« first day (1906 days earlier)      last day (3271 days later) » 

22:00
being annoying is basically in his DNA
Ell
Ell
hmm. What was it called
surströmming is not that bad to be honest; sure it smells like shit, but the taste is actually alright
Ell
Ell
it had the most bizarre taste
@Elyse looks like barf
user1804599
@FilipRoséen-refp Luckily not!
22:00
Ok, that was Sweden, not Norway -_-
@user3886129 Games don't need 50 mb/s down, but they do need it to be consistent. Even 3 Mb/s is more than enough.
Ell
Ell
some kind of pickled herring
@ThePhD I mean downloading them.
Anyway, time to make my kidney bean steacks. See you later :)
user1804599
Fermented herring.
22:01
Shooting stuff down/up the server, the higher the better.
@Elyse should I be offended by that?
user1804599
@FilipRoséen-refp Only if you like surstromming.
@Elyse I like cheeseburgers
@Morwenn Wut.
@Puppy ISTR a certain @sehe (or was it @sbi ?) saying that if you want to be a serious C++ programmer you need to do static analysis.
user1804599
22:01
@FilipRoséen-refp Consider moving to US&A.
@user3886129 Well, even then you don't need 50 mb/s: no server is going to let you monopolize 1/2 of their primary uplink cable just for yourself.
@milleniumbug That's right.
@ThePhD Mash kidney beans with a bit of flour, onion and chili, make steaks, put them in the frying pan with oil.
@caps Are you sure that Valgrind is static analysis?
@Elyse lived there, done that, but who knows; I might go back soon enough
> 23:02:11 nolyc$ [15054]<d4rkt1m3s> I'll try. but I assumed that the fact that it compiles makes it correct.
22:02
@Morwenn Oh wow, that sounds good.
@caps I might have said such a thing. At least, not using the tooling is irresponsible. End of story
^ c++ in a nutshell
it works thx guis
Post pictures!
22:02
@Morwenn You're welcome (in advance).
@ThePhD Steam actually allows me like 50 MB/s.
@ThePhD Yeah, I've never tried to do them by myself, so now is the time :D
Sometimes.
@AlexM. Tacky ottoque
Not on Sales though :(
22:03
@JerryCoffin How could I make that mistake ._____.
@FilipRoséen-refp spoken like a true haskell programmer
@Morwenn It's okay: your radiant perfection more than covers up for the occasional mistake. ♥
@Morwenn what is it
@Puppy I'm not sure, no. But the quote I'm referring to was in a context of discussing valgrind and static analysis together. Valgrind does runtime analysis, doesn't it?
22:05
yep
@sehe A mistake is when you do something wrong or unintended. Even if you've never made one, you don't need to lord it over us mere humans this way though. :-)
@sehe Crashes multiple times a day, the x86 compiler is super-terrible. I've heard the x64 one is better, but the version available when I was using the IDE had optimization issues in x64.
So @Puppy which of the advice in Effective Modern C++ is bad advice?
Does anyone else in here feel the same way about this book that Puppy does?
@milleniumbug is it bad that I consider myself a true c++ programmer (sometimes on crack, maybe)?
@caps How does he feel? He feels that C++ is bad, and much of the advice about the pitfalls should be taken as "avoid the language"?
22:10
@sehe I feel that Scott doesn't dispense particularly reliable advice w.r.t. C++11 and onwards.
hmm.. maybe one should start a blog-post-serie called "The Daily Pitfall of C++", that'd be.. interesting
@Borgleader I dislike the comparison at the end "oh look were owning the competition", as if nvidia wasnt doing essentially the same thing they are (i.e. using finfet and shoving twice as many transistors on the chip)
@Puppy This is what I was referring to, cc / @sehe
@Borgleader I would've preferred had they talked a bit about the actual architecture and the lineup for April. Now I am torn about the upcoming X2s if they're going to outmatch them in April.
@FilipRoséen-refp They did, only it was called "Guru of the Week".
22:11
@Puppy He's always focused on language trivia and how to build a mental model. In true GotW style. It doesn't surprise me. The fact that I'd like a better book doesn't make me dislike his /cc @caps
@sehe Some of the excerpts I've seen go beyond just not focusing on important matters.
Hmm? I've read it all. Examples?
Focused a lot on reducing perf/watt, guess because they got tired of the jokes on the account of the power requirements being able to support a village in Africa.
