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03:05
Question
If you have a templated free function
how do you get a function pointer to it?
Or a templated static function
Right now &arf<T> isn't quite working.
whatever happened to blend_pd losing throughput at every generation o.o
> What you don't want is a new release of a compiler breaking your code because you accidentally did things that would trigger undefined behavior and the previous compilers happily accepted that code without warning you.
@ThePhD That should work.
ah yes, accidental undefined behavior
@StackedCrooked Weeeelp.
Guess VC++ is being a shit again. \o/
03:07
Is it overloaded?
I don't think so
how difficult to avoid
I use that kind of stuff with 2013 and it works
it's you who sucks, probably
It's the only one of its type.
template <typename T>
int arf ( lua_State* L ) {} // nope?
> request->dispatcher = &::detail::dispatcher<typename std::decay<Args>::type...>;
compiles with 2013
03:09
Is that a free function or a static function inside of a class?
free function
Mine is a static function on a class... maybe that's the difference.
Let's find out...
function is innocent
You need to use &classname::func<T>
good one
function got framed for no reason
good thing it had arguments to defend itself
etc etc
03:11
@HubertApplebaum I use it all the time cus it cracks me up every time
@HubertApplebaum lol
@StackedCrooked I did that for the one in the class, yes, and it still didn't work.
@HubertApplebaum is that what they want to do in Uganda
But if I move it to a detail namespace and then reference it, it works.
I wonder if that's a standard thing or VC++ being the dumbs.
@LucDanton almost, they use the pend version
at this point I assume it's VC++ being the dumbs before I blame the standard
03:13
dark
I go "augh VC++ you've done it again" and then I go to the standard so I know exactly what to be angry about.
really I've learned a few edge cases that way
and other oddities
I did not call comments being non-nesting, though I probably should have, parsing simplicity and all that
Interesting, the way I’ve written the concept means that Invokable<void(int, int), int, int> doesn’t hold whereas e.g. Invokable<void(*)(int, int), int, int> does
guys
I think I need a singleton
will it be mutable
@HubertApplebaum No, Hubert. you are the singletons.
03:20
@jaggedSpire yes
@HubertApplebaum you monster
OOC, what for?
some parts of the program need to instantiate new thingy() and all instances of thingy must be registered in a collection somewhere
Or I could overload operator new but that's actually the same issue
oh boy
why do they need to be registered, or is that a state secret?
> note: concept 'Invokable<int (*)(annex::_self&), const annex::_self&>' was not satisfied
is that explanatory enough
03:22
no write an essay
@LucDanton your gf has a weird name
@jaggedSpire it's a requirement. once one of those objects is created they live until end of process.
it’s really weird, before I settled on using a function pointer it didn’t substitute the first argument so you had meta-computing gobbledygook (and you couldn’t see the signature)
stop hurting yourself
@jaggedSpire // chapter 0: fuck you
@LucDanton <3
03:24
a whole novel even, as you can tell
Best I can fucking do...
@HubertApplebaum ayy
I don't want to look at the benchmarks for this.
They're probably fucking dismal.
it’s not due to lack of constraints though nod nod wink wink
I don't get it
03:25
me either
anyhoo after all this Nieblerizing/refactoring I’m loving concepts-lite more and more
is that her nickname
or your mistress
cus that code I’ve just constrained used to have no constraints, it would have been too painful to write (and not really helpful to read/review)—now it’s compact, nice, understandable, and useful (c.f. the note above)
@ThePhD you know if you embraced The Way of Catface you'd be able to take this as a wonderful challenge
> and useful
impossible
that’s a lot of goodness
03:33
WHAT ARE SIGNED NUMBERS
WHAT IS HAVING A BRAIN
NOW, I TOO CAN FIND DISCOVER
aw man libstdc++’s std::get<int> etc. is not SFINAE-friendly
I’m guessing that’s because the spec sucks
> Requires: I < sizeof...(Types). The program is ill-formed if I is out of bounds.
oh yeah even std::get<0> etc. is mean like that
what to do, what to do
for one, write an efficient meta::find I guess
iirc we have an SO question on the topic but no clue how I’m going to find it again :|
03:49
@ThePhD I just read that as Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody.
Is there a way I can write my own small_callback which is just (funptr, void* userdata) that is convertible-to from a lambda, à la std::function?
