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05:00
@LucDanton do you mind if I ask your opinion on using something inspired by Andrei Alexandrescu's declarative logic talk in C#?I know I've been asking a lot of questions recently, and you seem to be the one who fields them most frequently. :\
@jaggedSpire I don’t know that talk but sure
on a activé un bidule !
attention aux choses & aux machins
mmmh guild lvl 19 means we have access to the first second level upgrade, i.e. Tavern 2
we’re surprisingly well-supplied on some of the required components for that
05:08
@LucDanton the basic idea was basically specifying cleanup code at the point where it became necessary, and the circumstances under which to use it as part of the function call declaring the cleanup code to execute. (circumstances being success, failure, and scope exit) He did this with uncaught_exceptions based logic in a destructor to avoid try...catch blocks but I'm pretty sure I can't avoid those when dealing with exceptions in C#.
so after copying a file as part of a clean file move operation you would register deletion of the copied file as a failure action if the removal of the original file went badly.
you would lose data
that was my issue too. I just wound up assuming it would only throw an exception from the function call if the file was unable to be removed due to being in a read-only folder or something.
no I mean with your scheme of removing on failure
but actually failure to remove means you keep your data lol
yeah it threw me for a loop for a bit
but the basic idea seems like it could be applied to connections and transactions when dealing with database connections in c#, as an example
ftr I don’t know about C# but in C++ it can pay off to 'invert' the logic
i.e. non-inverted it’s kinda like transaction_type tx = …; // rollback on exception
05:14
so you'd have a utility object with three sets of tasks you could add to, and three functions to execute every task on the list (presently thinking in reverse order)
inverted it’s confirmation_type cnf = …; /* do stuff */ cnf.proceed(); /* only reach that point without exception */
it’s morally the same but you don’t have to deal with the uncaught_exception[s] mess
and after opening a connection, you'd add () => con.Close() to the scope exit list
and with the transaction you'd add commit to the success task list, and rollback to the failure list.
As I am sure a significant majority of this room's users like to probably work on a mac, I must ask: Is it possible to create a virtual environment in OS X? Not exactly a virtual machine, but more like a virtual, isolated environment that you can initiate to install certain stuff, and when done, remove the environment which automatically removes all of that stuff.
@jaggedSpire yeah that can work
Why nobody told me that log n algorithms would suffice better job than n algorithms because 1/2000 is actually a time metric?
05:18
What gave you that impression. .-.
so in the catch block you'd ideally wind up with just cleanupHandler.executeFailure and in the finally you'd have cleanupHandler.executeExit and at the end of the try you'd have cleanupHandler.executeSuccess
@jaggedSpire yeah, or alternatively use IDisposable to hide some of the ugly bits
And with n algorithms we may loop, I don't know, 2000 and waste a second vs log n algorithms that would do 20 loops and maybe execute a hundred times more.
Why, why nobody told me that? Why?
@LucDanton the problem is I don't know how you'd execute catch-specific logic in a using
Why nobody told me "megahertz"?
05:20
@DemCodeLines and here I thought they liked Linux
Why we were like "gigahertz"?, more, plush, slope, plonk, pow.
@jaggedSpire what more information do you have inside finally?
It's all unix!!
@LucDanton in this scenario, just the universal cleanup logic.
so there is no catch-specific logic then
05:22
in the case of a transaction, there could be, though.
More like "SHA256" and then plush, plush, because hash table.
@jaggedSpire in which case I don’t think it’s a crime to stack using + try
I guess Java’s try-with-resources spares you opening a scope here
@LucDanton all right. Thank you.
The using() thing is also a thing.
@nick someone tried to get me to abandon my nick niche today
05:27
@jaggedSpire wat
not true
never give up on you dreams
But, how are they indexed? This opens up a wide new world for me to explore. The "algorithmic© world".
wow is it really snowing in Paris @sla @Rer @Ven
@nick jackSparrow would have been my new name
4
05:28
@VictorLopez what
@HubertApplebaum Inside Java and C# and many other managed languages, deep inside, like, in the most deep bit behind the implementation, there is a log n or n^n algorithm that will perform better than a simple n algorithm.