> Consider pass by value for copyable parameters that are cheap to move and always copied.
don't you think that this is kind of missing the point?
@sehe Well @Puppy seems to think that some of the advice from that book is actively bad, and I want him to elaborate on which and why.
22:13
he's whining about performance for what's likely gonna be irrelevant
it's premature optimization plain and straight.
@ElimGarak lol never forget the Boeing R9-290X.
@FilipRoséen-refp I don't consider it bad, not many of us could come up with constexpr counters after all (I definitely wouldn't). But laser-like focus can sometimes result in inadequate knowledge in other areas (disclaimer: I'm not judging you, I'm saying in general)
I wrote the C++ coding guidelines for my company based in part on that book, so if some of it is bad advice...
user1804599
22:14
@sehe lol "6 yrs experience"
@Puppy More premature optimization than pass by const&?
I'd argue that in many cases, that would also be premature.
@Puppy I think you missed the point (or you didn't read beyond the title)
@Elyse mm?
after all, if the caller passes an rvalue, you don't get any performance benefit in many cases.
user1804599
@sehe LiveCoding tells me you have 6 yrs experience.
22:15
so it's not really clear if taking by const& would actually improve your performance at all.
user1804599
Which is … true but misleading.
@Elyse Don't recall seeing that. Lemme look
@milleniumbug and I definitely agree with you, which is why I try to come up with fun things to do in other areas than just TMP and constexpr hacks. Though I need to get better at actually publish things, I know that is one of my shortcomings.
@Puppy But taking by value is premature optimization?
@sehe To be entirely fair, I've read the excerpts he posted on his blog, rather than the full book, which I am distinctly disinclined to pay for after having read his samples.
@caps No, it's the qualifiers that are premature.
22:16
@JerryCoffin hmm, I guess this isn't too far from that
> for copyable parameters that are cheap to move and always copied.
@Puppy Oh yeah, for you it's not important (not for me either)
@Puppy So rather than "cheap to move and always copy" you would say "Prefer pass by value"
@caps Yes.
@Puppy Yeah, I got it the first time. He means "sink arguments" in Sean Parent terms
22:17
@JerryCoffin but GoTW wasn't just about pitfalls, I think the scope of the article series I propose would be smaller and more to the point. or what do you think?
@Puppy Ah, okay.
@caps For his interpretation of the sentence, yes
I'd say "Prefer pass by value, unless your profiler tells you it's important to do otherwise or it's semantically necessary e.g. out arguments (but those are dumb so don't do it)"
That's not the intended meaning
The point is: you can pass by value if you're going to move/copy into local storage anyhow, AFAIR (no need to do T&& all over)
So what else is bad advice?
22:18
@FilipRoséen-refp Perhaps. At least from what I recall when he was posting them on Usenet, the first ones really were mostly about pitfalls, but later ones branched out into more general topics.
@sehe I've taken the advice to not stress about T&& to heart, certainly.
Although I do tend to T(T&&) = default; //etc. pretty liberally.
That's basically rule of zero (when you need to user-declare any special member)
@sehe Yes. I love the rule of zero.
user1804599
@sehe ben blij dat dit jouw dochter niet is overkomen
Aannames, jongen
22:23
@caps Lambda default capture modes. They're great.
Deze is veel leuker:
Mogelijk pedoseksuelen tussen begeleiders Kaatsheuvel
Wethouder kan het niet uitsluiten
user1804599
RIP
user1804599
> Waarom IS af moet van de vlaktaks
user1804599
lol
@Puppy I must admit, I've taken to using them quite liberally. Even though I have been bitten by it once or twice (lifetimes)
> We say coach shall not have to be unbeatened
Classic
user1804599
22:26
> > Ed rookt een pakje per dag. Op dat tempo krijgt hij in 2040 hoogstwaarschijnlijk een hartaanval. “Er moet nu echt iets gebeuren,” zegt hij. “Anders gaat het straks helemaal mis. Dan zak ik over een paar jaar plotseling in elkaar. Daar moet ik niet aan denken.” Ed adviseert wetenschappers daarom met klem om hun leefstijl drastisch te veranderen: “Artsen en wetenschappers moeten veel harder werken, en daar nú mee beginnen.”
user1804599
classic Ed
user1804599
> Margreet herkent de zorgen van haar man Ed. Ze ziet de klanten van haar oliebollenkraam met de dag dikker worden: “Als ik dan zo’n dikke man een hap zie nemen van zijn heerlijke appelbeignet dan denk ik: die man gaat dood in 2040, de tijd begint te dringen. Ik weet niet of die wetenschappers zich daarvan bewust zijn.”
