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06:04
I don't feel like doing this training again
3 hours of speaking every time someone new joins the team
I need to record this shit once and for all and just give them a video
WTB Good Medieval music
will give my soul
06:22
@StackedCrooked taxonomist was the word I wanted
Not sure if Modo shit or just mediocre.
So who wants to give me a file with comments to test out my thing.
any comments or doc comments?
latter
hm, not sure I have anything lol
oh wait
Eigen has doc comments IIRC
06:27
Eigen's huge m8 :v
can't you parse a subset?
OTOH the bigger the better no? inb4 stars
clang will complain about "can't find X" etc
I mean technically I can add include paths and what not
but that's a lot of effort for just testing things
it will also be slow in debug
like horribly slow
06:30
Oh so you need code that actually compiles, not just parses?
preferably
you can actually shut up clang's diagnostics about identifiers not being found me thinks
I can technically ignore all diagnostics but it ends up in having weird effects on the cursors.
I think I'll be fine as long as there aren't any syntax errors
wait a sec maybe I can find one file
hm, nope
hmm
time to find Doxyfiles in github and steal files.
06:34
so basically this file should not even include standard headers right
no that's fine
I made sure to get that working
in a very hacky way I should add
I actually parse the output of gcc -v
lol Eigen has a "Core/Util/DisableStupidWarnings.h" file
Core/Util/Meta.h should be self-contained
Wow this isn't even C++. This is C. Stupid github.
06:36
you'll need to include a few std headers it seems
// 2196 - routine is both "inline" and "noinline" ("noinline" assumed)
// ICC 12 generates this warning even without any inline keyword, when defining class methods 'inline' i.e. inside of class body
and delete the last few lines with DiagonalMatrix or something
stupid markdown
Anyway, that person doesn't understand the language rules and whines when a compiler tells him so. lol
06:38
vOv
wait I wonder if that is doxygen format
You don't get it.
yeah probably I don't
It's inline in the ODR way.
They mean inline in the actual inlining way.
> even without any inline keyword
...yes...
06:39
There is an implied inline keyword when you define the function in class body!
No fucking shit.
They're marking it noinline to prevent the actual inlining
They don't give a fuck about ODR.
The warning is noise.
sigh
@AndyProwl This is pretty hardcore.
Right off the bat I know I don't support enums or template specialisations.
This will be a good test.
Core/Util/Macros.h is also self-contained
at least it appears to be
I can't do macros.
Unfortunately?
libclang processes the file
06:43
ah, ok
Or it seems like it does.
Maybe it just handles the include guards and #include and not other macros.
(Core/Util/Constant.h)
Oh you know.
I wonder how I'd support stuff like that.
The #ifdef SOME_MACRO blocks
that alternate the constants
that seems like a common thing to do
#ifdef EIGEN_VECTORIZE
const unsigned int ActualPacketAccessBit = PacketAccessBit;
#else
const unsigned int ActualPacketAccessBit = 0x0;
#endif
The way Doxygen solved that problem is that you passed preprocessor defines in the config
So you could technically do -DEIGEN_VECTORIZE or something
makes sense
meh 10 minutes to the training rip me
you would have to preprocess the file and yet display the intent of the code in the documentation
so passing the defines is the best solution IMO
06:54
yeah clang definitely does preprocessing
those macros are gone from the AST
ActualPacketAccessBit is 0x0
I have to pass the define to get the other value.
How do you deal with evolving code style? E.g I use to always write camelcase and lately I've been evolving to snake_case. However, now my code base is no longer consistent. Do you tolerate that, or do you make an effort to make it all consistent?
I switched all my code to snake_case.
I used to use thisCase but I started liking snake_case more so I just changed everything to snake_case.
Consistency is better.
I suppose for a public open source project I'd make the effort to make it all consistent.
07:03
I mean it's good even for private projects.
Like if you have a to_string function you'd be debating if it was toString or to_string.
Maybe you have both..
However, codebase at work is huge and spans over a decade.
Slippery slope I think.
I'd stick to whatever is the convention there :p
"Oh reddit is down. Better to go r/cpp"
yikes.
When I started working there the code was a huge mess with no structure at all.
How about types
Currently I still use upper camel case for types.