@jaggedSpire I liked this idea. this nick fits you
but we would miss the jagged spire
@nick you should be on Discord
@VictorLopez Are you on drugs
05:30
gonna sleep now. bye
@bitcode night
13:30 still in bed
night, jack. night all
@nick I'd never change my nick on you, bby
I have spent 100% of the day so far in it.
05:30
@HubertApplebaum why, are you offering
ah, memories
@HubertApplebaum p far gone
@HubertApplebaum haven’t we all
I would guess
@HubertApplebaum Not at all. Think a bit for a second: You have to iterate over 60 000 pixels.
05:31
@jaggedSpire thx u
Well you're going to have to seriously reword if you intend to make sense
that or I am missing context
it's nearing the end of my day and I've only spent about 7 hours in bed
60 000 pixels.
That are base of 2.
OTOH there've been days I got up at 18:00
because rgba each one has 1 byte, so 4 bytes per pixel.
05:32
I was up till 5 and I'm in bed rn so I don't know what percent that is
well only one, really. It was the day I had a party at 18:30, too. :|
@VictorLopez what exactly is it your rambling about
this is irritating me atm
@jaggedSpire lool
nick you wanna grab lunch or sth
05:33
yeah man
@LucDanton really though, thank you for being willing to talk these things out with me.
@HubertApplebaum Why would you iterate over the entire array of pixels with n complexity when you can let the math part from the processor to speed up the thing with pot processing? With 2 pixels of the same color. Using n^n or log n for the loops.
lettuce do the thing
@VictorLopez Well you don't
@nick let's have it in Oola in Sheung Wan they do nice omelettes alright
I'll get a semi shower to be semi clean
OK at what time should I be there
We should right now, re-write the entire thing.
idk say 14h30
Rewrite the entire thing, now. We should.
I know you need some time to get on the train and stuff because pleb
kk
05:36
Vote for *Rewrite the entire thing*.
Vote for *More gigahertz*.
I believe that when this kind of situations happen a good place to go at is the open source repositories.
The performance toolkits, there are some, for benchmark but there are no documents for performance over the thing on itself.
I believe that is upon the compiler.
Who does that? I'll go around, don't wait for me. It may take me years or so.
I need a tag name
for something that's supposed to signify that a type has special semantics and doesn't play nice with the C++ RAII scheme.
@ThePhD #yolomaestro
E.g. a handle or something.
@jaggedSpire struct yolo_tag {} const yolo {}; works for me.
well change the rules after you ask why don't you
maybe NO_RAII_YOU_DINGUS
maybe special.
05:41
oh it's special all right
Oh, my gosh. Is it metaprogramming?
Working name will be yolo until I make a good shed for this bike.
wtf why is the default program for .log files notepad on my laptop
notepad
also my file organization is a mess and I want to clean it up
Woof.
Do compilers have plugins?
05:46
randomly deleting files I don't like the looks of has no way to go wrong
Depends if you compiled them with plugin support
@nick am semi-clean now getting semi-dressed
I don't need all these ntuser.dat files what are they even doing
actually yes I know
Imagine that a compiler would enable the code to be parsed and analyzed and the plugin would understand loops and enable complexity improvements over a defined set of rules, time rules, space, storage and data size rules.
it's an virus
oh, you
delete all shortcuts who needs those
05:51
Not in compiled code but as a syntax, semantic and lexical thing, and then, roll the code back to the compiler.
still not sure what victor is smokin but it's a good one
@nick are you ready
@HubertApplebaum you don't need herb if you're sleep deprived enough.
#lifelessonsfromhighschool
@HubertApplebaum yeah I'm putting on clothes
I'll get you an example. Coliru, give me the power.
All the power!
