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00:02
Hey can someone remind me
How are copy assignment operator supposed to be written?
@JerryCoffin I can't unilaterally undelete posts. So I can't get rid of those downvotes.
@VermillionAzure carefully
I mean right now i'm trying to write a Node<T>& operator=(const Node<T>& other)
Isn't there some way you can integrate the copy constructor into the copy assignment constructor?
Yes, it's called the copy-and-swap idiom.
Right... But I don't know much about but it's supposed to ensure "strong exception guarantee" what is that
Also does it waste anything; do compilers usually optimize it away?
00:07
Plenty of explanation available online
@DmitriBudnikov because C++ documentation is so fun to read
I have a better time reading UNIX man than C++ docs
And I have a better time pointing people to existing documentation than typing it out myself unless they have very specific questions
Also about concepts; can they be used to automate this sort of stuff?
e.g. class A : MoveConstructable, CopyConstructable etc.
Cinchquake alert
3
00:31
Rule of 963
01:20
Yay now I know copy/move-and-swap
You're welcome
You didn't forward me to anything anyways lol
1 hour ago, by Dmitri Budnikov
Yes, it's called the copy-and-swap idiom.
how ungrateful
is ok bby next time you can guess the idiom names on your own I guess
I mean I was looking at copy and swap but
I was wondering if there was something where you didn't have to create a temporary variable and whether it mattered at all
since optimizations
it's optimized away jfc
this isn't 1982
01:24
@DmitriBudnikov What's up
How have you been
Oh no..
what about you
Glatepul!
planning to go to seoul over the weekend somewhere next month, I'll let you know
01:26
Really?
@DmitriBudnikov but but but how
well yes o.o
@DmitriBudnikov How long you think gonna stay?
over the weekend only
01:27
Why don't you have the next coming monday off ?
:D
25 april?
That's correct.
@VermillionAzure it's trivial
@DeanSeo not off here
@DmitriBudnikov What do you mean, it's trivial?
The compiler needs to understand what it can optimize and why and if it's allowed
@DmitriBudnikov You can use your holiday.
01:28
And I dunno how but I'd like to know. Tips?
@DmitriBudnikov No rush though. Please keep me posted !
for the copy-and-swap or move-and-swap
@DeanSeo I have barely any ._.
@DmitriBudnikov That sucks.
and need to save up to go back to furansu
//Hi, I have been trying to understand this line

for (int j=min(n, arr[i].dead)-1; j>=0; j--)

// what is this dead function?
and did they do so? They could straight away choose last address in array i.e. n
01:31
@DmitriBudnikov I mean how does it know that it's allowed to optimize away a temporary?
@AbhimanyuAryan How should you know that's a function?
Doesn't it have to build an AST and work on it at some level?
@AbhimanyuAryan how is that a function
ohh sorry its not a function. I confused it with Ruby's function where we don't use ()
So what are you talking about?
That looks like the inner for loop for a bubble sort, maybe
But that's not a function
@AbhimanyuAryan Ruby doesn't use () operator when invoking?
01:33
@DeanSeo its optional to use () or not
@AbhimanyuAryan strange
// Returns minimum number of platforms reqquired
void printJobScheduling(Job arr[], int n)
{
    // Sort all jobs according to decreasing order of prfit
    sort(arr, arr+n, comparison);

    int result[n]; // To store result (Sequence of jobs)
    bool slot[n];  // To keep track of free time slots

    // Initialize all slots to be free
    for (int i=0; i<n; i++)
        slot[i] = false;