@Puppy @milleniumbug and I talked about those extensively today. What else?
> Consider emplacement instead of insertion.
> Use std::atomic for concurrency, volatile for special memory.
user1804599
I used volatile recently.
user1804599
22:30
To cause segfaults which are subsequently handled.
The second one is quite obvious if you had read the descriptions of the features
@Puppy Why is this bad advice?
@Puppy And what's wrong with this advice?
inb4 too low-level
user1804599
Changes to page protection act as memory barriers. :3
@caps Because in the infinite majority of situations, it's completely pointless, or even harmful.
emplacement doesn't really offer anything over insertion.
just make the thing, move the thing in, job done.
and then you don't run into the problems of perfect forwarding not actually being all that perfect
@caps The implication is that average joe should be using std::atomic for concurrency, which they absolutely should not be.
22:33
@Puppy Firstly I think you're wrong about the odds (very). And secondly, it doesn't say "always use emplace".
user1804599
Average Joe should learn how to program in order to become above-average Joe.
@Puppy Except when things aren't movable in the first place
@Puppy What do you mean?
I use .emplace in associative containers because m.insert(std::make_pair(k,v)) or m.insert(decltype(m)::value_type(k,v)) are annoying
@ElimGarak mine was from my phone.
22:34
@sehe In which case, I would suggest resolving that problem first.
@caps seconded
things that are not movable are far bigger problems than just putting one in a container.
@Puppy Puppy "The advice is bad because it doesn't apply to me."
@BartekBanachewicz Same, my primary network access is tethered 4G/LTE
don't really see it.
22:35
@sehe Because he's a good enough programmer with enough knowledge of stuff to know what to do better?
$60/month up to 150/75 flat.
even if you're stuck with an old C++03 library, you can always just chuck a unique_ptr over the top, a custom hasher/comparator, and call it a day.
or even some particularly special types like std::mutex.
@Puppy Because trade offs never happen
@ElimGarak seems weird to have that as a primary connection
I only use 3G as a backup
@BartekBanachewicz Landline only offers upto 10/4
22:36
So what's wrong with std::atomic?
@ElimGarak suckage
intense suckage
@sehe They do happen; but not often enough to warrant generalizing about how great emplace is.
@caps What's wrong with it is that people might use it.
k time for some haskell
@Puppy And the problem with using it would be...
22:37
the problem is that it's highly improbable that they'll succeed in using it to create something that's genuinely correct or efficient.
@Puppy Moving changes identity too, so even moving it in is sometimes not convenient. Emplace is - in principle - more elegant ("say what you mean") and often leads to more readable code. Of course it doesn't do anything for PODs/aggregates etc.
I personally love emplace on associative containers e.g.
@Puppy Did he?
yes.
user1804599
lol talking to puppy about readable code
@Puppy More probable than using a plain int?
@Puppy Oh well. It's not a book about correct or efficient design. In fact, it's not about design at all
22:38
@sehe What is a good book about design?
@Puppy I don't recall seeing that. It seems to me you took all his "consider X" to mean "You should use X" too much of the time
@caps I'd argue yes. It's pretty obvious that if you're using a plain int, you need a better solution and it's clearly not correct. If it's std::atomic, it might be correct.
@caps I dunno know. Life :)
user1804599
Design is extremely project-specific and therefore a difficult topic to write a book about.
@Puppy You know. std::atomic will be correct. No ifs, buts, maybes. It's just not a given that it will do what you need or be as efficient as you need.
22:40
@sehe Well, considering X but then not using it most of the time is even worse than considering X but then using it, since you're spending time considering X instead of doing your job or considering something more important. If you're going to advise that people consider emplace over insert, it needs to offer something important that justifies that consideration.
If you're gonna argue that loads/stores with explicit memory order specifications are risky, that is another guideline
type Pair a b = (a,b)

f :: Pair Int String
f = Pair 5 "x"
doesn't work :(
suckage
@Puppy It is really a book telling people about the applicability of new language/library features. Of course he points out where you could /consider/ them
@sehe Well, that's just the problem, isn't it? The entire problem with std::atomic is that it will be correct, but writing correct code on top of it is pretty impractical.
