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11:00
user written functions by you?
@chmod711telkitty Well, even functions you write, when it gets complex enough, become too hard to reason about as your system grows larger and larger
@VermillionAzure CSV and TXT files are by nature not very scalable
However most operating systems allow you to use them in an append-only fashion which should be the default for any sane storage system
That is one desirable property of text files
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Lol I think they do it just because it's uniform
There's probably binary forms of data that are more efficient
Text is binary
@CatPlusPlus Encoded as raw binary data, not as ASCII
11:03
ASCII is raw binary data
@VermillionAzure ASCII encoded binary is problematic
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva oh I remember when we had this fight.
@VermillionAzure I don't see many functions written purposely aimed at generate UB, unless it's a random parameter generator
ASCII binary can only store half the values as regular binary which is wasteful
Isn't that obvious
11:05
@chmod711telkitty Say we have a pure function F(a, b) = a/b
@AndyProwl How would you undefine the function though?
If b is 0, the behavior can possibly be undefined (and ambiguous)
ever write input verification code?
@chmod711telkitty Yes, but I try to cover that as well.
The point is that, given a scope, we should be able to successfully come up with a non-ambiguous input/output table for all possible input/output cases
ITT Cinch asks telkitty's opinion as a last resort
11:07
well I got everything to show up fine
user1804599
hi!
@elyse Hi! Would you like to hear this too?
user1804599
What?
Would you like to hear the word of Cinchsus
@VermillionAzure ;_;
11:08
Cinchsus Cunningham
Hey.
you are not listening, again, are you?
That's rad
user1804599
Culliningus Cunningham
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/b2e2ee8615aa4bc9 experience my pain
11:09
@elyse I'm trying to propose a way to formally measure ambiguity within C++ code
user1804599
const (100 / 100)
@elyse Wanna read the GitHub gist?
@Rapptz Spaces for indent, interesting. Less painful than what I imagined.
user1804599
also, ambiguous code isn't C++ code, since C++ programs must be unambiguous
@elyse Ambiguous meaning impure + undefined given a certain scope where anything outside of the scope is considered implicit state.
11:11
@VermillionAzure that's the whole point of C++ programming
my cute 30 line function gained 4x the size
RIP
bby u know what else gained 4x the size
not big and beautiful?
@chmod711telkitty That doesn't stop the fact that given a scope, we cannot always reason about the code because it may be coupled to something outside of the scope
@chmod711telkitty We may even forget that some cases can cause undefined behavior (e.g. divide by 0 in a string of 5 functions)
there is something called debugging, there is something else called patching
programs are rules of how things should behave
11:14
@chmod711telkitty Would you like to see the gist?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ What do you mean? (Lunch break, will answer later)
if there is UB, usually you are doing something wrong
@AndyProwl std::vector::emplace is currently defined for any type T of std::vector<T>. What should happen in the case T is a virtual concept? How should the program behave when you call emplace and std::vector is instanciated with a virtual concept? If it shouldn't compile, how would you express it? Would you specify a special case in the standard?
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Your mum?
today is 9'11
11:18
good morning / day everyone
@JonathanMusso Are you CS master?
So Cinch is still misusing the word "ambiguity"?
sigh
@Griwes To be truthful, I should be using ambiguity and invalid
@VermillionAzure in no shape or form lol
The result of a function is never ambiguous.
You call it, you get a value.
11:20
@Griwes Logically, it can be if you are missing certain predicates or values required for its logical computation
Not something that might be 2 or 3 values (that'd be ambiguous).
> Ambiguity is a type of uncertainty of meaning in which several interpretations are plausible. It is thus an attribute of any idea or statement whose intended meaning cannot be definitively resolved according to a rule or process with a finite number of steps. (The ambi- part of the name reflects an idea of "two" as in two meanings.)
@Griwes That's right.
Take non-atomic reads/writes
There's never more than 1 interpretation of a function call.
Aaaah, the Lounge, it is worth coming just to see the starboard
Stop.
11:21
I'm ambivalent
@VermillionAzure why do you ask
Your examples are bullshit.
