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01:00
or you're misguided in believing that your logic is consistent or either relevant
'logic all the way down' doesn't work
Man, you're talking out of your arse again.
these people have a set of beliefs that motivate them to do what they do
Let's not all go too deep into the "nothing is sure" logic again.
I almost had a panic attack last time
@Jefery it is rather unsettling
I have measured the weight of an electron.
user406009
01:01
@Elyse Ok that's just stupid.
@CaptainGiraffe I want the result in microyourmums
@orlp Millicans?
by the way, you can be perfectly rational and assume that which the bible/quran/etc says is true
@CaptainGiraffe No, Vaticans
occam's razor is by no means a requirement for rationality
01:02
@orlp Yeah
I personally believe in occam's razor
but this is not something I can prove to be correct in any way or form
it's an assumption just like the bible is
@CaptainGiraffe You mean the heat splattering converted to mass. Also, weight != mass :P
I've talked to myself about this levels of assumptions I make just a few days ago
user406009
@orlp It all depends on how literal you take the bible/quaran/ etc.
@Lalaland it absolutely does not
01:04
@orlp Yeah... No.
@ElimGarak No I mean a carefully prepared experiment.
user406009
@orlp What about the parts of those books which contradict our scientific measurements?
user406009
In particular, the age of the earth and how the earth was formed.
@Lalaland as ridiculous as it might sound
but the entire 'god might want to trick us' argument is rationally sound if you do not assume occam's razor
It was something along the lines of: The only thing I'm sure is that there's an atom moment that I'm experiencing right now in which I'm conscious. The very first assumption is that more of said atomic moments existed in the past and are continuing to exist. The next assumption is that moments that happened in the past are almost they way I remember them, and so on....
01:05
in fact, who's to say your senses can be trusted more than the quran
user1804599
@orlp I'm a solipsist.
after all, the quran is the holy word of god (just FYI, these are not my personal views, just a thought experiment)
in fact, the entire senses argument is deeply unsettling to me
you might argue that obviously your senses are true
user406009
That sort of trickster god seems incompatible to me with the god in the Bible.
Jul 14 '13 at 11:47, by Jeffrey
I'm solipsist so I'm not even sure you are here.
but I know that to be false, because hallucinogenics exist
01:06
I was so before it was cool
user406009
People do argue about this though. Your argument has merit.
Lounge<Philosophy>
Take that zoidberg
user1804599
@Jefery :(
user406009
You should read Meditations on First Philosophy by Descartes
user406009
01:07
(If you haven't already)
user406009
This topic is pretty much what he spends most of the book on.
user1804599
Great song.
@CaptainGiraffe Yes, they're all carefully prepared, given the scale. And they were all called experiments. :P
my very own existence baffles me so much that I must be aware at all times that which is assumed
01:08
@Elyse #FO4, also Rocket 69
Anyway. There's no point in discussing these things really.
true
If you want to do precise measurements look into millikans.
just saying that dehumanizing terrorists will not further your understanding of them
There's just too much not knowing going on that your head starts spinning for a bit.
01:08
instead, you will alienate them, misleading yourself you've succesfully dealt with this part of your brain
I think that understanding their culture and beliefs is a fundamental part of solving the problem.
user406009
@orlp Yes, but belief isn't rational. But that's ok since no one is perfectly rational.
user1804599
@Jefery If you're a solipsist, why do you observe a computer computing things faster than when you compute them yourself?
user1804599
You can construct a counterargument, but it's still fun. :D
A computer is dumber then I am
Oh wait, I see what you mean.
01:09
@Lalaland belief is orthogonal to rationalism
user1804599
You don't know whether the computer exists.
user1804599
If it doesn't, you are imagining it.
It exists for me.
@Jefery For that I need a reasonble account of that culture.
user1804599
But if you compute things without the imaginary computer, it takes longer.
01:10
rationale has the form condition -> consequence
I actually have the fear of being the only person/god in the universe and that all of this is the result of me getting crazy about being alone.
user406009
@orlp Here is an interesting question, do you think it's right to look down on certain cultures?
"I assume that my eye is correctly viewing the world, and I see an apple" -> "There is an apple"
user406009
Is it OK to "attack" certain cultures?
@Lalaland yes
01:11
@Lalaland No
user1804599
@orlp You must assume your brain functions correctly as well.
@Lalaland depends
@Lalaland depends
I believe it's ok to look down on other cultures as long as you're aware of the scope of your assumptions and your own morals
user406009
I bring this up because there are very scary aspects of the type of Islam practiced in that part of the world: pewforum.org/2013/04/30/…
01:11
I do not believe that attacking others is acceptable if they're not harming you
I believe in tolerance for everything except intolerance
user406009
In particular, death for apostasy and punishment for blasphemy are fundamentally incompatible with western society.
