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14:00
as for runtime overhead, write and then profile it first as usual
@Puppy manually checking error codes isn't the only alternative
what other alternative would you suggest.
@Puppy I don't need to profile it to know how fast it'll be
@Puppy monads
apart from the fact that both C and C++ have truly shitty monad support
it's not really comparable.
it's as shitty as anything else
exceptions have unfair advantage of being a language feature
14:01
C++ has proper support for exceptions.
but I was under impression C++ is all about writing things as libraries
@BartekBanachewicz Oh really? I did not know that you housed a supercomputer and detailed simulations inside your skull.
"we don't need pattern matching we can write a library"
etc.
actually, exceptions are mostly implemented as a library ;p
mostly.
still they get advantage of being hacked in
14:02
I don't understand immutability in Scala
every other library has to use regular syntax and stuff
they're not hacked in, they're just a language feature.
and frankly
not every other library does have to do that.
Like you have val which is for values (immutable) and var for variables (mutable).
well yes and monads aren't but that doesn't mean you should always favor language features over libraries
take for example Boost's numerous attempts at lambdas, which have ended up not being done as a library at all.
14:02
1 min ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
but I was under impression C++ is all about writing things as libraries
there's a difference between favouring a library and using a library even when a core feature is plainly vastly superior.
Fine. But AFAICS val only prevents reassignment. It does not imply immutability
@Puppy "plainly vastly superior" is false here
For example val obj = ...; obj.x = 1 would be fine.
exceptions are strictly less powerful than arbitrary monads
14:03
@BartekBanachewicz Exceptions cannot be implemented as a library. At all.
@Puppy they can if you manually implement the semicolon
at least in total.
but since in C++ you can't override the semicolon you have to change syntax
@BartekBanachewicz So where did you intend to put the platform-specific unwinding tables?
@BartekBanachewicz That depends on what you're using them for.
He is talking about implementing something similar to exceptions using error monads.
14:04
you're stuck thinking in the C++ exception model while I'm talking about the general idea
Not exceptions per se.
we're not gonna go far with that
well you are talking about your C++ code.
so yes, fuck the general idea, it's the C++ exception model that matters.
At least not the unchecked ones that can be thrown anywhere and be caught anywhere.
you're right, picking C++ was a bad choice
14:05
unless I am mistaken and you are using Haskell on your controller.
I've no idea why I thought it would be ok
because it will be perfectly OK.
there's nothing wrong with C++ exceptions.
no it won't
C++ sucks balls
i haven't started writing and I already have problems with that language
it's far from perfect but so is every other language
except some are less far
Ven
Ven
14:07
is it bad if I like C++ because of its corner cases?
eh, a lot of that depends on what you're actually trying to achieve.
it's bad if you like C++ at all
@Ven Yes.
Ven
Ven
@Puppy I'll continue anyway
Meh, I actually like C++ for the templates only. But explaining rvalue references is funny still
also, J is fun: ]`({.,([: ": #-2:),{:)@.(#>3:) is a pretty nice program
rustc -C opt-level=2 -Z no-landing-pads --target thumbv7em-none-eabi -g --emit obj -L libcore-thumbv7m -o runtime.o runtime.rs
14:09
I like C++ because it feels like less bullshit
which is pretty incredible considering the amount of bullshit in C++, really.
Hi! Guys can someone help me with double linked lists in C? I'm making a simple card game, but it already gives me a segmentation fault error, I can't figure out why.. It seems I got everything right. pastebin.com/raCfcfUN
no
no
Rust could actually be a good idea
14:10
no
I'll need to look at it deeper and see if I can build it for my MCU
And just with printing something like currentelement->prev->prev also gives a segmentation fault.. but it should work as it is a double linked list.. What is happening? :(
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz I've already seen some small kernels written in rust
Hello.
@Morwenn o hai :)
Ven
Ven
14:12
me no speak hungarian
Hey @Morwenn o/
Hi @Morwenn
The comments are in hungarian, yeah how did you know? But all they say is how they create the 52 playing cards.. which just works fine.
Ven
Ven
I can recognize hungarian. not speak it.
@Tigris Debugger.........DCV
Ohwait - not on main site...
14:16
@Tigris You implemented a doubly linked list yourself and it gives you segmentation faults? Well, I never
@Jefery Yeah, that is the case. But it should just work fine.. Inside the for loop it can go all the way forward or back, but when I call something like curr->prev->prev it just crashes. Weird.