And you are misusing words.
Function calls are not ambiguous. If they are, your program doesn't compile.
@JonathanMusso I'm trying to formulate a formal way of measuring ambiguity in a C++ function and then use it to isolate ambiguous or undefined behavior given a scope.
@Griwes What is the value of 5 / 0?
Undefined.
Reasoning goes out of the window when your program exhibits UB
Google -> "function ambiguity" -> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambiguity_function
11:22
@VermillionAzure Define ambiguity?
not related
@CatPlusPlus Exactly. Undefined behavior is a subset of ambiguous behavior
ugh
no
it's a subset of ill-formed programs
@VermillionAzure DEFINE ambiguity.
11:22
@VermillionAzure Ah ok, well goodluck.
The first sentence there uses the word.
That gist doesn't define it.
Ill-formed is something else entirely
@Griwes The superposition of possible states of a value.
@VermillionAzure 5/0 is defined as undefined
> i don't think this joke will ever get old
Just like an aborted fetus
3
Dear God I'm such a bad person please forgive me
11:23
@VermillionAzure f(0) is never ambiguous then.
I'm amazed you guis are still biting
I love how you're debating over terms while the only interesting thing is the idea.
No function call result is a "superposition of possible states of a value".
Also values don't have states.
Only eigenvectors
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Gather that in a whole message so that I can star!
11:24
Values are values, states are states. Two completely unrelated concepts.
@Griwes Let us define a third logical truth value, ambiguity, A, such that it represents the superposition of the set of possible values an output may take on.
@VermillionAzure Go watch some Lakos' talks.
is an i3/4gb ram sufficient enough to start a beginner book on c++?
@VermillionAzure That relates to C++ programs in no way.
Stop talking bullshit terms with no meaning.
11:25
@Rerito You too are a bad person now, sir.
@CatPlusPlus ok thanks, I do not have access to my desktop today
Stop caring about values
@Griwes Given a scope of a function F that accesses an external value, from inside the scope of F, can you reason about the global value from inside that scope?
So far you've failed to show one practical application of what you are saying.
The semantics are undefined
11:25
@JonathanMusso Upgrade processor and download RAM
You cannot reason about the code alone
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Good, I can sing Michael Jackson now
Give one or get lost.
@Nooble haha come on
@Griwes We have a function F that computes the determinant of any matrix M.
11:26
@VermillionAzure stop the fucking examples
Give one practical application of this.
@Griwes Determinants are a huge application.
...
@Griwes Simple: if the « ambiguity » is over 0% while it shouldn't, you probably have a bug. But you have the same information with a boolean.
Purity has a practical application: code optimization.
@JonathanMusso Theoretically it should be enough.
11:27
For example, you can fold several identical calls to a pure function into a single one and use the returned value in all these places.
@Griwes It has more than just one. The other is that we can always reason about it because it doesn't have any surprises due to external input.
Your misuse of words has no applications so far.
I read ambiguity as "inability of a function to output the same result for the same given set of arguments"
You both suck
@VermillionAzure I can reason about code without your bullshit metrics.
11:27
@Griwes Pinpointing the cause of bugs or undefined behavior to a specific block of code.
If you can't, then well, you suck.
Debugging. Efficiency of design.
@VermillionAzure Can do that already. Sanitizers exist.
Andy was right, it's all about sucking
@VermillionAzure First one - same answer. Second one - wtf.
11:28
lol people still getting mad at cinch
@Griwes Creating an objective measuring stick to measure the logical effectiveness of design over all cases in its input/output domain/co-domain.
He is probably the most successful troll of the room now
@VermillionAzure And that's useful how?
@Nooble ok thanks I will just give it a shot if it's not smooth I will save for desktop
11:29
@Griwes Because it allows us to objective compare design patterns and then say which one is better and less prone to having ambiguous or undefined cases.
@VermillionAzure Stop misusing the word "ambiguous".
You made the word "ambiguous" itself become ambiguous.
If one design has more undefined cases than the other, it's probably better to say that the one with less possible undefined cases is better.