05:55
DIOS DAME EL PODER
has anyone tried using boost.build?
boost.hallal
as a build system for a project, not for compiling boost, before you snark
well, snark more
05:57
gif me snark power
only thing I can tell you is that I failed at building boost 1.60 with vc14 yesterday
@nick okay. Just be sure to eat no energy source larger than your head.
so I built boost.build with vc12 and then used that built boost.build to build the rest of boost with vc14 :lol:
@HubertApplebaum what a coincidence, I'm building boost 1.60 with mingw g++ today
@jaggedSpire will keep this in mind ty
05:58
@HubertApplebaum :|
and you did it all by yourself, pulling yourself up by the whatchamicallits
@jaggedSpire I thought you only msvc
~VC++~
@nick only at work
and I do C# at work for now so I am free
@LucDanton all of it
free of MSVC, oh glory be!
05:59
oh nice
next step is jabbascript I predict
@nick yeah they've made me do some javascript
apparently the whole c++ developer thing just screams "enjoys dynamic typing"
that's kinky
eh, could be winforms
eh could be cancer
actually it is winforms I spent days this week trying to get text boxes to flow
why won't they flow? nobody knows.
06:01
well done
I'll get the foo_log_n function, hold on, the code is here
so I'm scrapping that and making the entire interface a browser instead
but where are the drugs
@jaggedSpire you hipster
06:02
fuck it the web was designed for UI and winforms was designed for satan
There must be some kind of iterator over log n or n^2 for every input.
@jaggedSpire well it's kinda true
That would swap the n complex algorithms to another complexity order.
mayn algorithms aren't miracles
@hub I'm leaving in a min
06:04
I have had it up to goddamn here with it being next to impossible to make text boxes that grow and also have padding in a flexible layout
@nick Me too, meet in where?
I mean this is not a difficult requirement
jabbascript all the things
I coded it even, but winforms resets all the calculated everything so it just flashes between the two layouts and I don't know why
@HubertApplebaum Sheung Wan station I guess?
@jaggedSpire because fuck you I'm winforms
06:05
alright, see you then. leaving
someone watch over victor pls
kk
the scroll bar works according to some determining factor that apparently based off of the present whims of fate
Tell users to use a fixed resolution
I don't understand why it sometimes never shows up but that happens
Rewrite the layout rendering engine
06:07
I spent several hours trying to get it to automatically scroll to the bottom of the page. It would have been easy except for some reason when you set the scroll to the bottom of the page one way, it would navigate there but leave the scrollbar offset so it looked like you weren't
the other way required additional bullshit
use Icicle as rendering backend
would be an improvement
ugh reminds me of a shameful experience trying to keep a chat message viewport scrolled down
browsers really don't like reversed order, believe it or not
apparently there are some circumstances under which all elements in a flow layout control have their widths determined by the width of the first element in the control
okay, fine, sure. But this is apparently affected also by settings in the children of the elements
for some ungodly reason
the best answer I could find was basically "I dunno Autosize is fucked"
well thanks, how am I supposed to make text boxes grow to fit their content without it
I thought manually calculating the height when a width was set, and setting the height as part of the call then would be the way.,
MSDN has documentation that effectively does this
doing this led to the flashing effect I mentioned earlier
reopfaoiufaifcaoinjpoinpoinmjpoinmjpoihjrciu
god damn I just wanted padding on textboxes in a list
why is this difficult
it's to give epileptic people seizures
06:16
so anyway if you never hear from me again it's because I've gone and done something unwise because of winforms-related trauma
Is it n - base per iteration?
like if it was an indexed-smaller array.
void foo_log_n(){
for(uint64_t i = 0; i<4; i=i*2){


}
}
That way you loop 2 times.
And we have ~207 nanoseconds less in execution.
Even expanding the vector/container to the closest base we would have less execution time by indexing until the last item before resizing but that would suppose a previous allocation of base-extended vectors for storage.
That would suppose fixed size structures. Probably I'll get this tonight. I'll write something after this. Pretty interesting.

Well, the reason of this rush is because image processing takes a lot of time and there should be a way to iterate over segments with math, instead of mere logic, with math.