    // Iterate through all given jobs
    for (int i=0; i<n; i++)
    {
       // Find a free slot for this job (Note that we start
but maybe not so strange
operator () is a beautiful operator. That should not be optional !
@DeanSeo unless you're lisp
01:34
(.)(.)
so here's where I got this for loop from i.e. printJobScheduling function
@Mikhail +1
@VermillionAzure Look at the generated assembly
@DmitriBudnikov I'm not asking about that
I'm asking how it knows that it's allowed to make the optimization
I'm not answering
01:35
this has nothing to do with translation to implementation
@VermillionAzure Lisp uses too many (((((((((((())))))))))))). Not so good.
It completely has to do with that
Write a simple class and write a simple move/copy-and-swap
@DmitriBudnikov Assembly has nothing to do with the semantics of C++ and its own systems and rules
And I did
Cool, now write the assembly for that move&swap by hand
With no optimizations
01:37
You're missing the point
Never mind
@AbhimanyuAryan arr[i].dead
What is this?
@Mikhail (.)(.) what are those tities?
you know what's the difference between you and I
@VermillionAzure figured it out. It was something else
01:38
the difference between you and I is that I have a reasonably good of how these things work, and you have none
yet you want people to teach you how it works, and when that knowledge slightly deviates from your rigid expectation of things, your brain gets numb and sealed
@DmitriBudnikov So how do compilers look and parse things, then?
well you know what
go get fucked
I'll be here sipping my coconut mango juice while you struggle
Isn't the process like => parse => make AST => act on it?
01:40
to the plonk machine!
also wouldn't it be sad if optimizers stopped at the AST level
lmao
leumao
@AbhimanyuAryan Is this that overlapping job problem example where you need to schedule the events/jobs optimally according to start/end time?
ell em ay o
@VermillionAzure yes maximise profit with deadline in Job Sequencing Prob
@AbhimanyuAryan oh so it's twofold with the optimization of weight too, then?
@VermillionAzure yup
01:43
@AbhimanyuAryan Ooooh nice. So what type of algorithm is being used to do both? Is it still greedy?
does the interplay between both change things
@AbhimanyuAryan Oh okay cool
@Xeo #banned
02:36
So
Lounge ded
BADJETEK SAVE US
that's a wonderful pic of some mountains and the sun
@BartekBanachewicz Everyone's having fun in discohorde
@DmitriBudnikov does this have an Android client yet
02:38
gah the results were not worth waiting for
discord... android client?
@BartekBanachewicz well yes
its probably got better cross platform support than slack lol
a bit of a stretch but linux doesn't matter anyway
Uh im clicking the install button amd nothing happens
Thanks play store
your wallet probably ran out of money
K it started dl
Meh Dick chord is as empty as here
02:45
wow
I just realize my Node wasn't using Node* for the parent/children
@VermillionAzure OH NO
What a terrible tragedy
user406009
I always hate having DAGs in C++. The memory management makes it a giant pain.
user406009
The current trick I am using is to allocate all the nodes up front separately and manage their lifetimes all together. Then everything else is plain pointers.
You could replace "DAGs" with literally eveeverything in that sentence
@Lalaland uh whats DAGs
user406009
02:48
@VermillionAzure Directed acyclic graph.
user406009
Although, I guess any type of graph is the issue.
@BartekBanachewicz No seriously I was trying to do a linked list without using links... QQ
@Lalaland Also how's it an issue?
user406009
The problem is that there isn't a clean sequence of ownership, you have shared junk.
user406009
So unique_ptr doesn't work.
user406009
shared_ptr works, but that's a pain in other ways.
user406009
02:49
Like when there are cycles in the graph.
@Lalaland Why are you trying to use a graph anyways?
And uh how do cycles cause a problem?
user406009
Shared_ptr doesn't work when there are cycles.
user406009
Well, it leaks memory.
oh
then don't you just use weak_ptr?
it provides a maybe-like thing, right?
user406009
It wouldn't work either.
user406009
02:52
The weak pointer doesn't keep it alive.
@Lalaland Maybe you have each have a shared_ptr
user406009
@VermillionAzure And then you have a memory leak.
user406009
As you have a cycle of shared_ptrs.
And then you somehow poll if it exists by getting a weak_ptr and then copy over. if not, set the one you own to nullptr
So like, I have a link I think exists. I'll check with a weak pointer if it actually exists and if it doesn't it doesn't
The other solution is to have an object own edges instead of just pointers
@Lalaland What maybe you can do is model the graph by its edges instead of its nodes, and make sure each single is represented by an invisible loop to itself
user406009
Eh. I think I'll stick with my solution of allocating all the nodes separately.
03:00
@Lalaland Never mind
It's extremely bad
03:33
@Lalaland Good thing you mentioned "any type of graph", since a DAG can't have any cycles (thus, a Directed Acyclic Graph).
Or to put it more simply: DAGs are actually pretty easy. It's other graphs that get more difficult.
user406009
Yeah, I realized that halfway through.
But yes, weak_ptrs are typically used specifically for situations where you (at least might) have cycles. If you draw your graph a little like a tree with some set of "roots" at the top, and "leaves" toward the bottom, you typically want to use shared_ptrs for the downward links, and weak_ptrs for the upward links.
@JerryCoffin But how do you decide which are the roots
Also yay I've made a parser
user406009
03:50
@VermillionAzure You could create a total ordering of the nodes.
@Lalaland ewwwwwwwwwwww
user406009
Assign an increasing id to each node.
@VermillionAzure More or less arbitrarily. As you create your graph, you add nodes. You start with some arbitrary node, and treat it as a root. All the outgoing links from it are "downward", so they're shared_ptrs. As you add more nodes, you check if an outward link from it is to an existing node. When that happens, you create it as a weak_ptr. Otherwise, you use a shared_ptr. If you add a node that doesn't have an incoming link from any existing node, that's another "root".