Not weird at all.
That is sure it can go forward, maybe I messed up the links pointing back.
Yes, you messed up somewhere.
You should use C++ and use std::list or even just std::vector instead
I doubt anyone here has the patience to debug your crippled doubly-linked list implementation. Sorry.
@Tigris Well, when you breakpointed on the ' curr->prev->prev' and traced the links back, what did you find out?
14:22
I just figured out, that maybe I did not linked it backwards.
xD
@Tigris Debugging something like a dl list is not technically difficult. It's just a lot of precise work with the debugger and making notes and pretty pictures with arrows. It's ditch digging, which is why devs continually try to outsource it to SO. Nobody here wants to dig ditches for free.
Yeah, I just thought maybe someone could recognize the problem at first sight of the code, because it probably that obvious.. and my guess is, I did not connect the elements properly.. I only link the next pointer, it seems. :DD Thanks anyways.
anyone here ever remotely worked before?
@edition I remotely worked
@набиячлэвэлиь how was it?
14:26
You're not so good at English, are you?
@edition In what way? My main customer is in Germany, I am in the UK. Does that count?
@набиячлэвэлиь I am a native speaker of English, I just choose not to speak proper english here often.
@edition Well then, funny you didn't pick up on the joke
@edition Oh.. do you know Bartek well?
@MartinJames No, not really, why?
14:32
@edition He usually speaks Haskell, (and lately a smattering of hardware)
@набиячлэвэлиь probably because its 3:31AM, and I'm eating a bar of chocolate to stay awake.
lol
dem spoilers
lucky me, I don't speak witcher
beh, fallout 1 is still absurdly expensive on steam
@BartekBanachewicz lol
14:38
and windows only
meeeeh
> Soccer meets driving once again in the long-awaited, physics-based multiplayer-focused sequel to Supersonic Acrobatic Rocket-Powered Battle-Cars! Choose a variety of high-flying vehicles equipped with huge rocket boosters to score amazing aerial goals and pull-off incredible game-changing saves!
@BartekBanachewicz I'm sure the linux drivers will be along shortly.
@BartekBanachewicz ..and working linux drivers along longly.
and impossible creatures still costs 6€
oh it's a remaster apparently
in the meantime I've bought all half life games because there was a discount pack
Today's lol is C# 'f you wanna help you can write your own Algorithm to solve this problem, or upgrade my code, Thank you':stackoverflow.com/questions/33720600/…
Ven
Ven
14:50
> Warning professional programmers stuff coming a head
I love a head
2
k time for the three screen setup
@Ven Yyyeah.... I was tempted by that 'giving head' teaser, but I've had a few mails from mods recently already:(
ok, I think I should be leaving this room before I have a schizophrenic episode and make editionOS, and claim that I had divine assistance in writing it.
Facebook’s new http://internet.org is evil https://www.techinasia.com/talk/facebooks-internetorg-evil/ terrific post by @maheshmurthy #netneutrality https://t.co/E0wj1WQtXf
@edition You should refuse that. This world is all fucked up and it's because god's API is shit.
15:00
ah well, being idle makes me pissed.
I don't know what the hell to write.
I mean, FFS, a billion years of development and we have a computer with an unknown OS and cannot be backed up:(
yeah
10^11 adaptive threshold-logic gates, but no USB3 :(
besides the point. I can't think of anything interesting to write.
@edition Yeah. I have lots of stuff to write, but... :(
15:05
with my Waveform renderer, it was interesting when I managed to get it running, but now its just boring.
my projects are becoming pointless.
I should really fix my form save/reload. ATM, it saves and reloads the const bitmaps, filling the files with huge and redundant hex strings:(
@edition make a project generator that generates non pointless project ideas :)
mmm coke vanilla
not a common sight around here
mmm diabetus
15:18
so I stock up
those new protoss looked p cool
the protoss sith
Ven
Ven
pretty cool art
16:02
Wait, so func(a, b) is interpreted as (a, b) (tuple) being passed to func in Scala?
Ven
Ven
no, autotupling is the other way around
Otherwise, why am I getting
(rowData: Array[Array[Any]],columnNames: Seq[_])scala.swing.Table
 cannot be applied to (Array[Array[String]], Array[String])
Ven
Ven
foo bar (a, b) will auto-tuple (to foo.bar(a, b))
I have: new Table(Array(Array("A", "B"), Array("C", "D")), Array("Test1", "Test2"))
For some reason it's either parsing it incorrectly or Array does not implement the Seq trait or Scala is bad at types
Ven
Ven
you're just being confused by the error message. arrays in scala are not covariant
how do you declare Table?
