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22:00
@AngryShoe you need to start at the beginning and follow the data until the end
Xeo
Xeo
@AngryShoe UE actually has a Math Expression node for stuff like that
that's about how you read it
@AngryShoe That looks like an AST dump of that expr, tbh
@AlexM. except that following that diagram means following the path of evaluation, not the path that your mind has learn to read
@Borgleader yes it indeed is
22:01
I read "exp (-x) * sin (x + 4.78852)" from left to right
@AngryShoe you need the path of evaluation to see the changes to the input's state over time
that's the point of dataflow programming
What I'm saying is that sometimes (maybe most of the time) that's not what the best way to visualize the function is
@Borgleader any more critics ? :D
Bwuh. I don't want to close all of my other things just to run some tests.
As in exp (-x) * sin (x + 4.78852) you don't need to know in what order the evaluation happens, you just know what it means
22:02
input ----> [+2] ----> [*5] can at most be linked to something like...
Will running this in a VM isolate the CPU usage enough to give me more reliable results?
(+2) . (*5) $ input
@ThePhD Will your face
@ThePhD Maybe, probably not
and also no
running it in a VM will just make things even worse.
22:03
You're just gonna have more overhead
no, thanks :)
@набиячлэвэлиь Exactly
@AngryShoe not sure I understand
what do you mean?
q_q
I need to find a dedicated slave machine
@AlexM. No side-effects, undefined order of evaluation is v0v
22:04
to run this kind of stuff for me.
Maybe my school has things like this set aside from graduate students.
@AlexM. That the line exp (-x) * sin (x + 4.78852) tells you everything you need to know without having you know what the order of evaluation is
Where I can just run benchmarks all day.
but the fact that those things can happen in any order is immediately visible from the diagram
22:04
Is (-x) being executed before passing it to exp? Yes, but who cares?
What matters is the whole expression, not the order in which each term is evaluated
yes, text is more condensed than diagrams
is this what you want to say?
No
What I'm claiming is that the order of evaluation of terms is not necessary to understand the function
If you want to debug, then yes, maybe it's useful
But for writing and reading programs it's often not
hey guys.. what does this result in?
volatile int a = 3; int main() { return a * a; }
UB.
@AngryShoe but... it's how it was written
user1804599
22:06
UB.
I mean how else would you multiply a number
@AlexM. What is?
dunno, it's outside of a function, so it may be initialized to zero
if not by inputting it to the * function
but the volatile is complicating stuff
22:07
@AlexM. What?
Ell
Ell
@JohannesSchaub-litb ub
lookup I changed it
Ell
Ell
9
how's the affairs now?
22:07
@AngryShoe I don't understand what you're trying to tell me I see absolutely nothing wrong with that function
it's a properly implemented function in a dataflow style
Who said it isn't?
Ell
Ell
@JohannesSchaub-litb it returns 9. Right?
user1804599
@JohannesSchaub-litb 9
why do you keep saying it doesn't fit into a completely different style
of course it doesn't fit
I'm going against the dataflow style for writing and reading code in general
22:08
I'd say 9, but given that litb is asking this, I expect a trick question
it's a whole nother idea
user1804599
Unless somebody reassigns a before main runs.
yes I am going against it too
@AlexM. What?
Never said it doesn't fit into another style? What style?
@milleniumbug It's such a simple program, what could possibly go wrong?
22:08
I already told you that the whole visual thing for programmers who use text languages will never catch on
because it's slow and cumbersome
Ell
Ell
@milleniumbug I expect that also
@AngryShoe whats dis
Ell
Ell
but I still think it's 9
WHY DO YOU KEEP ARGUING WITH ME
22:09
nothing jefrey, just drop it
Don't be angry
we say the same thing
but for some reason we don't think we do
@Xeo ahahah one piece
@ThePhD litb. litb could possibly go wrong.
@AlexM. I have no idea what you are saying, but I'm going to trust you on this
22:10
the only thing that I immediately like about those diagrams
@JohannesSchaub-litb is this the full program
is that you can see at a glance what branches can be done in parallel
hint: it's not 9
because "order does not matter"
all it matters is for the n branches to end eventually before their destination starts processing and sending data forwards
@AlexM. Do you think that it's useful for beginners?
imagine you're a device register and listen on reads of that volatile variable!
@Borgleader what does so means ? super operator ?
morning
22:12
@JohannesSchaub-litb There were no such constraints given in the presentation of the program.
@AngryShoe no, but it's useful for the non-programmers who use visual languages
@Puppy the constraint does not affect the answer :p
and it's simpler for a compiler to use this info to parallelize I'd assume
well, it certainly does.
well it's not a constraint
it's a help to find the answer :p
22:13
obviously the hardware can do whatever random shit it wants with a volatile variable.
the sample could order pizza, launch the nukes, or send demons flying out of your nose.
but that's not useful and has fuck all to do with the posted program.
right! so this is a hint as to why the result might not be 9. perhaps undefined? unspecified? implementation defined? huh, perhaps defective?
