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21:00
associate? closely?
7 mins ago, by набиячлэвэлиь
@UdayKiranKaturi If you have a C++-related question, please go to the new C++ room therewith
Better yet, just see Stack Overflow. They have minimum question quality requirements for a reason
@sehe Wat.
> The big-O complexities of stable_vector operations match exactly those of std::vector
How does it do that?
@caps Dollars. And lots of them
Asking is only gonna get you shot
21:02
I suppose the tradeoff comes in the non-continuity affecting the speed of linear algorithms.
@caps By sacrificing memory resource use, secondly the constant is not the same
@sehe The constant?
I have pulled a Robot. I cut my middle finger while opening a box of milk...with my yesterday sharpened knife. Very bloody.
I wrote a general purpose index_iterator.
@ThePhD Ooh, boost has one of those, don't they?
21:02
@caps I guess so?
11
Q: Big Oh notation does not mention constant value

PradeepI am a programmer and have just started reading Algorithms. I am not completely convinced with the notations namely Bog Oh, Big Omega and Big Theta. The reason is by definition of Big Oh, it states that there should be a function g(x) such that it is always greater than or equal to f(x). Or f(x) <...

@caps I think it allocates memory in every insertion
@wilx Woulda bin worse with a blunt and/or jagged one
@SashaMN it's not node based. Well, not in that sense. Also: i.imgur.com/KwdwNU3.png
looking at this speedrun of battletoads
21:04
@ThePhD Looks like they used to
it's like the game was done solely to be difficult
@набиячлэвэлиь could. Don't underestimate knife cuts
@sehe You need "true" constant time, right? How it possible then without memory allocation and deletion in each insertion or removal?
21:05
I think you've made up the allocation things. That's all. Have you read the docs?
Also, don't forget, std::vector::push_back allocates
@sehe lame, no seizure-inducing GIFs
@набиячлэвэлиь For you: i.imgur.com/5zrvaV1.gif
@ThePhD Did you finish your school stuff first? <3
@sehe I'm looking at boost::stable_vector, which says "Originally developed by Joaquin M. Lopez Munoz, stable_vector is a std::vector drop-in replacement implemented as a node container, offering iterator and reference stability."
std::future<@ThePhD> is important to me <3
21:09
<3
@caps Interesting. It does name itself a node-based. I'm convinced it doesn't allocate on each operation (it may well preallocate nodes in batches, like vector and just indirect access)
@sehe "stable_vector does not store the objects in contiguous memory layout, instead, each object is stored in separate node"
google knows
@SashaMN And that says exactly nothing about how the nodes are allocated. TYVM (did you see my previous message?)
@Borgleader I was doing school stuff?
> error C2892: local class shall not have member templates
fuck you
21:11
that's C++ for you
8 hours ago, by Borgleader
@ThePhD Yes, school stuff. Be an ACE student, get all them As :)
arbitrary restrictions for no apparent reason
how do polymorphic lambdas work, they're local and have a templated operator()
magic
@Borgleader Oh. Right.
they might not be local.
or even a class at all.
21:14
@sehe ok, my bad :(
It's interesting they call it node-based. I suppose it could allocate nodes individually. I wasn't under the impression it does, though.
@sehe That would make it pretty much an implementation of std::deque.
@JerryCoffin I don't think he means allocates them contiguously.
@JerryCoffin Not for the index indirection! I agree on the rest.
alright
time to do something stupid
21:16
@sehe The bit on memory overhead might be enlightening, if you follow the math. boost.org/doc/libs/1_60_0/doc/html/container/…
#define auto_partitioner
@Puppy me?
you are stupid but I don't want to do you
@caps Allocation may be contiguously, the logical sequence doesn't use a linear sequence of the elements
@caps Okay, so like MS' implementation of std::deque when anything but quite a small T being stored.
21:17
@Borgleader lol Puppy x Borgleader
no wait, I don't think I can #define this problem away
@milleniumbug Borgpy
@caps Pretty conclusive
@sehe Hmm, I think I see what you mean though.
21:17
watchin u
@sehe is C allocation functions (like malloc and etc.) use the same logic?
Ah
> The following image describes the layout of a possible data structure upon which to base the design of a stable vector:
@SashaMN not sure what you mean
It could allocate in blocks and re-use sections of the block that have been removed from the container.