@Lalaland I believe we have the right to look down upon that, but not to attack them for it.
they're incompatible with apostate life
user1804599
@orlp What if they are harming your allies?
If they were to do it here, to our people, then we can attack them.
01:13
Nothing is simple, everything is complicated
@Elyse the term 'you' here is used loosely
user1804599
OK!!!1111
I can't give a black and white definition for it, sorry
user1804599
@Jefery Lambda calculus is simple.
You are simple
01:15
ur mom is simple
user406009
I don't really know if there are any good solutions. Is it possible or ethical to get people to give up ideas like that?
@ScottW WOOF
How would you state your afiliation? Inshallah? Alla ahkbar?
@Lalaland no
I believe in open borders and choice of morals
forcing people to stay and force your morals upon them is intolerant and unacceptable
user406009
@orlp By that logic, we should completely move out of the Middle East, yet open our doors to refugees.
user406009
01:16
Which is actually a "solution" I agree with.
@Lalaland those refugees are only welcome if they accept our morals
and we should only move out of the middle east if they provide free passage to those who wish to leave
user406009
@orlp How do you do that?
@Lalaland I never said it was easy :)
It's crazy that a huge community of C programmers has to clean up the _correctness_ mess whenever gcc or llvm adds a sloppy _speed_ tweak.
user1804599
@Lalaland iron fist
01:17
It's nice how the C crowd blames compiler devs/"buggy" standards
user406009
@sehe Are these the people complaining about the UB stuff?
@Elyse you have weird fetishes
@Lalaland Basically
user406009
@Elyse People can lie.
@ScottW fail
or I'm missing a reference
user1804599
01:18
@Lalaland About what?
user406009
@sehe So, their code was never actually "correct" then :P
What we actually need is a free compiler that says "We understand that the standard is buggy. We will preserve the obvious meaning of code."
@Lalaland Basically ;)
user406009
@sehe Lol
@sehe Oh god
ABORT ABORT
I've seen this a lot. Projects typically say "Don't compile with -O2, GCC has bugs"
01:19
Chandler save us!
@Borgleader Please comment :)
djb is a genius and a madman
user1804599
Noun: iron fist ‎(plural iron fists)
  1. Ruthless and usually unrestricted control.
  2. Symbol of an army's tank or cavalry branch.
are you sure? it’s not entirely unusual for at least the C++ standard to have bugs
3. Anal fisting using iron appendage.
user1804599
01:19
Don't behave -> get the fuck out.
such that later fixes do break some existing programs
@sehe I dont have time for a tweet fight :)
Besides Ive no credibility in the matter
@Borgleader hah
user406009
@Elyse About their beliefs. Refugees can claim to support liberal attitudes such as no punishments for apostasy or blasphemy, but they can actually be secretly conservative.
user406009
@Elyse You can't kick people out once they are citizens.
01:20
@Borgleader you assume djb would respond
user1804599
@Lalaland You can say whatever you want. It's about what you actually do.
user406009
@LucDanton Usually, this crowd complains about stuff like signed integer overflow undefined behavior.
user1804599
You must obey the law.
@hashbreaker Interesting stance. You must have missed some cool blogs by @johnregehr . If you need java, use it. C not perfect, but- history
user1804599
@Lalaland Don't offer them citizenship?
01:21
@EtiennedeMartel Have you seen this?
/cc @Morwenn in case you ever come to visite ;)
user406009
@Elyse So keep the refugees as a permanent non-citizen underclass?
@Lalaland 'this crowd' being an imaginary product of your mind?
user1804599
They come here temporarily for safety reasons, and they go back once the region of origin is safe again.
@orlp wait, 'djb' - is he a "thing"? Never heard of him I think
01:22
@sehe he's a big thing
:D
user1804599
Or, at least, that's the idea.
one of the most prominent modern-day cryptographers
Daniel Julius Bernstein (sometimes known simply as djb; born October 29, 1971) is a mathematician, cryptologist, programmer, and professor of mathematics and computer science at the Eindhoven University of Technology and research professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is the author of the computer software programs qmail, publicfile, and djbdns. == Early life == He attended Bellport High School, a public high school on Long Island, and graduated at 15 in 1987. The same year, he ranked fifth place in the Westinghouse Science Talent Search. In 1987 (at the age of 16), he achieved...
user406009
01:23
There are a couple bug reports like that.
