@DeadMG it would have to generate a different non-inlinable function for different parameters it was given, I've never heard of a compiler doing such a thing. (not saying it's impossible)
@jalf now that I look at it, it's obvious that Mystical figured it out exactly. VC++ baseline test is mov/ret. GCC's baseline test is push/movl/movl/movl/popl/ret
@RMartinhoFernandes Mmh, making invoke return empty_type instead of void apparently turns optional<int> into a non-copyable type. Or GCC is going mad again.
@RMartinhoFernandes Indeedy. I get an ICE whether or not the concept checking is here, but apparently GCC decides to trip the checks when they're here.
> Rail travel at high speeds is not possible because passengers, unable to breathe, would die of asphyxia. — Dionysius Lardner, Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy at University College, London, and author of The Steam Engine Explained and Illustrated, 1830s
@DeadMG You're focused too much on rational thought, which is impossible without modern civilization. You're stuck in the past, no one gets together on the massive scale like Babylon and Rome without religion. Therefore, no one's freed up to think so much.
@Xaade They got together on a massive scale because it was the most efficient way to run their lives and conquer their neighbours. Religion is neither required nor beneficial for such things.
@Mysticial Alright, when I switched VC++ back to stdcall, it now has similar results as G++. So, half solved. Now: why are all the tests faster than the baseline? ASM for VC++ and G++ baselines and Jalf's here. Jalf's is reliably 20s, where baseline is 21s.
@DeadMG You miss the point. Rome wouldn't be as powerful without so many people. Rome wouldn't have so many people if they didn't absorb their religions.
when it comes right down to it, people will go where the money is, and a place that is rich from not wasting their lives on temples and statues and priests is going to attract a great population
@DeadMG Maybe if everyone miraculously gave up their religions in a wash of tolerance that's void of the racism and other divisive factors we have today.... oops.... nope.
just because there did exist at one time a civilization that did not allow religion to become a serious problem for them does not mean that they would not have been more effective without it
@Xaade Christianity started as an underground movement that was perceived as a threat to authorities. However, later it was declared the official religion of Rome and then it started being used as a tool for oppression.
@RMartinhoFernandes Of course not. But imbalances persist through all human societies. Their public health systems were easily the best in the world at the time.
@Xaade Sure you can share money. Look at, say, the Romans. They spent their money on public health systems that enabled their occupants to be economically active for longer by reducing the effects of various diseases. And sharing religion isn't profitable, sharing money via investments and lending can be.
@DeadMG Isn't that the sort of thing the CoE likes to jump on and rub off in their faces "hey, that's all right by ours! come visit your local church! we'll be waiting"? Like ordination of women? (Completely OT as an aside of course.)
@Xaade Not really. Happier people are more economically productive, and the cost of a ceremony is pretty trivial, unless you choose to go above the legal minimum.
@TonyTheLion Dark blue is marriage, light blue is union or similar. As you can see that's not so many for marriage (although IIRC Denmark has legislated for it very recently).
actually I think that's inaccurate. IIRC, it is that there used to be a law forbidding the church from marrying homosexuals (although as I said, civil marriage was legal), and they removed that limitation, so it's now up to the church what they want to do
But not 100% sure, tbh. I didn't follow it too closelyu
IMHO religion isn't evil by itself or even a bad thing, but it can be put to uses which are definitely not in the best interests of it's followers/believers. Religion can be and has been misused as a way to control people and to stir war and conflict between groups of people
but as @LucDanton says, yes, we're not an entirely secular country. The church has a special status, and so it kind of does make sense to legislate what they have to do/can't do
@DeadMG They're allowed to discriminate based on faith, no? If you're homosexual, you can't be of Catholic faith. Or something like that. I'm not an expert.
but I agree with you, as long as civil marriage is allowed, and confers the same rights as christian marriage, other institutions such as the church should be able to do whatever they please
@TonyTheLion why? How about Hitler's beliefs that jews are inferior and should be gassed? Plenty of people have the nastiest, most demeaning beliefs, and I don't feel obligated to respect them
Or rather, I respect their right to have that belief, but I also strongly believe that I have the right to confront them with my beliefs, and try to change their minds
@DeadMG You just eliminated equal rights by forcing the Church to perform a religious ceremony for people it doesn't want to. What's next, forcing a person to invite people they don't like over for tea and biscuits.
@jalf you're taking a very extreme example here, and I"m talking about religious beliefs, perhaps I wasn't being specific enough. Hitler's "beliefs" you mention aren't considered religious afaik
@jalf I was trying to put out a sensible idea, but it seems you can't do that on the internet because someone is always going to make mock of it somehow :(
@DeadMG If I offer tea and cookies to particular people of my own discretion, will you force me to offer it to people I don't like. A church is a private affair, like a person's home.
@DeadMG Ok, you just activated my trap card. "You have to respect how they believe" != "Forcing a church to perform a ceremony not required for legal marriage status".
@jalf Which reminds me that I've been surprised by the reaction of people to laïcité, i.e. the French brand of secularism. Apparently to some secular people it's "too much", but I haven't exactly pinned down too much of what exactly.
@TonyTheLion Sure. My point (and my belief/opinion) is just that beliefs are never sacred or taboo. If you want to hold a belief, you should be willing/prepared to allow others to test it. If, after being confronted with my arguments, you haven't changed your mind, that's perfectly fine, and I respect your right to stick with your belief. As long as you heard my arguments against, and considered them fairly and honestly
@DeadMG Ok, you just activated my trap card. "You have to respect how they believe" != "Forcing a church to perform a ceremony not required for legal marriage status".
if you offer that ceremony to the public, then you should be prepared to deal with the public, and deal with the fact that some of the public are homosexual.
@Xaade No, I'm disrespecting the beliefs that say "You should roflstomp on other people".