@SashaMN Whatever that is, yes. Allocation is allocation. Usual ::operator new defers to malloc, but that's not a given
21:19
@caps Daisy is a stable vector?
@AlexM. Pupleader
@Puppy No, the picture I posted above in reply to sehe.
I almost edited my comment but didn't want to mess up the one-boxing.
@Borgleader you might wanna know that pupleader is essentially puppy taking the lead :P
ok, time to leave work
@Borgleader Enjoy the ride bby <3
21:20
Interesting.
@caps truly, just profile. Work with whatever conceptually matches the design. Swap out the building block if it disappoints. /cc @SashaMN (and out)
@sehe sorry for my bad eng. And std::allocator implemented with knowledge how actually malloc works?
@sehe Thanks for chatting with me. Really appreciate it.
Thinking out loud a bit more.
@SashaMN Why would it. malloc has a public interface, that's enough for std::allocator<>
@Borgleader See you at home soon!
21:21
@sehe but it can be slower
I don't see what "but" is meaning in that sentence
@SashaMN nobody cares
user1804599
If you want fast allocations, use Java or C#.
It just forwards the calls, it's their job to do the job well
im trying to imaging why it would be bad, but nothing comes to mind :)
*imagine
21:24
So the cache could be a boost::stable_vector<T> that "owns" the items of the cache. Then the std::unordered_map<T*> could be traversed safely with no lock, since adding T* elements would be atomic (right?). Removing unused elements from the hash map would still require a lock, but that's okay since it will only deal with TTLs occasionally.
Adding new elements to the cache (i.e. adding them to the boost::stable_vector) would require a lock, but once their *s are added to the hash map, users of the cache wouldn't notice that lock.
@milleniumbug Not necessarily: "The standard library implementation allocates count bytes from free store" (not from the standard, cppreference here". No mention of malloc or even libc
std::allocator uses operator new not malloc
@caps Nope. unordered_map is not concurrent safe
@CatPlusPlus yeah I was quoting from operator new obviously
@sehe Dang, I'll come back to that then. Finishing this thought.
New elements could be added to a lockfree queue instead of going directly to the stable_vector, then the items in the queue could be periodically moved to the stable_vector.
user1804599
21:26
Find the bug!
what language is that
is the assignment operator assigning to the global scope
@caps If you can make the query interface work out. Perhaps the MRU items are always "hot" and it could hurt/increase performance
Shitty one, hence why rightfold is using it
@MadameElyse if is lexically redefined, and the call to it fails (1 cannot be called)
@sehe MRU?
21:27
Most recently used (where insertion is use)
user1804599
@sehe Yes.
Ah, yeah.
user1804599
CoffeeScript uses lexical scope without variable declarations. An epic fail.
Perlists would say good old fashioned pragmatism
Right, so the cache is asked for something it doesn't have, and it tells the user it doesn't have it, then adds it to the queue. If the user asks for it a bunch more times before it gets moved from the queue...
user1804599
21:29
No. Perlist would outright reject it for the lack of use strict; use warnings;.
I was thinking of this
http://chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/10?m=27954839#27954839
user1804599
Which requires variables to be in scope when used.
But that was before you knew I was talking about a std::unordered_map
Too readable for Perl
@caps Complication again. I'd really optimize this later.
@MadameElyse Don't forget there was Perl before that.
21:30
@sehe I think you're right. I'm probably best off starting with a simple, lock-on-most-operations implementation.
This has been a useful exercise though.
Yup. And just design to reduce the frequency of these operations. At least the mutating ones
user1804599
@sehe lol Perl code without use strict; use warnings;.
I.e. Perl code
You can't wish away reality
user1804599
The usual policy in helping sites (such as #perl) is even to outright reject any questions that include code that lacks the necessary boilerplate.
21:32
Everyone here frequently does
user1804599
People just don't care about it.
21:46
Question to everyone since Robot isn't here...
Ell
Ell
I made a faux pas
I tried to pour wine when the top was on :(
For nonius, is it alright to increase the amount of work being performed for each statistical sample?
Like, nonius collects data in sample groups, so there's sample 1 through N, where N is defaulted to something like 25, and those are your 25 groups.
Is each sample grouping allowed to run essentially different code than the others (to graph, say, relative performance as the amount of work increases?)