@JerryCoffin Well yeah but what happens when the amount of nodes gets quite large?
I mean I can think about that type of algorithm but it's when you want to also split up the graph to work in parallel or assume we can't have all of it at once
Also... I thought trying to assign an ID from one variable globally can end up badly if we enter into parallel programming?
especially if we're incrementingit
> If no show stoppers appear, I'd like to release 6.1 late next week, or soon after that, if any important issues are discovered and fixed, rc2 could be released next week.
03:55
@VermillionAzure It can work fine as long as incrementing it is global. Alternatively, you can assign a range of IDs to each thread, so most of the time, each can create new nodes independently (and only get into a global lock when/if a thread runs out of IDs and needs to allocate another range).
@JerryCoffin Right, right...
that's a nice solution!
@VermillionAzure You'd almost think I wrote highly parallel code professionally or something... :-)
@JerryCoffin TBH I'm intense interested in language design and operation design right now
And a lot of that has to do with graph theory
y'know(de)?
user406009
@LucDanton Yay!
> Currently in early development stage
last release: 2014
@Rapptz rip
04:57
Morning.
@JerryCoffin 7k up is nice, helped making the site better. 0.2 down is probably a bit low but I'm not in a position to cast stones.
@fredoverflow could be a slogan: Java, slow in every aspect.
2
> For instance I'm ready to bet that C++ is dead
rip
@fredoverflow Discussions of type between people who've yet to hear the phrase "Hindley-Milner" in their poor, deprived little lives. Close to the nadir of computer science.
05:16
@JerryCoffin what did you say?
@VermillionAzure Can you narrow down the part you're asking about?
whoosh
I tried to read the page on HM but I didn't really get it...
I'm not in comp sci so I guess I'll either have to force myself to take the elective or scruntch through the grind and wring it from the dead corpse of the ambiguity of non-knowledge
@VermillionAzure So ignore the details of exactly how H-M works, and just go with "type inference." For example, C++ doesn't use full-blown H-M, but still does a fair amount of type inference anyway (and so does var in C#, etc.)
H-M is just a specific algorithm for doing type inference that's 1) quite general, and 2) still reasonably efficient (specifically, efficient enough that using it won't necessarily lead to a horribly slow compiler).
@fredoverflow I think I said it more eloquently (if less fanboishly): Nearly the only other language in history to have existed as long and (probably) innovated less is SQL.
05:33
> an in-class initializer is not allowed for a member of an anonymous union in non-class scope
C++ why
why you do this
Hmm, H.265 looks interesting. Though it seems it will require too much CPU power to encode compared to the previous standard.
this isn't even an union it's a struct but still
@JerryCoffin I see
@wilx It's interesting, but kind of pointless. Almost nobody (even tries to) use all of what h.264 allows, and most of what's added in h.265 requires greater investment for smaller improvements.
@JerryCoffin It supposedly halves the necessary bandwidth, so that it IMHO a singular benefit worth the trouble. They are going to use it for TV broadcast here in about 5 years.
05:39
@JerryCoffin I like the ice cream analogy :)
wait wait wait what
how deep does the polytype rabbit hole go?
@VermillionAzure To the place where sun never shines...
@fredoverflow lol, the same kind of idiots were going around back in C# 3.0 times
@wilx I'm sorry I don't get that reference :(
"Types are given by the IDE so you do not have to write them." is gold
05:47
@VermillionAzure Hmm. I guess it is not international then. The place where the sun never shines is the ass. In Czech, it is a semi-decent way to say fuck you. To be clear, I was not telling you "fuck you", I was just using the place/expression as supposedly humorous answer to your question. I can see it fell flat.
@wilx oh.
Well... there are a lot of places where the sun doesn't shine :)
Also I'm not wit savvy
Does the sun shine on Uranus though?
Okay... So someone sent me a verified benchmark of my program running on what appears to be a pair of engineering sample 22-core Broadwell chips. 44 cores/88 threads
Um... I don't think I'll dare to release the numbers. This shit is probably still under NDA.
Does it scale?
Oh and 768 GB of ram.
05:50
Activists issue new list of forbidden phrases: grandfather clause; long time no see; uppity; no can do https://twitter.com/evrydayfeminism/status/721850751870451712
@fredoverflow We had a back-and-forth email thread for the last few weeks about this. I can't say specifics, but he needed my help to "tune" the system. Now he finally sends me a validation file which passes the hash check. So his hardware is real.
@Mysticial What a monster!
It's also the first benchmark I've gotten on Windows that uses more than 64 threads. That's 2 processor groups.
@Mysticial Have you signed any NDA?
@wilx No.
The processor group thing is kind of a pain-in-the-ass. Someone reported that bug in an earlier version which is how I found out about it in the first place.
05:54
unsigned nda = -1;   // whoops...
I fixed it, but I couldn't test it. I guess this guy verifies that my patch works.
Are you doing lockfree concurrency or something?
I'm not actually doing the parallelism myself. I'm deferring it to Intel's Cilk Plus framework when there are more than 64 logical cores.
The thread pool that I wrote in January also "theoretically" supports multiple processor groups. But that's obviously untested since I haven't released it yet.
Hopefully that won't blow up.
Anyways... I need to sleep.
I'll leave this here. It doesn't show any performance information. But it does say what chip this guy has:
Processor(s):          Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2696 v4 @ 2.20GHz
Logical Cores:         88
Physical Memory:       824,535,527,424 bytes  (  768 GiB )
CPU Base Frequency:    2,199,999,168 Hz