@AngryShoe it also helps if you think that people normally build very specialized pieces of software with this that solve one particular problem
that's the speciality here!
22:14
so you don't use these visual languages to build a complex desktop application that does lots of stuff
no.
Ell
Ell
int main() {
    std::this_thread::sleep_for(2s);
    return 100;
}
obviously the behaviour is implementation defined.
Ell
Ell
Here's a question - what does this programme return?
you've got this visual script that, say, interfaces with some hardware device to gather and process info, and maybe output it or just act as a sub-script to be called from something else
22:15
but since you don't say what the implementation is, it's impossible for anybody to say what the answer is.
@Ell What's the catch?
the question is defective.
Ell
Ell
@AngryShoe incorrect! Another programme kills it before it can return! I trick'd ya ;)
closed as not a real question.
@Ell 100 or an implementation-defined value returned when throwing an exception, that makes it all the way up to above ::main()
22:16
@Ell How is my question incorrect? :/
Also you asked what this program does, not what happens when you run it
user1804599
@Ell an exit status
Ell
Ell
@AngryShoe I was imitating litb really
That's... Silly
22:17
@Ell I see
@sehe you're too interested in my chatting :)
Not at all
Quite the contrary
@sehe that font rendering is so crispy
Is that a mac, @sehe?
Linux/chrome, defaults
then don't post images of transcripts with me highlighted :)
that is silly
22:20
No, you are
@Ell lame
better do something original
@Puppy the solution is: the program is undefined
anything can happen, there're no guarantees
Ell
Ell
@JohannesSchaub-litb it is not undefined, surely
it is defined to read a twice
hmm
apparently Wide has 2.4% PHP code
Ell
Ell
it is not allowed to ignore a completely and return 0 which would happen if it were undefined, right?
@Ell The hardware can perform basically completely arbitrary side effects on r/w of volatile variables. There's no guarantee that the value you get out has anything to do with the value you put in.
22:22
puppy why did you name your language wide
don't remember
@Prismatic In name of his mum
savage
I've been working on it for so damn long, I've forgotten quite a few things about its genesis
@Ell you have the soluion now. please don't hate me for it. just don't write code like that, and you won't run into the UB
22:23
@JohannesSchaub-litb but... why?
Ell
Ell
@JohannesSchaub-litb I'm not hating, I'm genuinely just challenging you in order to learn :P
@Puppy right, but that doesn't make it undefined
@milleniumbug because accessing a volatile glvalue is a side effect
@Ell Well, it pretty much does, since the Standard does not define the effects that the hardware may perform.
Ell
Ell
It's not about the hardware though is it, it's about the c++ abstract machine or w/e it's called
@JohannesSchaub-litb well, it is
Ell
Ell
22:24
does c++ define what any hardware does?
right, but volatile is effectively a direct hardware invocation that is not defined in terms of the abstract machine.
volatile is an abstract machine escape hatch- that's its function.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: Forwards unto the breach [c++] [c++11] [c++14] [c++-faq]
apparently the committee thought they won't let software programmers cause too much headache for hardware designers by firing up unsequenced events for volatile objects
Ell
Ell
@Puppy I don't think that makes it undefined
it certainly does.
Ell
Ell
are you suggesting every programme which uses volatile has undefined behaviour?
22:26
strictly speaking, they have implementation-defined behaviour, which is not undefined behaviour but is not really any more defined, if you get my drift.
@Ell Well, what you think about it doesn't influence the behaviour
also, it's "program". "programme" is for television.
Ell
Ell
@Puppy wut. nah
yes.
Ell
Ell
programme is for software also
22:27
I got asked what volatile was used for in an interview once
@Puppy Well, in BrE, it's all "programme"
But "program" is an AmE term imported into BrE for IT purposes
I said something about it being a hint to the compiler that the variable might change in a nonobvious way or sth
> British English uses programme unless referring to computers
@Ell my sample is undefined for the same reason that "++i * ++i" is undefined
Ell
Ell
22:28
well I use programme so live with it :P
it just happens to have two unsequenced side effects to the same object
I don't think I've ever used the volatile keyword
user1804599
@Ell s/live/plonk/
really, you should not use volatile by and large.
user1804599
I used volatile recently.
22:29
@Ell It's so irritating :)
I know some people use it in threaded while loops as an exit flag but thats what atomic is for
Ell
Ell
@Puppy I get your drift, but I think it's an important distinction
the only real use is communicating directly with hardware, which is not something most programs need to do.
user1804599
No.
Ell
Ell
22:29
@AngryShoe write a userscript
user1804599
Secure string types, which want to keep data as shortly in memory as possible, can benefit from volatile.