Aww fuck why not just ask the master himself
/cc @R.MartinhoFernandes
@Ell I must say that attempting to pour wine is quite a faux pas- I did not know you had such poor taste
Ell
Ell
@Puppy I know you don't like alcohol, but the alcohol in good wine tastes good :O
it tastes like crap
it's just ruined grape juice
21:55
lol
I'm not too fond of wine, but I'll remind you this:
That's, like, your opinion, man
Ell
Ell
@Puppy you've tried them all? :V
I agree some wine tastes like a crap
a lot of it actually
but a lot tastes really good too
Get a good wine and not a cheap 80% sulphur one
user1804599
yummy grape juice
user1804599
no, don't rape jews
21:57
goodjoke
@CatPlusPlus I need to figure out how to identify those.
@CatPlusPlus Like what?
Good wines are a lie.
When you don't like wine.
What is man, when you come to think upon him, but a minutely set, ingenious machine for turning with infinite artfulness, the red wine of Shiraz into urine?
jesus fucking CHRIST
21:59
@JerryCoffin Sleepy?
I need to get angry at anything
This airport is r e t a r d e d
@JerryCoffin I read that "turning" as turing :/
Turing? now that's a great dude
Yes let's have massive shopping malls and shit so people can spend money but oh no no seats around the gates let's just leave everyone lying on the ground because fuck you
also the wifi is shit
22:00
@caps Buy, try, remember the name; or go to a tasting event or somethin
i have a more interesting problem
with regard to command validation
@AngryLettuce Seats cost money. No seats -> make sure people go buy things instead.
suppose a player issues a move command to a group of units. If the units don't exist, the command is bogus and the server should reject it
@CatPlusPlus The problem with that is that it starts with the word "buy" and strongly implies that it may not in fact be a good wine.
@nick you must have arrived by now amirit
do you speak chinese already
22:01
However, if in the meantime one of the units is killed, the player might still want to move the remaining units
does it flow in your squinty eyed blood
@AngryLettuce He's secretly been a Chinese spy the whole time
oh hi Bartek, it's good that you're here
@AngryLettuce He indeed arrived.
@Puppy Go to a dedicated wine shop and you have a good chance of cheaper wines not being bad
22:02
@milleniumbug that's a nice thing to hear
user1804599
Do vegetarians also eat spiders while they sleep?
@BartekBanachewicz That doesn't matter.
user1804599
@fredoverflow ^
Also you can share bottles if you're that cheap~
validate the command when it comes in, all the units must be alive at that time; if they die in the future, it's not the problem of validation.
22:03
Or you know ignore the command for units that aren't alive
whilst installing Hate (Hate-0.1.4.2) cabal's complaining that Could not find module ‘Hate.Util’. Normally I'd investigate but ISTR you mentioning Util is not implemented yet
@CatPlusPlus That's certainly an option.
Why are you doing anything Haskell
@milleniumbug sounds like a bug.. but 1.4.2 is old!
I think that Hate-0.1.4.3 is released that addresses that problem
user1804599
22:04
45
Q: Do you eat a certain number of spiders whilst you sleep?

billynomates Over the course of your life time, the average person eats X spider/insects/whatever whilst they are sleeping. X tends to vary according to who you ask. Is this just an urban legend?

user1804599
@milleniumbug 1.4.3 fixed that IIRC
ok, cool
now how do I upgrade
fap
@milleniumbug cabal update && cabal install Hate?
22:05
@Puppy "There is a saying that 'He who drinks wine, thinks wine: he who drinks beer, thinks beer.' Alan Could and did drink both, but in either event he remained entirely himself. As a beer drinker, in the literal sense, I remember he once achieved a certain distinction by swallowing a pint in one draught. This, he maintained, could not be done with water because the attempt made one disgusted with himself." (From: Alan M. Turing: Centenary Edition, by Sara Turing).
@BartekBanachewicz weird, doesn't seem to work
@JerryCoffin hihi
(still 0.1.4.2)
I'll try checking some more things
you got haksel'd
@milleniumbug you can directly go cabal install Hate-0.1.4.3
22:07
you can also your face
user1804599
> Cologne mayor advised to keep arm's length to public debate
in the event of a total fuckup, you can download the .tar.gz directly...
user1804599
> There will be a code of conduct for Henriette Reker, the mayor of Cologne, which states that she must make at least an arm's length from the public debate about the assaults on the station during New Year's Eve.
hmmm, my version of base is too low, need to upgrade
@milleniumbug woah woah, that means your compiler is too old
what version are you on?