@HubertApplebaum yes, you can write your own type-erasure
std::function uses no special trick, it can be implemented by 100% legit library user-code
idk what is the magic between lambda-type -> std::function
if you want to learn I can dig up an answer of Xeo’s, which is the reference on type erusure IIRC
89
Q: Type erasure techniques

Xeo(With type erasure, I mean hiding some or all of the type information regarding a class, somewhat like Boost.Any.) I want to get a hold of type erasure techniques, while also sharing those, which I know of. My hope is kinda to find some crazy technique that somebody thought of in his/her darkest ...

it’s a question actually
oh I should probably add an answer
@HubertApplebaum I haven’t checked that particular Q&A in a while, and the answers seems kinda… lacking in quality—ask me if you have any doubt
as luck so happens, I’ve been re-factoring my type-erasure library rn so
> That’s quite a lot of boiler palate
04:14
eh cba to add/edit an answer
it’s a really noisy Q&A
@HubertApplebaum did learning killed you
04:31
Old Man passed on.
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Have you seen channel9.msdn.com/Events/GoingNative/2013/…?
user406009
I think that covers the technique quite well.
@LucDanton No I went to buy a sammich and sushis
lol
exactly the opposite then
un sanlouiche au brie même
pasque oui ça existe ici
04:43
la classe
But yeah I think I get it now
communions ensemble, jvais croquer un bout de Ossau-Iraty de mon côté
gloire à toi
my keyboard is gonna stink of fish
chew with your teeth ffs
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Never eat over a keyboard.
user406009
04:45
It's like the most important rule of keeping things sanitary.
You mean even more important than "never shit over a keyboard"
user406009
I guess if you have one of these, it's fine to shit while being at your keyboard:
user406009
user406009
Also, there is no point in having obvious rules. Who would ever shit on a keyboard?
That looks like a giant upside down hat in the chair ...
user406009
04:49
It just doesn't make any sense at all.
Also you can always use the keyboard on your mobile while in the toilet
user406009
I mean, I guess if you had a really bad case of the shits and you were in a room consisting only of keyboards ....
@Lalaland I wouldn't, but apparently some people do, otherwise how would you explain this?
Why wasting 15 mins a day when you can still talking trash on the internet while doing your daily business :x
user406009
@HubertApplebaum That looks like a student assignment.
user406009
04:52
And shitty student assignments are somewhat OK as the student might not have learned what a std::vector is.
@HubertApplebaum jesus christ what the fuck
user406009
(Although, some of those functions get too nested)
> Venezuela: oil price increases by 6000%
lol
user406009
Also, Cicada, can I ask you for a bit of help? I need to run a bunch of breadth first searches in parallel. Have you ever tried doing something like that on a GPU?
user406009
The graphs for each BFS are really small, I just need to run a ton of them.
04:57
graph searches are fine as long as you don't branch
otherwise RIP
can you describe your problem in more detail
mmh bikeshed for find_in_pack<needle, a0, a1, a2> and find_in_sequence<needle, list<a0, a1, a2>> (i.e. I want both metafunctions, but what to call them respectively)
Poor Lala :D
Also, I slept weird and now my back hurts, dafuq.
@ElimGarak you’re getting old
@LucDanton No bikeshed needed, those seem fine already
@HubertApplebaum what to call the same thing, but lookup by index instead of by type
nth_in_pack/nth_in_sequence?
04:59
Why does stackoverflow downvote 'easy' questions?
perfect!
wow that was an easy bikeshed
@notorious stackoverflow is not alive, it doesn't downvote
the in_foo bit is very verbose for my tastes, I’ll need to have a think
@notorious Why do guys despise 'easy' girls?
@ElimGarak you know what i mean. the users constantly downvote questions that they think are too simple
user406009
05:00
@HubertApplebaum I am simply trying to calculate the number of paths between two nodes in a graph. The graphs are very small, of size 64. Each node has 6 neighbors. The basic algorithm is ideone.com/VUEGVw
@notorious because it's lack of research
user406009
I am basically trying to compute the number of possible paths to every other node.
@Lalaland coliru pls, ideone blocked
presumably because if they're easy they've either been asked before or are solvable by trivial research effort.
