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00:13
evenin'
@Borgleader how're you today? :)
slightly better than yesterday
yourself?
pretty all right
gotta pretend to be a real adult and clean my apartment tonight
 
1 hour later…
01:42
I wonder if there's a way to detect that someone's already using OpenGL...
01:58
I am losing a close friend to HK ... he's transferring from the Sydney office to HK office. OMG cicada, he's in algo trading too!
Maybe he is cicada
I doubt it, cicada doesn't have a PhD
2
A: Is pointers arrays?

AnTApparently you made an assumption that applicability of [] operator to something necessarily implies that that "something" is an array. This is not true. The built-in [] operator has absolutely no direct relation to arrays whatsoever. The [] is just a shorthand for a combination of * and + operat...

This is the first time I hear about the fact that operator[] doesn't work with arrays, but that instead a[x] decays a to a pointer first before applying the subscript operator
restoring process is taking forever as well
good thing that I am doing other things while waiting for it
02:33
@LucDanton btw I suddenly have a doubt
are you sure it isn't a question?
are you questioning my vocababulary
Just curious
@DmitriBudnikov I know it's indian and hispanic, that's why it's curious to see an out-of-demographic use.
03:24
@DmitriBudnikov did it get better
20 hours ago, by Luc Danton
that would be entirely unheard of
Several groups of top linguistic experts have reached the consensus that the above might perhaps be sarcasm. In light of such brand new information, I was wondering, what would be the practical difference of having functions as a language construct, and why didn't the committee choose that solution?
I'll be honest but I'm not really on top of the things compilers do when it comes to implementing actual functional languages with actual arrow types/first class functions
I do know that the general sentiment regarding type erasure from folks involved with the C++ implementations is 'it would require compiler heroics for it to be optimised away'
and the answer(s) to 'why didn't the committee do X' is almost always 'nobody proposed it', 'it would be novel and unproved', 'it's a lot of work'
boost::function<Sig> is the opposite of all those three things
IOW C++ sucks
Okay thanks for the explanation
I’ve actually never looked at the generated code of any language other than C and C++, come to think of it
03:45
@DmitriBudnikov if it's any consolation, I think most implementations still have very obvious limits, e.g. full program optimization
passing a vector<function<Sig>> aka [a -> b] from TU to TU to be invoked there is probably going to involve slow code
2 1/2 month old red panda cubs /cc @Borgleader @Ell @ThePhD @TonyTheLion @Ven @Xeo @набиячлэвэлиь
I don’t know about you but I outside of containers I never feel the need for std::function
@Shoe It's not true. [] applies to either a pointer or an array (or something that overloads operator[]). The array is not converted to a pointer, then the [] applied to the result either--there's a difference in the result type (with an array, the result is an lvalue if the array is an lvalue, otherwise an xvalue).
wtb -fwhole-program-miracles
why not try some OCaml btw I hear it's a darling when it comes to that sort of stuff :)
03:50
OCaml is nice indeed
I wanna try F#
@LucDanton Sounds more like "to the point" than "by the way".
@LucDanton I need to store callbacks as members
socket.on_closed = []() { blah };
@DmitriBudnikov have I already walked you through how I proceed with that sort of stuff? e.g. will those callbacks change target over the course of the lifetime etc.
I don't think you have. Most of the time no, they don't, but in some rare cases they do.
Although that could be written differently, in my case.
@DmitriBudnikov as in here, you can store the callbacks itself and not a container to hold it (which is how I suggest std::function<Sig> should be treated)
then everything is transparent to the compiler and it can manage some pretty nifty stuff
@JerryCoffin well, it’s more of a tangent that popped in my mind, it’s not like checking out OCaml is going to nudge the C++ compiler into doing more work out of jealousy :)
the template<typename Thing> foo_type<Thing> foo(Thing&& thing); dance I do all the time
04:01
wow, that's very cool
bookmarked
04:20
> regex is for regular grammars, whereas DNA is based on a context free grammar
o... okay
This is bullshit.
NONE of theselua frameworks compile cleanly on g++/clang++
NONE OF THEM
Not even the ones developed with g++
I even turned off -Wall -Werror
The only other thing I can do is compile with -fpermissive for fuck's sake.
@LucDanton Hmmm...maybe I should look over the Clang source code, and try to find where a "Jealousy" class should be added...
@ThePhD I'm sorry to hear that :\
04:54
> tfw you need templated virtual functions
Where did I go wrong.
sehe posted a neat answer related to that subject
want me to dig it up?
Uh.
Sure.
Honestly I want to gut this whole system
But my team is already struggling with basic template metaprogramming
I can't dump a handmade variant on them and then explain that to them too. =/
15
A: How to achieve "virtual template function" in C++

seheAfter some thinking I recognized this as the classic multi-method requirement, i.e. a method that dispatches based on the runtime type of more than one parameter. Usual virtual functions are single dispatch in comparison (and they dispatch on the type of this only). Refer to the following: And...