22:09
@BartekBanachewicz Hello.
@JerryCoffin that was supposed to be a chuckle
now sure now, it may be quite old, it's whatever Fedora 23 provides
@milleniumbug hate specifies 4.6 as lower bound which is ooooold
@milleniumbug $ ghc --version
@BartekBanachewicz Ah, so. :-)
> The Glorious Glasgow Haskell Compilation System, version 7.8.4
22:10
@milleniumbug wut
that's base 4.8.
post the log from build
ah, Hate depends on hpp, which fails to install
@BartekBanachewicz will do in a moment
@milleniumbug aaah shit
I remember bumping the Circle CI version to 7.10
might be a dependency problem. Ouch.
Yay, I finally closed another issue /o/
I haven't really put too much effort into checking the 7.8 build, I should've popped up another set on circle
22:14
@Morwenn Link or it didn't happen
@milleniumbug the ironic thing is that I don't need hpp at all
your face didnt happen
I only need it for GLUtil
eh damn you @acowley
hmmm, ok
how bad would it be for you to update the GHC?
From your side this is the easiest way to get it to work. I might add 7.8 support but that requires a bit of work on CI and in configs I suppose
alternatively
22:16
It's not in the Fedora's repos, so either I'll wait or I'll build from source
ah that sucks
@набиячлэвэлиь Er, if you want... It was one of the oldest ones. Took some time because of design considerations.
@milleniumbug if you can clone Hate directly, you can just remove hpp from dependencies
ok, will try
@milleniumbug replace it with cpphs
so that you have
build-depends:       base >= 4.6 && < 4.9,
                     GLFW-b >= 1.4 && < 1.4.7,
                     cpphs,
                     GLUtil >= 0.7,
                     ...
I want to say it's not my fault but I should've thought about it
22:27
> I don't plan on teaching Spring 2016
Everybody and their mother not teaching their usual courses come Spring 2016
JFC.
dat moment when u so nerd
even profs are less of a nerd than u
Guess I'll just have to go with some of the boring crap classes.
yeah
@ThePhD For example?
22:37
well crap
CircleCI doesn't support build matrices
@JohanLarsson That. About sums up my gripes with stupid StyleCop policies. It's degrading C# into COBOL, and absolving the programmer of his responsibility for intelligent code organization
this kinda sucks
I don't want to move back to travis
travis does
@Morwenn None of the Ruby/Using Linux/Javascript/etc. introductory programmer courses are being taught. The sections on Korea are not being taught. 2 of the East Asian Studies courses (Reading the Early City in Modern Japan) that would have been taught were canceled by the PhD students teaching them (go figure the new blood who brings something new and fun to the curriculum decide not to do their classes).
And for some reason, the registrar told me I was denied entry into Bjarne's class by the instructor.
@sehe has little to do with stylecop imo, pretty sure stylecop would scream if he saw it.
22:38
Which doesn't make sense, because the same day I got a confirmation e-mail from the CS advising department that I was in. ?????/
@JohanLarsson Depends 100% on the config. Also, not really about the method of enforcing. The downsides stay
So if that falls through, I can take...
@ThePhD Wat.
that's bureaucracy for you
.... Intro to Databases.
.... Intro to Databaaseeessss Zzzzzzzzzzzzz.
22:39
Oh, uh...
@sehe stylecop has don't use regions as default iirc, at least the roslyn analyzer
@ThePhD I hope you're just pretending this time
I always found database boring.
@JohanLarsson These aren't regions, right. It's member ordering AFAICT
if the alternative is Bjarne Stroustrup's class..., sure
22:41
> As a precaution, Linode has expired Linode Manager passwords. You will be prompted to set a new password the next time you log into <https://manager.linode.com/>. If you haven't already done so, you should do this now.
@sehe you are right but it is some kind of template they have used for adding regions
Whoa what ^
@sehe Databases are kinda Zzzz. I haven't been able to get into learning about them, though at some point I feel like I will due to how necessary they are for everything in existence.
what kind of college is that, we had databases in the third semester
22:41
To be honest, though, I feel like I could get better acquainted with a database doing something like a hobby project.