05:01
@HubertApplebaum okay, fair enough
and really if they've been asked before they're solvable with trivial research effort
happened to me lol, i'm a newb at programming. i don't even know how I got 20 rep. But just watch me four years from now, i'll be better than all yall
user406009
It's a very simple BFS.
05:02
I'll be dead in 4 years son, am already approaching 88 ys
@notorious there's only one true noob here
@Nooble lol
@Lalaland lemme see
@notorious Really? You have 18 rep, not 20, dude.
i have 20
05:04
Guys, how much rep does he have?
it didn't update yet i guess.
@ElimGarak 19
@ElimGarak Savage.
but you need 20 to access chat
user406009
I mean I guess I could use the non-branching non-BFS algorithm for computing the number of possible paths. But that one is O(n^2) instead of O(n).
05:04
@notorious You're a dead man walking.
2spooky etc.
it takes a while for rep change to spread here
@Nooble yep. one mistake in asking a dumb question, or giving a dumb answer and i'm practically 'banned' from this site.
But no worries, give me my 4 years and i'll be at 100k rep
@notorious To be fair... that one was pretty easy to solve.
lol now it is
05:06
@Lalaland Sometimes it's worth doing more computation
@notorious Yeah, you'll be 4 times the man @LucDanton is.
Surprisingly on GPU sometimes doing more work goes faster
@ElimGarak How can someone plonk @Borgleader four times?
But am thinking so wait
@HubertApplebaum @lucDanton won't have a reason to visit this site once I start my mission to 100k
05:07
FWIS it should be parallelizable without too much effort tbh
It already looks quite nice
index for packs, index_in for sequences; and nth/nth_in
The branching is minimal
index_of would be nicer but index_of_in is awful
eh Python does use .index() after all
user406009
@HubertApplebaum I guess that's considered "minimal"?
Well it's not "real branching"
user406009
05:09
Hmm, I guess I'll just have to break down, code it and see.
Also I'm p sure I've read a paper before on that
user406009
I've been able to find papers on fast BFS algorithms for a GPU. The issue is that I need to do a bunch of BFS searches really fast, rather than one large BFS search.
We know cicada has a main sock, but how many mini socks does he have?
one for each toe
So your graph is entirely stored in getTaxaBits?
05:12
You mean that he has a decade of mini socks??
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Nah, every node is a 6 bit variable called history.
oh yeah I already have variant_element (that one modelled after tuple_element of course) and variant_index, so index is nice for consistency
user406009
The graph is sorta implicitly stored by a vector called events.
user406009
Which stores the necessary bit configurations to transfer from one node to another.
user406009
However, each iteration of the BFS will be different because the possible edges depend on both the 6 bits of the node and the getTaxaBits()
05:15
So every node is described by its adjacency bits
Maybe you want to take this to a private room btw
Otherwise people will complain that we're THINKING oh wow
user406009
Eh, I think it's fine. I just got to sit down and try to implement this properly. Then I'll see if I can get anything out of it.
user406009
@HubertApplebaum Thanks for the assistance.
I'm trying to understand your algo
It's a) aptly named and b) well commented hence my ease
@HubertApplebaum eh
user406009
05:18
@HubertApplebaum I guess if you are interested I could explain it in chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/103788/graphs
05:37
You guys ready for the war between government and huge companies?
Google & Apple vs U.S.A. government at the moment.
Round 1
Govt wins
End of round
inb4 google and apple leave U.S.A. offices, moving billion of dollars out of U.S.A. and the government goes bankrupt
not credible
> Google Launches Fresh-Grocery Deliveries
I like when companies believe they can fight the government
it's like bringing piss to a shit fight
"but we have the moneys!"
"it's ok we have the army, police, jails, etc"
lel
and it's 100% legal m8
05:54
uh are variable templates supposed to be sfinae friendly or not
I’m assailed by terrible doubt and can’t think straight atm
c'est le début de ton coming out
they totally aren’t of course, and I guess we’ve never brought that up before since most variable templates (in a TMP context) are of the form is_foo_v i.e. total, either true or false
that’s… interesting
and of course you can only delete functions, heh
what is one to do I wonder
user406009
@ElimGarak Have you heard the recent news about Apple?
@HubertApplebaum serai-je alors assailli de toute autre manière???

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