06:36
@jaggedSpire I will remember you
@nick <3
06:55
Why does foo_log_n execute faster?
Like, 8 times faster.
Tell me the truth about life.
See how many foo_log_n can we execute and it's still faster than foo_n.
@jaggedSpire You're being traumatized by... WinForms?
@jaggedSpire jaggedSparrow.
@ThePhD they don't seem to be organized in a sane fashion
each time the layout changes for a flowcontrol, apparently it calls the layout function on every element inside of it. Sane, right? except it does so three times each and then overrides the results.
also I forgot to mention that it counts adding an element as changing the layout.
\o/
even when the new element is at the end of the list of elements, in a flowlayout control that basically organizes everything in a vertical list.
What is optimization.
Ven
Ven
07:08
@HubertApplebaum we had like 5 minutes of eery snow last morning. I went to sleep 2 hrs ago and didn't see any today(or last "night")
@ThePhD optimization is for c++ plebs apparently
You know what's faster? std::for_each is faster.
what's really excellent is the auto size property
which makes the element it's applied to grow and shrink with its content
except it apparently doesn't play well with the alignment specification for elements
or the docking, though that's understandable, since that tries to force the element's size to match the enclosing control's size
sort of contradictory goals there
I mean he understands that's a bad trait
it could be worse
he could be complaining that it happens, here he's only saying that he would complain but it's an assholish thing to be unhappy about.
07:16
I don't it seems so out of touch to me
It's one of the first things they taught me: "There are other people in other countries, Jefffrey".
I'm not saying he's not, but at least he recognizes it
@jaggedSpire Oh my god
Now it all make sense
I've been living a lie my entire life, and they told me, iterators, and they told me, for loops, and they told me ++ before the variable, not after the variable.
@Shoe what, me being a rum-fueled, half-crazed lone pirate on a mission?
@nick :)
07:19
ye
I have found my calling in life
and it is to act completely insane so no one will think I am actually insane, while imbibing as much rum as I can and possibly gaining control of a pirate ship
@jaggedSpire in_life()
Wow nooble. Just wow.
vengeance and gold would also be involved, ideally. Specifically, the acquisition of the aforementioned riches
does off-balance arm-wave
@Shoe I am an amazing person.
I tend to wow people.
07:22
wow
exactly
like "wow you must really like tempting Murphy to make your root namespace bugfree"
Ven
Ven
:D
@jaggedSpire Honestly the best namespace.
@Ven nice gravatar
Oh yeah, I will predict something now
07:24
oh?
The division between chat.SO and Discord will eventually hurt the Lounge to the point where it could die.
:(
this is not a fun prediction
It's not indeed
Ven
Ven
That's one of the most boring prediction I've ever read.
@jaggedSpire gravatar seems to really like blue
07:26
@Ven :)
Ven
Ven
"I predict splitting the community will split the community!" yes :P
I'm still disconcerted, how can more code produce faster results?
I read it as "splitting the community will kill it"
@VictorLopez Using spaces instead of tabs also produces faster results.
@Nooble WHY?
Scary math :(
I want my teddy.
07:32
@VictorLopez he just likes spaces
Ven
Ven
@jaggedSpire yes, that's very easy to predict.
I am so tired.
this is faster than this, and the difference was the tab at the foo_log_n function.
Ven
Ven
Definitely the tab.
I've been trying to do a buffer overflow attack for 4 hours now.
07:41
@VictorLopez You're timiing it on an online service that handles multiple requests.
And you're wondering why performance is wavering.. because...?
rules of measuring performance:
1. don't do it in a debug build
2. don't do it when the system is multitasking
Probably... time. The machine code generated shall be the same? When the compiler outputs.
And with time I mean this whole thing about space-time.
Without the tab I have... faster results.
here is at imgur.
No tabs when writing inside the body functions.
But that would only work for code blocks that mess up with math and logarithms, multiplication/division.
By the moment.