@Morwenn I think a well-taught class on relational theory might be interesting (but it would definitely have to be taught well to keep from degenerating).
vect-opengl refuses to build on newest OpenGL
god damn it
Linode Resets User Passwords Following Database Breach | The State of Security #Linode #Data #Breach #Passwords http://buff.ly/1VJxv5a
@JerryCoffin Be it practical or theorical classes, I never liked databese classes. And I still stay away from databases as long as I can :/
22:43
Is there a PDO like library for C++
@Morwenn Fair enough--to each her/his own.
@JohanLarsson So yeah, that's epically counter productive IMO
yeah, nasty, I have to watch it as I step tonight
kills ctrl + m + o, making reading the code much harder
just felt like whining so I came here :)
Sometimes I wonder what I really like in programming. Sometimes the answer is « nothing » and I never really liked working in the field either. On the other hand, I'm worthless when it comes to everything else, and there aren't many things that manage to keep me interested. So... well, having a job in programming is the lesser evil.
Ugh, I can't English my brain tonight.
I... don't know what to say
Ell
Ell
22:46
@Morwenn I like programming because it is challenging
I don't like challenge when it actually means something.
I guess I've entered the dependency hell
maybe I should've used stackage
22:48
new bindings to opengl were recently released and they fucked up a lot of things
I guess I'm gonna drop backwards compatibility soon and just move forward
I can't afford supporting every compiler and library back to 2010
@milleniumbug I believe PDO was originally kind of an imitation of Microsoft's ADO (though AFAIK, ADO isn't portable). I'd usually prefer something like SOCI or DTL though.
@milleniumbug uguguuguugu i.imgur.com/TLmnlhO.jpg
woah Sven started the Haskell OpenGL binding 11 years ago
@milleniumbug are you into cartoons?
feels like eternity
22:51
> The SOCI library is distributed under the terms of the Boost Software License.
@JohanLarsson yeah he's a big fan of sailor moon
@JohanLarsson I watch anime if that's what you're asking
I'm sold.
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn what would you do for a living if you could do anything?
he also likes cory in the house
22:52
@Ell Nothing.
a lot
Ell
Ell
@Morwenn what if you had to do something?
I mean, what real life career would you go into
or just a real life job
@milleniumbug ok, that was what I tried to ask. Didn't think you were a fan for some reason.
I can't see any I'm really interested into. I guess I'm just immature and I simpy don't like the idea of having a job or people having expectations.
You and every other person on the planet.
sbi
sbi
22:54
Welcome to the Lounge. Have a seat, watch a bit, and read the rules before you post yourself.
14
Ell
Ell
I would love to run a business of some kind^tm
But you know what's more important than the pressure of having a job or people having expectations?
sbi
sbi
Good evening. Can someone pin that please?
Eating food.
And living in a house.
sbi
sbi
Thanks!
22:54
@sbi Nope. Sorry. Can't do it.
@Ell I can pay you if you help me maintain Hate :S
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin :)
dependencies are a bitch
@Ell I wouldn't ^^"
@JerryCoffin SOCI's website seems more presentable than the DTL's one, so I'm going to try it first (also the tested list of compilers on DTL's website includes MSVC 6.0 - is anybody updating this page?)
sbi
sbi
22:55
And, @Puppy, did you notice you became the owner of yet another C++ room?
:)
yes
sbi
sbi
That guy's on a mission!
he'll fail like all the others
Ell
Ell
@BartekBanachewicz nah I don't think I'm qualified really
@ThePhD Of course. And one of the reasons I'm still in the programming field is probably because it's well paid compared to anything I would be able and willing to do.
Ell
Ell
22:56
I will have a look after exams though
sbi
sbi
@Puppy Worse, I'm afraid.
how so?
sbi
sbi
He's talking about nothing but "unprovoked abuse". Kinda kills the mood in a C++ room.
Confirming that this is Real Paul™. — Andrew B 2 hours ago
Apparently Server Fault haz celeb
sbi
sbi
Too bad, I really would have liked a C++ room for newbies to point at and say "ask your Q there".
22:58
@sbi why do you need a chatroom for that given we have main?
@sbi It's notable how much provoked abuse he's willing to tolerate. I've never seen someone care about who started it so much
oookay pushed the constrained version to CI
let's see whether it'll build
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz Because it would take some strain from the lounge to function as a C++ helpdesk if you could point at some other room.
I don't believe there's any strain really
sbi
sbi
@Puppy Um. I fail to parse this. (Probably my fault. I'M tired.)
22:59
most of the people come here with basic problems

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