@ThePhD gasp
05:02
@ThePhD plebs
@jaggedSpire It's not really their fault. University doesn't teach this kind've stuff at all...
yeah, I recall my uni courses on C++
night
good luck with the stuff
what if I am one
05:09
OK, this is concerning now
Got chest pain again
Going to the doctor today
just woke up? from it?
Woke up normally, and it set in soon after
tell those details to the doctor
I'm dying, folks
we all are
05:13
wow and here goes robot brandishing his death like it's a privilege
std::initializer_list<T> has this allure of being an array view where the backing array is magically handled for you :| being held back by the constness right now though
yes fuck that
> I don't know my nationality. How can I visit Denmark?
Like everyone else, by plane, car, train, jfc.
no
you're wrong
first its your
05:29
yea
got any more?
not anymore
I'm so hungry I could eat lunch
pleasant talking with you, Dmitri
always
> No, the entire SO C++ community is toxic as fuck.
> Stack Exchange moderator here. Lightness and a few of the C++ guys are ... known to us, let's say.
> Some mods treat them differently because they contribute so much, but personally I'd rather see them gone.
05:34
congratulations all around, we did it
Well I'd rather see you gone too, @mods!
big round of applause to everyone for keeping the mods in check
I agree with those points
I don't see why anyone would want to engage with SO
on a communal level
me neither
> solving all my problems
Maybe that?
clearing all the doubts
05:48
Hi, anyone working on any interesting projects lately?
I'm doing stuff with AR Drone sdk, well trying, the bluetooth connection is the hardest parts as it's not implemented for my drone :(
I am working on an automatic suicide note generator everytime I run msvc
meh, its not that bad. Weirdly I prefer it to eclipse! Java made IDE...no no no
I also wrote a simple script that detects the use of variadics in my code and plays a funeral march when my mouse gets close to the "build" button.
do they play marches on funerals?
Damnit.
05:53
damn it all to hell!
Fucking hell
This whole polymorphic accept sucks
I can't do recursion nicely
I can't return values
I can't have out values
have you tried getting poppy seeds and growing them in a pot and then making a business out of those
Like. I either load up the class hierarchy with virtual functions,
or swap gears to variant
variant
motion passed
Make sure to read The Rules and DO NOT CLICK THIS LINK.
06:14
@Shoe Well, it's true. But it's potentially so confusing that I never dared teaching it that way to beginners.
Free rules for anyone age 0-178.
A Rule Book a day keeps the ban away.
Here is the relevant skorbut type checker part:
private fun Expression.typeCheck(): Type {
    type = when (this) {
    // ...
        is Subscript -> {
            isLocator = true
            val leftType = left.typeCheck().decayed()
            val rightType = right.typeCheck().decayed()
            if ((leftType is PointerType) && (rightType is ArithmeticType)) {
            //               ^^^^^^^^^^^
                leftType.referencedType
            } else if ((leftType is ArithmeticType) && (rightType is PointerType)) {
            //                                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^
And then He said: let there be Rules. And there were.
11
As you can see, [] indeed works on pointers, not arrays :)
But of course, arrays decay to pointers; note the .decayed() calls.
@DmitriBudnikov i'm not starring that
06:25
me neither
because the first sentence is a lie
> We are the best chatroom on Stack Overflow.
LIESSSSSSSS
Xeo
Xeo
Truth
inb4 cat's quote
> internal compiler error: Segmentation fault
it had been a while
user1804599
@fredoverflow why don't you desugar to pointer arithmetic and dereference?
user1804599
06:33
Then you don't have to duplicate code.
Fear of confusing error messages.
Although the above error message is already confusing as shit for beginners :)
user1804599
06:47
Ugh, hxt depends on network.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Hello darkness, my old friend.
the sad thing is that I'm a bit worried about making testcases (I'm waiting for the GCC6 release), since creduce doesn't understand concepts
proof that concepts-lite is the worst
07:02
> > Whilst your here Mr Smith, may I ask if T5 fine materials are on your review list?
> These have been on the list since HoT Launch
@DmitriBudnikov speculation soon to pay off
any time I'm sure
@Zoidberg Like 1[2] would complain about not being able to dereference an int.
Although who writes code like that? Maybe he deserves to be punished.
Just type in the characters "\r". Like you typed in the characters "^M", except they're different keys on your keyboard. — sehe 27 secs ago
@LucDanton hmm? Proof of bad concepts
What are these people doing using C++
@sehe you can’t tell me what to do you’re not my real mom
12
Basically.
07:23
is this guy for real
oh wait no
sorry it looked almost like real trump
@LucDanton But in which direction
can’t go lower than vendor price
> Update: items can now be sold for less than vendor price
they’ve actually been doing passes to remove those items listed at less than vendor price btw