@sehe Ah, yes. :)
22:41
at least for int, it's obviously incorrect and you'll probably fix it.
@Puppy Impractical?
@Puppy Oh well. It's like saying "consider using stainless steel nails" - and then objecting "hey hey, just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean you should be using nails in the first place". Big deal.
It's really that "just stay away of c++" then
writing correct concurrent algorithms or containers is definitively non-trivial.
it's not something where you can just slap in an atomic increment here and there and solve the problem.
I think this quote is quite relevant (by Raymond Chen)
Aug 1 '15 at 12:29, by unordered_meow
> Good advice comes with a rationale so you can tell when it becomes bad advice. If you don't understanding why something should be done, then you've fallen into the trap of cargo cult programming, and you'll keep doing it even when it's no longer necessary or even becomes deleterious.
@wilx Same for mutexen, and anything for concurrency/synchronization. But puppy thinks people will apply atomic at the wrong level more easily?
@Puppy His book, not being about that I think
22:43
compared to "Writing a correct concurrent algorithm", "Writing a correct cross-platform atomic operation wrapper" is trivial.
@Puppy His book doesn't solve problems
@sehe Which is a flaw which should be corrected before publication.
@Puppy But the book isn't about that. The book is about "given that a correct cross-platform atomic wrapper exists, consider using it [ed.: when appropriate]"
I freely admit that it's not his fault that the Committee dropped the ball, but he could at least not advise people to use or consider using broken feature.s
user1804599
The difficulty of implementing concurrent algorithms depends on the algorithms.
user1804599
22:44
Some concurrent algorithms are incredibly easy to implement.
@sehe Except it's practically never actually appropriate. All you're gonna do is encourage people to write buggy concurrent code.
@Puppy ... To me the book is about understanding details and interference points between new language/library features. The "problem" it does solve is: "How to create useful and correct mental models for the new features"
@Puppy LEL. No arguing with that. It's wrong, and you know it
user1804599
Fortran is ugly.
@sehe The problem it should solve is "These are the new features you need to be using". Other new features that you should not be using do not need consideration and merely detract from the usefulness of the book.
Unless you're going to explain away your weasel word "practically" so that "practically never" doesn't mean "practically never"
22:46
uh huh.
@Puppy So, again, the fact that you or I would like a better/other book (as well) doesn't make me dislike this book.
#entitled
user1804599
duct tape programmers are the best
so what I'm basically seeing is that I've made an assertion, but you can't even be arsed to make a counter-assertion, you're just gonna troll instead.
Funny how everything looks gr8 on pics.
well, you can fuck right off
before you arrived this was a perfectly good discussion on technical merits.
so go back to whatever hole you came from
user1804599
22:49
@sehe where do you identifiy yourself on this scale?
@Puppy My turn to say "I'm not seeing it". I asserted perfectly fine why I like the book, even fitting it into your mold of "if the book doesn't scratch an itch solve a problem, that's a flaw" - It helped me solve my problem.
@Elyse The biggest advantage of Fortran over C is that Fortran has a single integral type.
No error-prone implementation defined integral promotions
@Puppy Did I misspeak?
I'm frankly quite surprised at the level of vile you spewed on me in just a minute. I will be leaving. I don't see I deserve this treatment.
22:51
@sehe oh fuck puppy
sigh
user1804599
@milleniumbug It has many. For example, integer*2 and integer*4.
i mean you shouldn't care vOv
#sharksandblood or #peoplewithoutpatiences
guys, don't fight while there's this lovely event going on with people playing games and helping cancer stuff
22:52
@sehe Yeah, I don't get it.
@Puppy "I'll just make it a std::atomic" is not going to lead to correct concurrent code, but... is there no place to use std::atomic in correct code?
@AlexM. I didn't know cancer needed much help stuffing... (SCNR)
@Elyse Hmm, was I wrong again? Didn't see them mentioned in the book I was reading. Let me check...
user1804599
Look up kinds.
@caps I do. I love to use it for e.g. simple shared data exchanges. Granted, it's very rare that I use it. Same goes for mutex and locks. I love to just pass data between tasks.

« first day (1906 days earlier)      last day (3271 days later) »