@Griwes Come on, let's develop tools first. We'll see if they have any pratical application once we have them. Isn't that how mathematics work?
@Morwenn He hasn't even presented an actually useful idea yet.
@Griwes Stats.
11:31
@VermillionAzure Okay. So an interface takes a string and returns an integer.
@Griwes A correct answer to whether inheritance is better than composition.
Good luck checking all the cases.
@VermillionAzure AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHHAHHHAHAHHAHAA
We always do stats, we don't always know why, but sometimes we find correlations, and sometimes there is also a related causal relationship.
Seriously Griwes, stop. It's bad for your mental health.
> A correct answer to whether negative numbers are better than positive numbers.
11:32
oh I forgot static & co.
There's probably a way to measure complexity as well...
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ I thought it's long agreed that my mental health doesn't exist?
@VermillionAzure abstraction?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ You get a compiler error when trying to emplace() an Any, because an Any cannot be constructed
11:32
@edition Yeah, but how do you quantify abstraction?
@Griwes Oh, keep going then.
I haven't laughed this hard in so long
@VermillionAzure abstraction layers?
same as when you do new Any() or something
@VermillionAzure I can measure the average length of hair on my body.
11:32
@VermillionAzure Depends on the cases, doesn't it? Take you G() function. If you always pass true as parameter it doesn't matter that b is unknown to the caller. Is G() now better or worse than F() in this case?
I can do that!
@AndyProwl I see
It'd be a measurement.
But it's utterly useless.
@SimonKraemer G is still worse if you use the same scope.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Do it :-)
11:33
Not nearly as useless as your metric, though.
Because G now depends entirely on an input that you don't even see in your immediate function call--it's hidden in your spaghetti.
@VermillionAzure G is not worse. It has different semantics.
@edition Yeah, but how do you measure that?
You can't compare two functions that do different things.
@VermillionAzure Go make some possibly useful measurement. Like measuring your dick or something.
@Griwes ...It might be possible if you can chain enough together to replicate the same process...
11:34
@VermillionAzure Is sin(x) better than cos(x)?
Is sin(x) better than tan(x)?
@SimonKraemer If G is a function of a and b, G(a,b), then if you fix a, you still have G(b)
@VermillionAzure well, there are factors that influence complexity, therefore you would quantify abstraction layers by their respective factors, maybe
@Griwes I like to go off on the tangent!
Is arc sin(x) better than sin(x)?
@edition Perhaps a good definition would be the amount of operations to reduce to an equivalent value.
11:35
Can you measure which is better?
e.g. 1 + 1 + 1 + 1, unoptimized, is more complex than the constant 4.
Because it takes 3 more operations to get 4 than just having 4.
sin(x) would probably be better than tan(x), since tan(x) has smaller domain.
But it makes no sense to compare them.
@VermillionAzure Yes but you don't give a fuck coz... Compiler!
Because they do different things.
@VermillionAzure They are isomorphic.
Likewise, accessing the integer of int************ b is going to take much longer than int b, unoptimized
11:36
@VermillionAzure Your F and G are not.
@Mgetz wait... he spends all that time perfecting a piece of wood just to burn it?
This should end your idiotic examples now.
So yeah, maybe sin is better than tan.
@TonyTheLion I have no idea
At this point @Griwes has lost nearly all his hair
11:36
I think he makes display wood
@Griwes I'm not comparing them; it's just measures of ambiguity in a function.
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Definite proof that you're a bad person
@VermillionAzure ...
@Mgetz thats what I understood from watching that
@Griwes It's like you didn't even read it.
11:37
@Rerito he he
@VermillionAzure And that's useful how?
I could have misunderstood too
@Rerito Sure, but, sometimes you can't recompile entire paradigms.
(The pun was good btw)
@Rerito I'll book a dinner for two in hell, then
11:37
@VermillionAzure There is no actual use for it!
hehe
@TonyTheLion regardless... someone selling $1000 firewood needs to be hit over the head with a faggot of their own product
@Griwes Because it means that your code is not modular and is prone to effects outside of that scope.
