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19:00
Damn it
E3 KH3 isn't that good
@StackedCrooked maybe it's related to the 32/64-bit size ambiguity?
@sehe We've gotta bunch of interfaces in our application platform. All supplied with vtables. As from the device specific configuration they shouln't need to have one. Though it works more smoothly now.
I'm thinking that maybe it doesn't have enough registers when int is used.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold you came twice when I was afking :(
19:02
@StackedCrooked strange i'm not familiar with this
Neither am I :P
also wtf is this
which asm
@Ven And loft your front teff actually?
i cannot tell which arch
Ven
Ven
@πάνταῥεῖ m8
19:04
@StackedCrooked odd. I mean, most vector stuff usually operates on 128bit? (but I have no real clue about this stuff :p) so 4x32 should fit right in...
@StackedCrooked this is exclusive to short so far...
and char
Xeo
Xeo
@melak47 64bit?
It seems to operate only on variable sizes that are...h
hm...
@Xeo are you sure? what about vector math libraries applying vectorization to 4xfloats, pretty sure that's a thing
Xeo
Xeo
Hm nvm
19:06
@Ven That's what my translator calls: "to come a cropper"? Is it?
quick glance at wikipedia says that even SSE(1)'s XMM0-7 registers are 128bit wide, so this should only take one? :\
> vector version will never be profitable. :(
Ven
Ven
@πάνταῥεῖ what
@wilx cool
user1804599
@Ven :D :D :D
19:09
@StackedCrooked Also, you do not specify -march=, so some of the instructions might not be available. Though I have just tested and -march=native does not help either.
I've tried with -march=corei7
It does work with float and double.
that's weird
what stops long from doing this
@StackedCrooked Isn't i+=4 wrong?
19:12
lol, it is
@StackedCrooked wait why
It's modified code from former experiment.
@wilx ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
i c nao
19:14
wait but that's still not vectorized right
Ven
Ven
@πάνταῥεῖ he'll get some new ones later
@StackedCrooked I believe that the Coliru sandbox should not allow programmers to execute binaries by using the system call from C++.
still have the pointers everywhere
@VictorLopez huh, what do you mean
@Ven He's gotta have a harder time ;-) :
19:15
@VictorLopez Oh, you mean system("")
Well, it does allow it.
@VictorLopez oh i see what SIMD is now
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked lol, as if that matters
it's like matrices
> adjustfield left|right|internal. Useful for masking operations
Xeo
Xeo
You have access to the commandline anyways
19:16
@StackedCrooked Yes.
ios_base::adjustfield is a superset of ios_base::left, ios_base::right , ios_base::internal.
hmm...
maybe i shouldnt say that.
it's not a superset, but the set adjustfield contains the elements.
@DonLarynx what is dis
iOS?
@DonLarynx aint nobody got time for videos cuz
Ell
Ell
19:18
@wilx yes!
@StackedCrooked Check this out.
@wilx +1
@BartekBanachewicz I might actually be here today if you want
Ell
Ell
19:20
time to get on the bevvies
user1804599
@πάνταῥεῖ nice bike rack.
@TonyTheLion oh cool
just imagine; twice the work on a single-threaded processor
@VictorLopez yes, you can do that
user1804599
@TonyTheLion nice!
@wilx win. My imaginary internet credits to you
19:21
@VictorLopez I always intended Coliru to have as few restrictions as possible.
user1804599
wtf why was that flagged
@rightfold The tooth fairy might do them something nice ;-) ...
Who's flagging all the time? Time to stop.
Ell
Ell
I am glad I'm low rep enough to not see flags
at what rep do you see flags?
user1804599
19:22
> get drunk or die
@sehe Do your Internet credits absolve me from sins committed in the Lounge? Am I saved now?
user1804599
@nick 10k
@Ell hehe
ok thats gonna be a while for me
@wilx No.
:D
19:22
I wish we could see who flags
Ell
Ell
@sehe ;)
@sehe ;_;
@Jefffrey No you don't
Ell
Ell
it's never reddit time
3
19:22
flame the internet bees
@Ell buzz off
be more open minded bleeze
@sehe Yes, yes I do.
@VermillionAzure ;-P Pfffrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
oh wait a minute
@Jefffrey kids
I forgot to work on my C++ tutorial;
19:23
> forgot
@sehe Why?
