent NULL in AWK?
^ that sounds like a great thing.
user562566
@BartekBanachewicz have my vote
09:40
He wanted to write "assembly" in XML.
@rightfold who cares
user1804599
I do.
Well. Figure out a way. I don't take to accidental complexity lightly and prefer solving real problems with proper tools
And his lodsb was "ReadFromDsEsiToAlAndIncrementEsiIfDirectionFlagNotSetOtherwiseDecrementEsiAnd..‌​."
(That's not even its final form -.-)
Guys
I want to build a desktop PC
09:42
19 hours ago, by sehe
@Mr.kbok guis*
do you really?
What price range should I expect to put into this?
$10k
@Mr.kbok to boldly go...
09:42
@rightfold I have been playing with some logo designs ;)
@Mr.kbok do you have screens already?
user562566
@Mr.kbok 2500
@Mr.kbok As long as I get at least 40% anything's fine.
> FrEduCide
^ that's what happens when you lecture?
the box itself nowadays will go for around €750-1500
09:43
Just so it's clear why starting/stopping manually is just taboo, I'll explain. There are two big unknowns when a benchmark is written: (1) how much time it takes to run the code, and (2) what the true resolution of the clock is (which is not the what `Clock::duration` means). Nonius obtains estimates of both in an early step, before starting an actual measurement.
If (1) and (2) are of compatible magnitudes, i.e., (1)≫(2), I can just run the code once and get a decent measurement.
If the magnitudes are not compatible, I can make (1) bigger, but can't make (2) smaller. So I basically scale (
Woah, that's a wall of a text.
Sorry.
lower than that and you're buying cheap, higher and you're reaching the exponential range of high-end
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wonder who wrote it
Are you all either insane or living in a superinflation country
@R.MartinhoFernandes Don't be! I appreciate the time you're taking to explain
@BartekBanachewicz Oh you mean the box with things inside. phew
09:44
@Mr.kbok Wait for Skylake. By then you get, well, Skylake, and Haswell's going to get cheap (until some time).
in Scala, Dec 11 '14 at 20:07, by FredOverflow
I cannot decide what language to use for FrEduCide (Fred's educational C IDE) yet.
But yeah, it sounds kinda morbid :)
It is morbid. It clearly means Fred Education Murder
SUI C IDE
I should make that.
@Mr.kbok You most probably want 32GB of RAM, a quad-core cpu and at least a 256GB SSD.
you can save a lot on the GPU though.
@sehe So the fourth option would mean "Kill the noobs"? :)
09:46
buying a budget NVidia for around €150 can get you a lot of perf for the buck actually
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wait I'm not sure I get it: why can't you just offer the clock for manual timing of one sample, but then having more samples be taken for one measurements? How does the fact that the stopwatch is started/stopped manually rather than automatically make this "multiple sample + averaging" pattern unfeasible?
Actually I thought spending about 500e on the box
Sorry if the questions are noobish
then cut the RAM in half, get a quad-core i5 and perhaps think about 128+1TB combo
@AndyProwl Because if let the user start/stop manually, that start/stop happens in the middle of a run of the user code.
09:48
I'm afraid I don't understand what's the problem with that
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah I intended on getting two disks anyway
@fredoverflow I thought that was what you meant, honestly. I supposed it was the joke about that image (aside from the flippant font choice)
user562566
spend the extra few bucks and get a 4th gen i7, get the extra ram and keep page filing off
> make (e=2): The system cannot find the file specified.

uhm, anyone knows how to know which file cannot be found? As usually make give such usefull errors...
@sehe I'm just brainstorming ideas...
09:49
@Mr.kbok Get the best cheap case (check that Obsidian 200R) and a good 500W PSU. Probably somewhere around $100 total.
@Gizmo make it verbose, last resort: strace
@fred aren't you paid to teach the noobs?
user562566
@Mr.kbok the small price gap between an i5 and an i7 is worth doubling your total number of logical cores
@AndyProwl Say, the clock resolution is 10. Let's say that the user code basically looks like this, in the spirit of the original scenario from the issue: { factory(); stop(); destructor(); }. If factory() runtime is 5, that call to stop will, every single time, register 0 time. Run that 10000 times, it's still 0.
@MarkGarcia 500W is too little
09:51
so you are a professional noob dealer
600 is a reasonable minimum
@BartekBanachewicz System consumption for a typical i5 + discrete build's probably around 300W at full.
@Mr.kbok I'd think about getting no GPU at all at first then and buying a mobo with display out. GPU is the cheapest and the most effective upgrade anyway.
@BartekBanachewicz Let's compromise @ 550W then.
@chmod711telkitty Yes, that's why I'm building an IDE for noobs.
09:52
@sehe thank you
@MarkGarcia that's saving €30 now and prompting for a replace when he adds a GPU.
user562566
it's funny arguing about the power requirements when the requirements for what you're going to power are not even clear
@AndyProwl When the code looks like { factory(); }, and factory() runtime is still 5, there is no call to stop right after it. The surrounding code is start(); for(10000) {...} stop();. The call to stop will register 5000, not 0.
Okay 600 then
@TechnikEmpire that's why you plan with a headroom
the price difference between 500W and 600W is negligible
09:53
Maybe I'm just not expert enough and if that's the case let's make this my last message, I don't wanna bother you too much with explanation. What I'd expect is that with automatic timing something like this would be executed N times per measurement (depending on clock resolution): `clock c; c.start(); run_user_code(); c.stop(); read_time_from_clock()`.
With manual timing what would be executed N times per management would be: `clock c; run_user_code(c); read_time_from_clock()`, where the user code would call `c.start()` and `c.stop()`. Does that make any sense?
and the cheap power supplies degrade over time anyway
user562566
@BartekBanachewicz yeah I agree you just spend the money get the higher power with a nice long factory warranty
so after a few years the peak power can be lower than rated actually
oh fuck markdown
also better PSUs are quieter.
09:54
@AndyProwl No, if you put the clock stuff inside the loop, you will measure a ton of zeros.
after the CPU fan the PSU is going to be the most noisy part
@fredoverflow so jealous - you are getting paid to make the noobs your free QA of your IDE
and while you can get a good CPU fan for €25, it's hardly possible to quiet down the PSU
PlayGrind
C⎚
Cyan Ide
@R.MartinhoFernandes Why? What you measure should be c.stop() - c.start(), no? Does it matter whether that's in a loop?
09:55
@AndyProwl Yes, and that will be zero, because run_user_code() takes 5 units of time, but the clock resolution is 10.
The clock can only measure 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, and so on.
I think I'm starting to understand
Oh wait, I have the perfect name for my IDE: Ceci n'est pas un pointeur, with the image of an array in the background.
Xeo
Xeo
What Robot does is start the clock, run multiple samples, stop clock
so that whatever is measured is larger than the resolution of the clock
09:56
OOOH New Ultravox album is out.
I think it's Live or something
@Xeo Yeah I finally got it
@chmod711telkitty Actually, I'm doing it in my spare time. It's for my C job on the side, not my main job.
Sorry it took long
2
Ultravox is such a cool name
mainjob would also be a nice name for an IDE...
09:57
It's fine.
@fredoverflow !pointer
Xeo
Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes Might you be able to provide an interface that allows people to say "subtract this time from this sample run"?
:D bastards
@Xeo I have considered that, yeah. I already have similar machinery in place to discount the framework overhead (which has never proved worthy so far).
Xeo
Xeo
Of course, sampling destruction time gets a bit tricky.
09:59
@Xeo You mean, benchmark the whole thing, then benchmark just destruction, then take the difference?

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