@Lalaland relation to current discussion?
user1804599
Reality is that politicians want to keep them here as long as possible, and give them suffrage as soon as possible, so that they keep their power.
user406009
@LucDanton That is an example bug report opened by people who are annoyed by GCC optimizing too much in the case of undefined behavior.
djb made qmail, ChaCha/Salsa, Curve/Ed25519 and many other things
user1804599
And salaries. Don't forget the salaries.
01:24
i.e. no relation i.e. 'this crowd' doesn’t exist
@Lalaland it’s not related, so let’s not bring it up
user1804599
@Jefery Attacking Russia is like attacking the USA: a terrible idea regardless of everything.
or if it is, I’d like to know how
the tl;dr is don’t assume
user406009
Weren't we talking about the tweet sehe posted?
oh and Poly1305
basically don't be surprised if most of the internet traffic in 10 years is encrypted using algorithms he invented
user1804599
01:26
@sehe Yes. Roger.
I'm a crypto geek
Nice
but I'm kind of surprised you guys don't know djb
@Lalaland @LucDanton has half the lounge plonked i wouldnt be surprised if hes confused about whats being discussed :)
user1804599
I'm a gypto creek
01:27
@Elyse USA! USA! USA!
I've seen the acronym before, but didn't make the connection with "D. Bernstein"
@LucDanton am I plonked?
Time for another petition?
that was the genius portion
user1804599
@Nooble I prefer a grandition.
01:28
to see the madman portion you just need to read his code
although I have reasons to believe that was generated code
user406009
@orlp Wow, he helped secure the rights of the public to use encryption.
user406009
Bernstein v. United States is a set of court cases brought by Daniel J. Bernstein challenging restrictions on the export of cryptography from the United States. The case was first brought in 1995, when Bernstein was a student at University of California, Berkeley, and wanted to publish a paper and associated source code on his Snuffle encryption system. Bernstein was represented by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who hired outside lawyer Cindy Cohn. After four years and one regulatory change, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that software source code was speech protected by the First...
user406009
That makes him a hero as far as I am concerned.
not use encryption
export encryption
user406009
@orlp Not everyone I care about is in the US :P
user1804599
01:31
@orlp It's terrible.
Good night ladies.
user1804599
Bye.
user406009
@orlp What would be his stake in the debate?
user406009
For "excess" compiler optimization or against?
@Lalaland time
oh
I don't know
I'm not a catalogue on djb's opinions
the reason I said that djb likely won't respond is simply
would you expect linus to respond to your tweet on some opinion he posted?
or bjarne, or <insert high-profile tech guy here>
these are busy men with tens to hundreds of emails/tweets/irc pings/snail mails/tweets/etc daily
user406009
01:35
Oh, nvm, is that djb's twitter handle?
unless it's an elaborate spoof, I believe so
user406009
That opinion makes more sense then.
user406009
As crypto is one of those fields where correctness matters at all costs. And optimization can actually be your enemy.
There's a simple method: write correct code.
01:38
@sehe That way you don't need unit tests!
@Lalaland Yeah, I've put my comment in perspective too.
However, I'm fully prepared to note that this kind of tweet plays into the herds that indeed blame the compiler for being unreliable and stuff while violating strict aliasing all the time
@sehe Why blame the tool when you can blame its tools :)
@sehe violating strict aliasing is too easy IMO
IMO reinterpret_cast should make the compiler aware that this pointer is indeed aliased
and should just work
Well, that would almost make it useless (because people will say that it criples their performance without reason). So it needs an "unsafe" pendant then
user406009
Why are people constantly violating strict aliasing?
01:43
@sehe right now even a simple *reinterpret_cast<uint64_t*>(some_char_ptr) violates aliasing rules
that's just bullcrap IMO
user406009
Just don't use reinterpret_cast.
@Lalaland bullshit
reinterpret_cast is useful and works
user406009
@orlp I think you are explicitly allowed to use char* in that case.
we need to get out of this annoying mind set of where float isn't IEEE754 and int isn't two's complement
@Lalaland nope, you've got two pointers of different type referring to the same address
violates strict aliasing
try again
@orlp only matters if you mix them in subsequent operations, right
01:45
@sehe nope
the very act of reinterpret_cast, even if you dereference immediately, violates it
> even if you dereference immediately
huh. You mean, unless you never dereference it.. ?