16:05
@Ven So, I have to explicitly pass an array of Array[Array[Any]]?
wat
lol
Yeah that was it
Ven
Ven
Array[Array[String]] is not a subtype of Array[Array[Any]]
It should
Ven
Ven
well, if table was declared with [+T], it'd
But that's just an issue with not having Strong typing
That function should really be statically polymorphic and accept Array[Array[T]] for any T that satisfies some ToString constraint.
Almost 2016 and we are still dealing with how broken inheritance is
@Jefery Only if the arrays are immutable
Ven
Ven
16:17
@Jefery lol, everything has toString in scala
it's a really big problem
@Puppy sssh, don't explain him variance :P
I just got a linker error for a static const unsigned int bla = 123; inside a class template...had to add an out of line definition to get rid of it o.O
is there any reason that should be required?
16:35
Which compiler?
GCC 4.1.2 for an embedded target :/
@melak47 It's weird, but you need to do that
That's normal.
@Ven s/in scala/on the JVM/
Ven
Ven
@набиячлэвэлиь @набиячлэвэлиь no one forced scala to keep this stupidity.
much like numeric conversions.
16:38
@R.MartinhoFernandes really? I thought only non integral or non const static members require the out of line definition
@melak47 Depends on how they're used.
/home/borgleader/SVN/llvm-build/lib/libLLVMSupport.a(Compression.cpp.o): In function `llvm::zlib::compress(llvm::StringRef, llvm::SmallVectorImpl<char>&, llvm::zlib::CompressionLevel)':
/home/borgleader/SVN/llvm/lib/Support/Compression.cpp:52: undefined reference to `compressBound'
/home/borgleader/SVN/llvm/lib/Support/Compression.cpp:55: undefined reference to `compress2'
/home/borgleader/SVN/llvm-build/lib/libLLVMSupport.a(Compression.cpp.o): In function `llvm::zlib::uncompress(llvm::StringRef, llvm::SmallVectorImpl<char>&, unsigned long)':
ah fuck....
@Borgleader You too? Is is 'zlib Day'?
@Borgleader Just use a package ;p even Wide can use a package of LLVM now
@MartinJames Its not a direct dependency though, it seems to be the jit code that requires it somehow. I'll live withouth it for now, I dont feel like fixing my ninja stuff.
@Puppy Says the guy who started 2 years before me T_T
16:47
yeah, but I only needed a custom LLVM because of the batshit insane internal header stuff.
the packages are way, way easier to do.
just sudo apt-get install llvm-3.7-dev and job done.
but if you want to build LLVM yourself, then sudo apt-get install -y zlib1g-dev should be enough.
maybe cmake omitted to build those libraries or i somehow fucked up
because, if i comment out the jit
@Puppy basically, it looks like this /cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
the code links, and i see the module output
16:53
officially, LLVM has a dependency on zlib unless you told it otherwise, I believe.
so you probably just happened to not use any of those functions before.
there's a CMake setting to turn off the dependency if memory serves.
@набиячлэвэлиь when do I need that? (apart from "when the linker says so") :p
@Puppy Oddly though on windows it works, so maybe on linux they depend on zlib by default but not windows? eh idk
I think that on Windows they don't depend on it by default, but they can do.
because im litterally just taking code from visual studio and pasting it in my vm
RTTI is kinda the same way- on Windows they do not disable RTTI but on Linux they do disable RTTI by default.
16:58
zlib1g-dev is already the newest version.
zlib1g-dev set to manually installed.
weird...oh i need to add it to the link flags in ninja
yeah
I dislike the fact that the lib is called zlib, but to link its just -lz
@TonyTheLion <3
yeah same
bin/boltlib(codegenerator.o):(.rodata._ZTIN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE[_ZTIN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE]+0x10): undefined reference to `typeinfo for llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager'
is this the no RTTI you were talking about earler?
yep.