^ Wasn't significant probably ...
@VermillionAzure if you're making a tutorial could you please explain the difference between pointers and references
@StackedCrooked Exploiting the system may be a concern I guess. Some calls would allow to escalate privileges there.
19:25
What's this? The Talos Principle at 15$? SOLD!
@nick Good point.
@nick References can't be nulled
@VictorLopez Oh, I didn't think of that :)
@nick yes
but this will probably come later
like i know the differences in theory but what does it mean for me as a programmer?
i.e. when should i use what
19:26
TBH Coliru probably has many vulnerabilities that I'm not aware of.
@VermillionAzure sounds good
@nick why don't you have a look
@nick Pointers often time do too many things, so ideally you never use pointers. References are used every time instead.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked said it many times. it's so easy.
19:27
@Jefffrey i thought references were pretty much built on top of pointers?
@Jefffrey pointers can be better than references in certain situations
user1804599
Have a VM pool that accept jobs from queues.
i.e. optionals
@EtiennedeMartel Steam CEO must love you. :D
user1804599
periodically reset VMs, or if VMs boot quickly enough create a new one for every job
user1804599
19:27
problem solved
@rightfold Yeah, I agree. But I'm lazy.
user1804599
what if I write it
And I suck at system configuration stuff.
@nick Doesn't matter. Their semantic is clearer than the one pointers have.
@wilx It is important to promote games made in Croatia.
19:28
@rightfold Feel free to do that.
Pointers can mean half a dozen things
@EtiennedeMartel Is it?
@Jefffrey i see
user1804599
@StackedCrooked OK
@wilx I think there's like, one developer there and that's it.
19:28
Right now!
@nick Resource owned, Resource shared, array, dynamically allocated array, reference, optional value are just an example
I come from an obj-c background and I never saw the & symbol till i touched c++
pointers are used pretty much consistently
user1804599
@StackedCrooked I'll publish it here: github.com/rightfold/rucoli
@nick While most implementations will probably use pointers to represent references, it's supposed to be a hidden detail.
@nick Pretty much everything I've listed has a better alternative. But if you really need an easily storable optional reference, then I would definitely go with pointers.
As opposed to say std::optional<std::reference_wrapper<T>>
Ell
Ell
19:30
re-coli
a dangerous bacteria
you get it from eating undercooked c++
Xeo
Xeo
undercrooked c++?
@Ell: Also, naked, yummy! :D
Ell
Ell
@Xeo oh yes, even better
@rightfold do you have a vps? should really have one for yourself, so you can mess without worry.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked I do.
19:33
cool
hey guys
what do you think about these iostream examples for beginners: compactcpp.wordpress.com/2015/05/04/1-4-iostream-10-examples
Ell
Ell
yeah std::reference_wrapper<T> is not much different to T* really
Xeo
Xeo
Except it's never nullptr.
It's a reference, not a pointer.
@Xeo hmmmm
what happens if we have a reference to a dynamic object and it goes out of scope?
test test test
@VermillionAzure the share buttons on the bottom make me thirsty
19:38
@nick do you like it
yeah
what does char** mean
a double ptr?
@nick yes
we can have int****************** if we like
Ell
Ell
@Xeo it's neither
what is the purpose?
Ell
Ell
it's rebindable, so it can't be a reference
right?
19:40
@nick list of strings
Ell
Ell
it's half way in between
array of pointers to strings
It's a rebindable reference
@VermillionAzure It calls the destructor of the parent object.
@StackedCrooked of course it does
Ell
Ell
19:40
just like a pointer is a nullable reference vOv
Xeo
Xeo
@Ell Oh yeah, I forgot that little detail
@nick It means you are now a 2-star programmer
But seriously
int*****
am I a 5 star yet
19:41
@nick it's just pointer indirection levels
doesn't matter how many, just means you have to go such amount of stars down the line
@nick In this case it's not good to have many stars
you could technically cast int* to int*************** and back i think with no problem
because they're usually the same size on systems
they should be. unless nasal demons and weird architectures
requires reinterpret_cast though
@StackedCrooked does it really? we should be able to just static right?
or does static call an operator?
massages head gently
19:43
@VermillionAzure 1. keep variable with their usage; 2. do error checking always (if (getline(stream, s)) {...}) 3. teach is.ignore() and correct eof() usage too
i.e. int -> float is going to call a conversion operator?
how. which?