Abandon all hope
This is ~~~software~~~
@sehe I'm confused
user406009
@orlp Oops. You are correct. It's only the other direction which is legal.
user406009
*reinterpret_cast<char*>(some_uint64_ptr)
01:46
@orlp That's fine as long as some_char_ptr was originally pointing to a uint64_t.
this example is kind of a special case
because the standard special cases char*
but I'd argue that if I know my platform
and I know my platform is IEEE754/two's complement
@Mysticial He's talking about the strict aliasing, does that make it different?
@orlp That's not about strict aliasing though.
static_cast<int32_t *>(static_cast<void *>(any_pointar_to_nonconst));
user406009
So @orlp you want stuff like en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_inverse_square_root to be legal in the standard?
then I just want my *reinterpret_cast<uint64_t>(&dbl) to be defined behavior
doesn't have to be specified - I know my platform
but please make it defined, not undefined
01:48
I think the whole aliasing thing is exclusively about optimizing load/store cycles and re-ordering opportunities?
@Lalaland yes
@sehe Kinda? If you take a valid uint64_t*, cast to char*, and cast back and deference, that's legal.
only for char* though
You said that explicitly from the get-go
hence I should've chosen a different example
01:49
i  = * ( long * ) &y;                       // evil floating point bit level hacking
i  = 0x5f3759df - ( i >> 1 );               // what the fuck?
@набиячлэвэлиь if you use reinterpret_cast, then yes that should be legal
result doesn't have to be specified by the standard
but at least make it legal
because the reality is, that is everywhere and it's useful
@orlp That's actually not possible. Imagine a processor where misalignment is a crash? If the char* really is just a char array and it's misaligned...
The standard's strict-aliasing makes sure that the misalignment fault is under the UB.
@Mysticial but it also makes the aligned case UB
And remember those CPUs that trap on copying invalid pointars? Good times, these are
also, that's a non-issue
the standard is now alignment-aware
01:51
@orlp As opposed to your face
it could add alignment requirements to reinterpet_cast
@orlp Not until recently right?
you can always read from a char* as long as there really is an object behind
@Mysticial C++11
I'm DeadMGing again
@LucDanton s/object/\0's/
user406009
01:52
@orlp I do agree with you that some things should be removed from UB.
user406009
Like signed integer overflow.
@Lalaland OH GOD YES
WHY IS THAT UB
I can sort-of respect it that C++ refuses to choose two's complement
but at least make it implementation specified
@orlp It should be IB.
not fucking UB
Just like floats.
01:53
like, that reason alone
is why 99%+ of programs are UB
user1804599
@orlp because then compilers can optimise under the assumption that it never happens.
@Elyse which is bullshit
user1804599
No, it's not. They really can.
user1804599
They do.
01:54
Love my girlfriend
[citation needed]
93
Q: Why does integer overflow on x86 with GCC cause an infinite loop?

MysticialThe following code goes into an infinite loop on GCC: #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main(){ int i = 0x10000000; int c = 0; do{ c++; i += i; cout << i << endl; }while (i > 0); cout << c << endl; return 0; } So here's the deal: Si...

user406009
@R.MartinhoFernandes Have fun!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Night, sleep tight!
01:55
@R.MartinhoFernandes night
@R.MartinhoFernandes Cheers!
@R.MartinhoFernandes Night
ugh
that's just dumb
user1804599
No, it's C++.
user1804599
If you want a well-defined language, don't use C++.
01:56
If you want a well-defined language, use Java. It's defined as, "shit".
user406009
I wonder if an "Make signed integer overflow implementation defined" proposal would get any support at all.
user1804599
Java is very nice compared to C++.
@Lalaland not at this stage
because muh compatability
Ugh. Thanks. I figured it was a stupid oversight. I was using VS, so those errors didn't show. Only the message above. — JayDoe 5 mins ago
user1804599
Integer overflow should throw an exception by default.
01:57
Ugh. The message of MSVC was actually very clear in this case
user1804599
Because it's almost always a bug.
user406009
@Elyse Yes. I agree with that. But that comes with an even higher performance cost.
user1804599
And bugs should stop the program.
Nothing like finding the roots of the quartic function on your own for shits and giggles to make you regret being alive after the 5th page of continuous sausage fest. I can see the roots starting to coagulate, I am thinking about calling it done.
user1804599
Integers should be unbounded by default, too.
01:58
@Elyse then they can't overflow
user1804599
Good! One problem tackled!
user406009
@ElimGarak Fool. Just solve it with a computer with Newton's method.
@Lalaland It's more fun with radicals. :P Also, coincidentally, their upper bound.
At least a quartic is solvable via radicals. Not saying you'd want to do that though.
IMO arbitrary precision ints should be the default and fixed-width int should be reserved for performance sensitive code and structs

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