17:06
@Borgleader but that's so clever! :p
you can implicitly reference the typeinfo if you emit the vtable, and that can occur whenever certain conditions are met
inheriting from it, and there's also an awkward part where all of the virtual functions are defined inline IIRC
then there's obvious references like typeid, dynamic cast, EH
I thought using deps/llvm-build/bin/llvm-config --cppflags and deps/llvm-build/bin/llvm-config --ldflags --libs would save me from such troubles.
it saves you from such troubles by disabling RTTI for your own project.
not a very feasible thing to do if you want it to not suck
@Borgleader <3 <3 <3 :)
@Puppy actually neither of these commands seem to emit -fno-rtti
17:14
that's a start but not a solution ;p
exactly, so why is the typeinfo stuff missing :(
well
I would say that you did not build LLVM with the "Please try not to suck" switch
and that their lack of -fno-rtti in cppflags is a bug on their behalf.
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader did you build with rtti env variable set?
@Ell i guess not? I ran cmake and thats about all
Ell
Ell
yeah you didn't
unfortunately the build process relies on the env variable instead of cmake variable to build rtti
17:16
nothing about rtti was mentioned on ^ this page
Ell
Ell
actually apparently you can set LLVM_ENABLE_RTTI and LLVM_ENABLE_EH
can you see these variables in the CMAKE build?
make [REQUIRES_RTTI=1]* [-j]
apparently i can do ^ (source)
@Borgleader That's because they basically assume that you don't want RTTI in your own project.
That seems like a pretty shitty assumption
yep.
Ell
Ell
17:18
well, they have their own RTTI thing
i think
so you could attempt ot use that mebbe
yeah they handrolled a replacement
which is shit and don't do it
packages come with RTTI enabled typically
but if you want it you'll have to build it with the "please don't suck" flag
lounge i have a question. If you were using a repeating Timer class in a library that invoked a callback at the end of a timeout, would you expect the next timeout to be scheduled after the callback or before it?
Ven
Ven
depends. Both exist.
@Prismatic depends on what you want :D
So if your timer had an interval of 1 second, but your callback took half a second to complete, would you want the next callback to occur in 0.5 seconds after the callback or 1 second after the callback
Ven
Ven
17:28
I want both versions.
nnnnnnnnnnnnooooooooooo
really depends.
but I would typically expect that the next callback would occur in 0.5 seconds
I think I'm going to make the default 0.5 seconds
otherwise the frequency is effectively non-deterministic
If you want the delayed behaviour you can just schedule another timer after your callback
17:30
the first version doesn't have to worry about the callback being reentrant :v
Well really my timer has a time out signal that you connect to. The timer itself won't invoke the callback
It'll be the event queue that handles the signal
My last llvm build took forever, and i know realize i had forgotten to pass -j8 to it
cd llvm-build
cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" ../llvm -DREQUIRES_RTTI:BOOL=1
make -j8
hopefully this'll work
does that -D define an environment variable or a macro?
who knows :D
@Borgleader why are you using weird options instead of the ones used by the llvm cmake files? :/
they dont use this one
17:45
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21047399/cmake-set-environment-variables-from-a-script
^ seems like it does the right thing
Ell
Ell
ohey gitlab hosts unlimited private repos
nice
@набиячлэвэлиь Haha should I write Lumiukko in Rust?
I totally should.
on windows I use the cmake gui and check the checkboxes, which edits the cmakecache I think... defining some random environment variable seems like a different thing :S
@Nooble and then C interop with C++, yummy
hello all
I have a new riddle
uh oh
17:52
@melak47 Well there is a checkbox for "LLVM_ENABLE_RTTI" when i check cmake-gui on windows
Windows and Linux have different mechanics
what's the reason again to add RTTI?
because not having RTTI is shit
to mix the llvm headers with RTTIcode, i suspect?
i mean, if LLVM can work without RTTI, there seems to be no reason to enable it
it can't
17:53
but I guess you can't link non-RTTI code with RTTI code or something
i see
@Puppy that's awesome. bleh
I managed to make it work using your suggestion. I placed the Output class and the emit function in a separate namespace and adding a using to the template member function. If you add an answer here, I'll tick it for you. — Mats Kindahl 6 mins ago
someone else please answer that :p
or find a dupe for it. i'm pretty sure there are plenty
Ell
Ell
@melak47 it works via CMAKE also I'm p sure
it's just usual to not have to set anything in cmake in the first place
@ᐅJohannesSchaub-litbᐊ It would be a fraud for me to answer, I have no clue about ADL, that shit scares me
user image
6
lol
17:59
@Ell all I mean is... cmake variable LLVM_ENABLE_RTTI seems like not the same thing as environment variable REQUIRE_RTTI

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