07:06
TypeName vs type_name
snake_case mostly for local variables.
type_name obv
@Rapptz I used ThisCase, which was problematic when you wanted to hook into things like for ( auto x : MyThingThatHasBeginAndNotbegin )
@Rapptz But then how do you name verbols (colour colour; :()
I use whatever code style the language's stdlib uses.
So for Python I do TypeName.
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva ns::colour colour;
07:07
STL use _M_t_...
:P
And if you're within ns
I also got scare-shocked by Unreal's code: they remplemented a large portion of the stl just to handle doing things like Begin() and End() rather than begin() or end().
Yeah it's unreal
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Usually a more meaningful variable name.
I didn't want the same case as Unreal, so I just went with snake_case.
07:07
background_colour etc.
If I have a container/range-like class then I use conventions from stl begin(), end), size(), empty(), etc...
Or even a less meaningful name.
So I end up with a mixture of styles. E.g: push_front(), size() and getTimestamp().
I wonder if Sphinx supports anon enums.
07:09
4chan enums
looking at the code, the answer is no.
@Rapptz I habitually visit that url multiple times a day.
@ThePhD Another reason why ranged-for is dumb
user1804599
Hi fools.
user1804599
07:25
> Scalable, fault-tolerant application-layer sharding
user1804599
#define abstract 0
virtual void f() = abstract;
@Puppy Another reason why ThisStupidCase is stupid. vOv
(notice how both "arguments" are retarded)
07:44
Hm.
Time to fix another bug in Sphinx.
@elyse for (auto i = abstract; i < v.size(); ++i)
It's an abstract kind of i.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy I thought you didn't care about conventions?
@thecoshman hahaha
Xeo
Xeo
@ThePhD Nah, also for their own memory management stuff
@ThePhD add private begin() and end()
(note: Unreal containers are still ranged-forable)
@JerryCoffin Wasn't that part of the notes?
Guess I remembered wrong
07:54
@elyse would you say you are a zero overhead abstraction?
user1804599
no
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva In Rennes, so still in Brittany. Brest-Rennes is ~250km and I had to do it twice yersterday.
@Morwenn Cesson-Sévigné ?
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Yes. Almost every SSII is in the same place.
Yeah. Check out the new OVH buildings BTW. They're classy af
07:59
Wow, indeed :o
I used to live not far from there
Who are you interviewing for if I may ask?
ye it is
user1804599
@TonyTheLion HTML is like an STD in that it's terrible.
08:06
11% of Americans pick silly answer in study, shocker
user1804599
Study finds that 100% of Americans are stupid.
> I explain us my situation. I have an code which [...]
Eh, I didn't get that C++/Python job in Rennes.
> The photo put a spotlight on the African American community’s complicated relationship with breastfeeding. After some of the more negative comments were tweeted, the photo was picked up by Black Women Do Breastfeed, a page devoted to celebrating black women who nurse.
Well, at least I don't have to find a flat between today and monday.
08:10
..... What the fuck.
@ThePhD If only @Lightness were here ;_;
We need a celebration for basic human function?
> 15% said they believed “software” is comfortable clothing.
Priceless xD
And there's negativity associated against it?
@ThePhD basic black human function*
08:11
"How dare you breastfeed, you MONSTER!"
> 1 in every 9 Americans–or exactly 11%
> surveyed 2,392 people
user1804599
How do you sort a comma-separated list in Vim?
Yep I'm sure that's representative of the other 300 million
How do you solve a problem when you need some kind of optimization for a universe of Objects? An example would be a "scene" with many 2D objects, when you need some spatial optimization. Would you expose in the API owning Object pointers, non owning Objects pointers or Objects handles?
user1804599
Why are you capitalising "object"?
08:12
I have problem X, here's a bunch of solutions Z that have nothing to do with X.
Well, I think that it could be a class
@ThePhD Because omg nipples in public think of the children oh wait
Not named Object literally, of course
user1804599
lol
user1804599
don't nam.. oh
08:13
People are dumb
4
Xeo
Xeo
FUN FACT: In Japan, about 2 people die from gun-related homicides per year. On a college campus in the US, 10 just died in the last hour.
Would I be flamed if I asked that question on programmers?
Fun fact: that is also not how statistics are made
@cubuspl42 probably
08:14
You would be flamed anywhere because your question doesn't make any sense.