Ven
Ven
07:58
It's probably their new generation C++ JIT
Takes time to warm up
If the resulting machine code from compilation is not the same every time it will take the host machine different amounts of time to go across the executing program to execute that line of code.
So there must be order when indexing files and producing the output from code. It is not possible, for instance, that the code that we input may diverge from spaces trimmed out by the compiler's parser.
Ven
Ven
U w0t m8
Even msvc has an ast you know
08:24
virus probably?
Ven
Ven
08:37
Yeah
La vie est belle ça s'écrit pas VIH.
I've got a game for you guys
Guess the period where I've opened and then closed Chrome
Who does math for the modern processors? Intel processors.
The coprocessor? Do they have coprocessor?, I'm unaware.
@Shoe beginning and end of that pic
08:54
@VictorLopez apu fpu
@Nooble hi
@nick well, that's it pretty much, if something is able to take over the byte execution order that would probably delay the math operations
 
1 hour later…
10:04
@Shoe obviously your cpu sucks
@StackedCrooked Obviously
Kylie Minogue announces engagement to British actor Joshua Sasse - when Kylie became an adult, her fiancee wasn't even born yet ...
you go cougar!
10:52
@Fanael Obviously KeePass
GATE is great if you want to see if a dragon could win from a fighter jet.
11:12
first that would require defining the mechanics of a dragon, and since they're impossible, I'd venture that that question has no answer
11:26
that's why you need to see it
:P
difficult to see things that don't exist ;p
11:40
Bwuh.
@ThePhD Hey <3
You went all Kasumi with your avatar
Also hi,
how'd you sleep?
well enough
user1804599
12:14
@sehe I don't have BSD servers.
user1804599
maybe the hamster writes perl?
12:37
If hamster could code in perl, people would have kept thousands of pet hamsters for programming purposes. I wish I could teach my chickens to write C++ ...
I mean, if my chooks couldn't write C++, that's fine. As long as they could code in javascript ...
12:54
hamsterfold
user1804599
> Teen on hoverboard with gun loses balance, accidentally kills cousin
user1804599
They are going to prohibit selling hoverboards because of this.
user1804599
murrica
user1804599
(no they aren't but that would still not surprise anybody)
the amount of stupid necessary for that situation to occur is staggering
Ven
Ven
13:04
American-levels of stupidity.
user1804599
gonna play modded minecraft :)
Ven
Ven
you go, fold.
user1804599
:D :D :D
user1804599
I really need to get a second monitor.
user1804599
For Minecraft documentation.
user1804599
13:07
fuck it not being in-game
the only exercise this month ive done is running out of money
lol
:D
I know that one very well too.
Eh, one of the proposals about SIMD vectors looks sane.
running out money is nothing, try to get deep in debt
actually, you need skills to get deep in debt
you can't just borrow 100 million because you want to
nobody is going to lend it to you
thus ... skills
On the other hand, when you've got a project, borrowing 1 million is easier than borrowing a mere 40k.
Today in the future proposals forum: Stroustrup being rude with people.
lol
good
13:15
@Morwenn Really? (Link)
> Matt's paper is making a lot of assumptions about the knowledge and opinions about people wanting concepts now based on the current model. Most seem flat wrong. He seems to have missed the last 5 years progress in the standards committee, or maybe 10.
gah, tdding on lowest gear
trump got in to the office, he's probably going to shut down/temporarily suspend microsoft/google/apple at some point in time
13:45
hmm
I have a maneuver of 666.6m/s
@Morwenn So sad
Here is even more sadness: I have a rehearsal with my band so I have to leave for now.
It's not sad
Your mum OTOH was sad earlier, but I got to comfort her. wink
> Trump later tweeted that he'd stop using his iPhone -- and only use a Samsung device -- until Apple cooperates with authorities.
lol
Like they give a fuck
@Morwenn Man, that thread goes on forever.
Nota bene: he continues to tweet from his iPhone
13:57
Why are you speaking italian
@Shoe i think you mean latin?
It's also Italian, but Latin primarily

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