Program Version:       0.6.9 Build 9464 (Windows - x64 AVX2 ~ Airi)
Constant:              Pi
Algorithm:             Chudnovsky Formula
Decimal Digits:        250,000,000,000
Hexadecimal Digits:    207,620,505,931
Threading Mode:        Cilk Plus Work-Stealing  ->  88 / 88
Computation Mode:      Swap Mode
Working Memory:        758,968,199,616 bytes  (  706 GiB )
06:00
should not ski formula
> In its ruggedness and lack of concern to look comfortable or easy, Brutalism can be seen as a reaction by a younger generation to the lightness, optimism, and frivolity of todays webdesign.
TIL today's webdesign is light, optimist and frivolous
@Mysticial fuck I'll need to buy more ram
optimist and frivolous
yes
light I can understand but optimist and frivolous are so high up the personification scale it's ridiculous
06:23
Well I'd definitely call 'including every JS library I have found' "frivolous and optimistic"
js code isn't compiled
it is, at the very best, transpiled.
compilation is a process reserved to those dinosaur languages used by those born in the 60s
06:38
1
A: Iterating through a string, and switch statements: C++

fredoverflowI would suggest that you extract the logic of vowel testing into its own function: bool is_vowel(char x) { switch (x) { case 'a': case 'A': case 'e': case 'E': case 'i': case 'I': case 'o': case 'O': case 'u': case 'U': case 'y': case 'Y': ...

Yay, a use case for std::any_of!
@fredoverflow how would this compare to a lookup table?
bool[256] or something similiar
I bet the switch is compiled to a lookup table, anyway.
AFAIK in most cases, it's compiled to a lookup table when there are more than few cases
_Z8is_vowelc:
.LFB0:
    .cfi_startproc
    subl    $65, %edi
    cmpb    $56, %dil
    ja  .L5
    movzbl  %dil, %edi
    jmp *.L4(,%rdi,8)
    .section    .rodata
    .align 8
    .align 4
.L4:
    .quad   .L3
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L3
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L3
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L3
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
    .quad   .L5
There you go.
neat
06:45
switch is by far the most "high level" feature of C in this respect; there is no simple 1:1 translation.
@fredoverflow Check out deez mad quads @Rerito
The compiler chooses between lookup table, binary search and sequence of ifs, depending on the distribution of cases.
With compiles getting so smart, my asm.js skills have become obsolete
user1804599
07:10
@fredoverflow Also VLA sizeof.
user1804599
Also, there is a simple translation: sequence of ifs with jumps to case labels.
user1804599
This is the most straightforward one. Other implementations are optimisations.
Ven
Ven
Hi
@fredoverflow do you even duff?
@ScarletAmaranth To be fair, I havn't participated in that channel in quite some time now.. :)
user1804599
Compiler can do escape analysis and optimise away mallocs. This doesn't make malloc more high-level.
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow not sure how quad works (even trying to read its description)
user1804599
07:24
@Ven It allocates a quadword.
user1804599
like static
@Ven Duff's vice :)
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg I mean, I don't understand how the switch is compiled.
@Ven A table of quadwords that contain either the address of label L3 or L5
user1804599
@Ven The quadwords contain instruction pointers to the case labels. The jmp instruction does the magic.
user1804599
07:33
.L3 and .L5 are label references.
user1804599
The linker replaces them by instruction pointers.
@DmitriBudnikov ahaha you used the word
Ven
Ven
@Zoidberg mh,okay, thanks. Was trying to understand why there are so many .quads
user1804599
@fredoverflow dude, just use strchr.
user1804599
bool is_vowel(char x) {
    return std::strchr("aAeEiIoOuUyY", x) != nullptr;
}
user1804599
07:38
@Ven It's a lookup table.
user1804599
	pushq	%rax
	movl	%edi, %eax
	movl	$.L.str, %edi
	movl	$13, %edx
	movl	%eax, %esi
	callq	memchr
	testq	%rax, %rax
	setne	%al
	popq	%rcx
	retq
user1804599
Amazing, it uses memchr because it knows the string length.
isn't it always the case that the more information one provide the compiler at compile-time, the more optimal it gets..
user1804599
This is even more interesting: coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/35ed42287376a093
user1804599
It doesn't loop at all.
user1804599
07:46
It converts the string into an integer and then uses bitwise operators.
well you compiled with -O3
user1804599
It does the same with -O2.

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