@StackedCrooked It's T0 * -> T1 * cast, ain't it?
no, (you can always use static_cast via void*, but that's basically reinterpret_cast )
@sehe VermillionAzure is Cinch. FYI
19:43
gosh
@nabijaczleweli that's essentially reinterpreting the memory
@Jefffrey HOW DOES NOBODY NOT KNOW THIS YET
> If we don't check for argv[1] first, we may get a
nasty error that will just freeze the program.
How/why?
@sehe I believe that's just how it works
it says hes cinch on his blag
19:44
@VermillionAzure How? Why?
You can't get something that's not exactly allocated or there
@VermillionAzure You decided to change the name for no reason v0v
@Jefffrey It's my github btw
@sehe uwotm8
@VermillionAzure "freeze"?!
19:44
@sehe oh i see.
@nabijaczleweli Just follow the arrows
WTF is all this shit? Who doesn't check argc first?
@MartinJames Me
@MartinJames who me?
19:46
Also fucking C-style ************** are you all drunk?
I just iterate over all args
> “vector” of arguments (argv)
No. It's for argument values. And, yes, make it a vector:
#include <string>
#include <vector>

int main(int argc, char** raw_argv) {
    std::vector<std::string> const args(raw_argv, raw_argv+argc);
}
@sehe Does that not mean hacking crt?
@sehe that's true
@sehe Why copy the args, though?
Why not parse them in-place?
19:48
You're all horrible:)
@nabijaczleweli Fine, const std::vector<std::experimental::string_view> args(raw_argv, raw_argv+argc);
@sehe fixed
The more we correct Cinch, the more he gains
@Jefffrey what are you talking about I weigh pretty light i'm not getting that fat
19:50
@VermillionAzure i think you've entered the denial stage m8
transcontinental stuff, damn
@nick no i have flab now
flabulous
@milleniumbug Why use a container, not parse args in-place?
nah just fluffy
user1804599
@StackedCrooked most of the app works now.
19:51
@nabijaczleweli encapsulation data safety why do we use c strings over std::string
...we don't
user1804599
I only have to implement the VM creation and destruction now, and sending the command to the VM and waiting for result.
Because string is slightly more useful type than char*
@nabijaczleweli Because non-composability of STL-like algorithms
@milleniumbug Yeah, I guess...
Y'all have a point
holy shit my tutorial is terrible.
types belong in Level 1.
19:52
@VermillionAzure Starbait much?
@milleniumbug no i'm just chatting
@rightfold cool
user1804599
But it distributes jobs to the first ready worker.
Ell
Ell
@VermillionAzure chatting brown
user1804599
And reads and writes HTTP messages.
user1804599
19:55
@StackedCrooked Don't know if this API is good enough:
user1804599
curl -X POST -d '{"files": {"main.cpp": "#include <iostream>\n\nint main() {\n    std::cout << \"Hello, world!\\n\";\n    return 0;\n}\n"}, "command": "clang++ -std=c++14 -W{all,extra,error,pedantic} main.cpp && ./a.out"}' localhost:1337
@StackedCrooked This paper on SLP vectorization might explain why it may not have vectorized as you thought I got to this because changing it to int* produced an message like this: Failed to SLP the basic block, decided to try figure what that means.
Hm..
> Superword level parallelism (SLP) is a vectorization technique based on loop unrolling and basic block vectorization. It is distinct from loop vectorization algorithms in that it can exploit parallelism of inline code, such as manipulating coordinates, color channels or in loops unrolled by hand.[1] It is available in the gcc compiler since version 4.3.
sounds cool
@VermillionAzure lol, are you using that "I'm going to say something wrong, so I'll be corrected with arguments I can add to my blog" tactic again?
19:57
@Jefffrey Yes. It works.
user1804599
Plan is as follows: N VMs are running waiting for jobs. Job is sent to ready VM. VM executes job and returns result. VM shuts down. VM is replaced by static image. VM is booted.
@rightfold why a vm
@VermillionAzure I know man. I know.
user1804599
Problem is I don't know how quickly you can get a VM to boot.
user1804599
Though if you have a dozen of them it may not be a problem.
Ell
Ell
19:59
well you can copy the saved state into ram, right?
@rightfold You can run it in snapshotted mode and discard the snapshot

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