@Ell Impossible
@Ell I agree that UB and IB are not the same thing; however, I think that litb used it in a looser way, as in, the Standard not does not define how the program behaves.
@MadameElyse That is direct hardware communication, effectively, since you're trying to communicate to the memory.
user1804599
YES MOTHERFUCKER
user1804599
also mlock master race
22:30
It's very hard for a program to get the context of the message right
user1804599
and ENCRYPTION
Ell
Ell
@Puppy okay, fair point
in effect, every function template that accepts "T &t" and contains "t * t" is dangerous
and should constraint T to never contain the volatile qualifier
the behaviour is undefined when it's not defined
nah, that's complete overkill
22:31
or... you can blame the guy who introduced volatile in the code and punch him
most of the time volatile simply has no effect.
and in the few cases where it does, you might expect the guy using it does so in a responsible fashion.
after all, it may turn out that t * t is exactly what he needs.
user1804599
use Java
user1804599
it has well-defined order of evaluation
user1804599
and lacks volatile
user1804599
win–win!
22:35
damn, I love you git clean -fxd
ah whoops I git cleaned something I should not have git cleaned
Ell
Ell
lol
oh well
Xeo
Xeo
Btw, just as an aside, a visual programming "script" can be come very ugly very quickly. Here's a random choice of our blueprints: imgur.com/a/PlyaS
And I don't think those are the worst we have
lol
OTOH these look visually appealing
22:39
they look like a fuckin' mess
@Xeo but theyre all aligned so neatly, and the colors :3
Xeo
Xeo
The middle one I made. The other guys don't bother properly organizing theirs with comments and helper functions :(
who am i kidding, thats a mess
user1804599
Make them in Minecraft.
@Xeo hahahah over 200k for the kill / save animals war :)
22:40
they look so cool
Xeo
Xeo
We're joking that blueprint complexity is measured in accumulated distance for node connections
Not all that much of a joke though, tbh...
unlike your face
Ell
Ell
blenders node editor is nice
unlike your face
22:44
how would you say working with UE4 is @Xeo
Also do you really have to make all those blueprints? Can't you just write all that in c++ (or does that end up being even more painful)
user1804599
oh boy
user1804599
some guys of 13 and 14 years old threw a bag in a train station and shouted allahu akbar and everybody panicked. it was a prank
user1804599
luckily there wasn't some cop around to shoot them directly in the head as that'd have caused a shitstorm about how bad cops are
Lol that age correction
I was thinking, okay stupid 13 y o kid I get... but a 40 year old? lol
user1804599
and in that case, the guy better not be black or muslim either, because then the shitstorm would be about how bad and racist cops are
Xeo
Xeo
22:49
@Prismatic The UI part is made nicer with blueprints
user1804599
you know what's funny
user1804599
one day a guy found a chicken egg and decided to put it in boiling water for a while and eat it
very funny :)
lol
@MadameElyse you know whats even funnier? people discovered how to make bread
user1804599
:p :p :p
22:51
no no , a wheel :D
user1804599
a lambda calculus
user1804599
Lambda calculus was the greatest discovery of all time.
@MadameElyse your python humor :P
user1804599
???
22:52
math humor
lol
@MadameElyse People over tens of thousands of years may get bored
Ell
Ell
I like this
it's very disorienting though
@Borgleader Don't you want to be an adult anymore?
Ell
Ell
@MadameElyse what about lisp?
user1804599
Lisp was an invention.
22:53
@Ell thats some nice water
user1804599
It was basically an adaption of lambda calculus for computers to execute.
user1804599
With side-effects.
@Morwenn it sucks, i have to work and pay bills :(
Lisp is smart but it is not very standardized and because of that it has a low adoption rate
@Borgleader The part that I find fun is the « not anymore ». I don't think I ever wished to be an adult.
user1804599
22:54
Lisp has a low adoption rate because it's fucking old and COBOL and Fortran were more popular at the time.
also)))))
user1804599
S-expression COBOL.
user1804599
(identification-division
  (program-id hello-world))

(data-division
  (working-storage-section
    (01 name (pic (x 100)))))

(procedure-division
  (accept name)
  (display "Hello, " name "!"))
user1804599
that'd be awesome
Ell
Ell
@Borgleader yeah it is
I want to make water
2
just top down ocean water. Like in an rts
maybe I can learn to use shadertoy
user1804599
22:58
@Ell Exploit oxidation of hydrogen.
Ell
Ell
they don't have any cloud like noise textures :(
i did do water rendering back in uni, ive tried finding the blog we based our implementation based on, but i havent been able to since here it is
I learned lisp and it is pretty awesome but I have two reasons for not using it
1. it is not well supported on many platforms and it does not have many libraries
2. I am a lot more low level OS and VM level, so it is too high level for me

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