@Mgetz yea
11:38
@VermillionAzure That's already solved by pure vs inpure.
I don't care about "how inpure" stuff is.
It's either pure or not.
@VermillionAzure Unoptimization that makes the code more readable and are still "corrected" by the compilers are better than the optimized alternative
@Griwes But it's not; sometimes the domain itself can include cases that cause undefined behavior.
@Rerito Inheritance vs. composition
11:38
No point making up terms any further.
@Griwes If you can divide an integer by another, although you can divide by any integer, dividing by 0 will still be undefined behavior.
Hey Griwes, why are you getting so worked up about this?
@VermillionAzure No; you can't divide by 0.
@Griwes But it happens anyways at runtime and your program goes poof. It shouldn't happen, but it did.
Division is asymptotic at 0.
@VermillionAzure Then you didn't check your fucking domain.
11:40
man
such a lame discussion
Is it perhaps because you see potential in what Cinch is saying and you are annoyed by the fact that he came up with this genius idea and you didn't?
such a bad bait
everything about this is just bad
Check your priviledge domain
@Griwes That's the point! The point is that not checking will result in some sort of bad behavior once you do divide by 0.
11:41
#bringback2014lounge
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ ...it's probably because I still hope that he can be made to understand :/
So therefore, you should make it so having a divisor of 0 will still result in defined behavior.
@VermillionAzure ...?
One way of doing this is creating an entire wrapper class that holds an additional Boolean that tells you whether the value is valid or not.
You can't force a free mind to understand. His mind is made to be ingenious like that.
11:42
Kind of like Maybe.
To think outside the box.
Maybe doesn't hold a boolean.
how high are you Cinch
Oops, the newb
@Griwes Like != equals
11:42
isn't it late where you are?
Maybe is a "variant" - an ADT.
@Rapptz Yes.
you're not up this late
go to bed bub
Maybe and optional are not really much alike.
@Rapptz BUT I AM UNDEFINED BEHAVIOR
11:42
yeah well go to bed
it's european time
Still. I already have tools to check for undefined behavior, thank you very much.
Oh, and they are not murdered when you encounter something that resembles the halting problem.
@Griwes Can you say with confidence that every case where you have might have undefined behavior is accounted for?
@Griwes Which one (I don't use any so I'm interested here)
@Rerito UB sanitizer, for one.
Thanks :)
11:44
@Griwes They are not?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Optional may hold a value. Maybe holds a value (either Some a or None or whatever the constructors were called in Haskell).
@Griwes But this is about validity
Hmm, what?
@Griwes Just a or Nothing friend-o.
None "contains" no value just like optional<T>() doesn't
I'm not sure what you are talking about here.
11:49
is there a 3D version of stackoverflow?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ Nothing is a value!
Just a is a value that contains a; Nothing is a value that doesn't "contain" a value.
And optional<T>() is not a value because?
optional is either a T or nothing
Maybe is either Just a or Nothing.
@Griwes And Maybe a is either a or nothing
11:53
No.
@Griwes optional<T> is either optional<T>(T(...)) or optional<T>()
optional either has an associated value or not
Maybe always have an associated value
(just only one of those values has a value of type a associated with it)
So optional<T>() is not a value?
It has no associated value.
@Morwenn interesting...
11:55
@Griwes What's an associated value? A value of type T/a you mean?
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ for optional - that's T. for maybe - that's either
optional<T>(T(..)) is not T
"value of x" != "value associated with x"
optional<T>(T(..)) and optional<T>() are two values of type optional<T>. Just like Just t and Nothing are two values of type Maybe t. In both cases, the first "contains" a value of type T/t and in the second there's no such value.
In all cases you have a value of type optional<T>/Maybe t
Maybe t is variant<T, nothing>
optional<T> is... { bool, aligned_storage_t<sizeof(T)> }
11:59
The implementation or size of an optional<T> is pretty much irrelevant here.
For all purposes you can see optional<T> as a variant too.
user1804599
@ʎǝɹɟɟɟǝſ no, it's either Just a or Nothing.
They express the same semantic.

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