Spatial optimization? Traversal optimization? Culling? There's papers for these, and posts already for these. You're not the first person to have these problems... ever, at all.
Look at Quadtrees, Binary Space Partitions, etc.
I'm not asking about the algorithm. I'm wondering about the API design
For example Qt has QGraphicsScene
Someone didn't use Google before coming and bothering us with their questions
Make something that fits what you're doing.
And QGraphicsScene's API sucks
@cubuspl42 What is the lifetime of objects
08:19
Well, limited by the lifetime of the Scene, I think.
I don't think that moving objects across scenes would be useful
No but can an object exist without a scene
> 12% said “USB” is the acronym for a European country
user1804599
your design is bad and you should feel bad
I think that it would make no sense. So let's say no
@elyse What would be a good desing?
Then have your scene own the object and expose references
user1804599
08:20
something that's simple and obvious
Scene::destroySpatialObject(SpatialObject &o)
user1804599
don't try to make a generic scene class
It wouldn't be generic
user1804599
that just won't work and it'll be a pain
I'm thinking about a methodology, not silver bullet solutions
Nevermind, sorry for asking
08:28
@CatPlusPlus Yes that's in fact how statistics works
No, not really
fixed a bug I reported in 25 minutes.
When your sample is that small compared to the entire population your conclusions about the population are garbage
what a pro
@Rapptz Wow.
One day, I'll be that good. :(
08:30
@Rapptz Wow :o
@CatPlusPlus the margin of error for that sample size is +/- 1%, that's not "complete garbage"
1.25% assuming 95% confidence
yaaawn
good morning
Morning.
08:40
I kinda overslept
but then again I went to sleep at 1am
and nooo work tooodaayyy how cool is that
time to use monads in rust
hipsterness approaching critical levels
fuck
my shop won't pay for meeting cpp
Because they are a poor, small company.
08:43
complicated end of year budget he said
Gotta keep fat bonuses for the traders
what a fucking fraud
Coke and whores ain't cheap m8
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Oh no, it's not the bank, it's my consultancy
08:45
@Mr.kbok Oh. You work as a consultant?
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva not for much longer
user1804599
Why does LLVM align the first instruction of a loop?
user1804599
Does it make jumps faster?
@Mr.kbok LMAO, classic SSII's enculator speech
@Mr.kbok I thought you were a full time employee of Hungarian Space Brownie Cookies
08:46
@elyse cache row alignment I suppose
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva nah, almost everyone is a contractor here except bosses and traders
@elyse You fit more useful instructions per cacheline
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes nice
If the loop code straddles two cache rows but would otherwise fit in one, you're wasting one row.
Just my guess.
08:47
@Rerito yeah. at least he could have spared me the dishonesty and just write "fuck off"
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva we even have one trader contractor! isn't that marvelous
Tell me you don't work for one of those La Défense-based consultancies
@StackedCrooked The link on that page is dead. Is that list still available somewhere?
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Courbevoie
08:49
but w/e I never have to go there
@Mr.kbok Different name, same place :p
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva Any idea on the salary levels in HK? Give me a benchmark
I feel obliged to point out that Windows XP is as dead as software gets (which means it will still twitch and sometimes slap you in the face). Get as far away from it as possible. As fast as you can. — rubenvb 12 secs ago
@Mr.kbok 600-700k HKD (junior) to 2 million HKD (5-10 years exp) yearly base + bonus
from what I gathered
08:54
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva because they're planning to move away from C++ maybe
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva pff that's not even close to rightfold
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva You have to pay for your own retirement plan/health insurance though right?
yes, everything
user1804599
funroll loops
When you deduce that from your salary. How much is left?
@rubenvb maybe it's old enough to be fashionable for hipsters
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva that's quite a wide range, but thanks
08:57
o_0 "The first rule of implementing C++ is you implement C++"
user1804599
> Edward Snowden didn’t turn off emails from Twitter and received 47GB of notifications
Hmm...
@Mr.kbok Can you use it with a typewriter?
@Rerito when you deduce living costs you can only afford noodles
@Rerito Those are not very expensive (~115 euros / month for insurance, nothing for retirement because lol I should plan that) , the rent (10000+) and food (7000+ because eating with colleagues who are RICH) are the killers.
08:59
@AnastasiyaAsadullayeva You could prepare your own meals
you should live in Poland and travel to HK every day

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