> The key thrust behind much of Chomsky's political world-view is the idea that the truth about political realities are systematically distorted or suppressed through the manipulation of corporate interests and elites
Today I TILed that Chomsky was also into politics
@LucDanton Well I do wonder what else that economist has to do
07:30
suggest introducing 2g/day for every player that has 30min available
It's funny because I always thought Chomsky was a computer scientist or mathematician but not at all
@DmitriBudnikov kinda amazing yeah?
oo as some would say
proof that lesser scientific fields can also produce useful theories
:smirk:
@DmitriBudnikov ohohoho
> I remember once they all understood my question wrongly and shat all over it, even after I explained how they were wrong.
Well if everyone understood your question wrongly then maybe you suck at wording questions.
I am tired of having to point out the obvious deficiencies in your reasoning
you deserve being shat on
god
people are dumb
nwp
nwp
07:38
usually people are not just dumb, their actions make sense from their perspective
It's just Plain Old Data. I don't think you can std::move an int.. — 0xbaadf00d 18 secs ago
@nwp lol
yes your comment probably makes sense from your perspective
nwp
nwp
it does
and with enough perspective changes you either learn that perspectives and actions change or you stay with "now I know everything, everyone else including me in the past was just dumb"
sounds far-fetched
is this from Lord of the Rings?
@nwp What about orthographic changes
nwp
nwp
@LucDanton if that was related to my comments then no, it isn't
07:42
@DmitriBudnikov lol people thinking that all rvalues have an rvalue reference type
Harry Potter then
@LucDanton Run you fools!
that one has time travel
nwp
nwp
@DmitriBudnikov I thought about that recently. I went through twitch titles and wondered why ~60% mistype the game they are playing.
aw you didn't get the joke
it's ok I guess, it requires some knowledge about 3d transforms
nwp
nwp
07:45
@DmitriBudnikov k, I'll save you the long winded answer then
@Griwes also lol the comment about Unix
Ven
Ven
yo yo yo
how high are these people
notice the orthographic mistake in orthographic
nwp
nwp
yeah, no, didn't get that
am I missing something
Ven
Ven
07:57
yes, he can probably do the conversion with SIMD instructions
that'd be a very fast no-op.
> I am a scientist that uses mostly C++ and Python.
@DmitriBudnikov Orthogaffe
Oh okay that explains it :v
Ven
Ven
:star:
> Most of our codes run on supercomputers
well that's a good waste of taxpayers money then
07:59
@DmitriBudnikov eazy rep, eazy life just submit a no-op function as an anwser
i think SO changed main colours
yeah they did make some changes
@BartekBanachewicz Trivia time: back when I was young I worked on a program that ran on supercalculators, and was tasked with optimizing it. A quick gprof revealed that the program spent, over a 1 month simulation, almost a week inside std::vector::size()
Ven
Ven
Does anyone have a standard draft handy? I need to search for some stuff wrt nullptr
08:06
for (int i = 0; i < v.size()
@BartekBanachewicz yeah. compiler didn't hoist the size() call
Ven
Ven
No way to get a pdf version? :[
@DmitriBudnikov lol compilerz
@Ven Get the LaTeX source and compile it yourself?
Ven
Ven
what's the real name of "universal references" that Scott coined?
forwarding references
Ven
Ven
08:12
ty
user1804599
> get$?: Rx.Observable<Rx.Observer<string>>;
Ven
Ven
is std::vector::push_back's complexity specified in the standard?
and reverse's? cppreference doesn't mention them...
@Ven O(1) amortized
@Ven O(N)
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov so if I want to allocate N elements, it's O(N)?
Ven
Ven
mh.
nwp
nwp
@Ven if the elements have constructors
@Ven Doing N insertions is proportional to doing N insertions.
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton so, what's the complexity?
O(N) amortized
Ven
Ven
08:21
(keep in mind, I never studied O(), so...)
@Ven oh okay
I replaced the 1 by N
usual multiplication rules apply
complexity analysis is relative to something
Ven
Ven
so, first, looking up what amortized complexity means.
for operations on something like std::vector<T> usually the complexity is (very handwaved here) relative to the size of the vector
double the number of insertions, you end up with ~twice the complexity, no matter the size of the vector
most sensible way to describe N*O(1) amortised insertions imo
Ven
Ven
08:24
well, I'm just interested in the complexity of (1) .push_back(element) N times (i.e. in a loop) (2) .reverse(N) + N times .push_back(element)
wow that british spelling
conflictuel en tout
Ven
Ven
amortisé.
@Ven pay attention to the complexity of reverse cos that one will not be constant relative to the vector size
Ven
Ven
When you say "push_back is O(1) amortized", that doesn't include if the container needs to realloc, does it?
@LucDanton whoops, meant reserve not reverse
08:28
good job
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton dmytry said reverse was O(N) (which makes sense, since it might realloc)
@Ven That's what "amortized" means. It does include the occasional realloc.
6 mins ago, by Ven
so, first, looking up what amortized complexity means.
You lied!
Ven
Ven
The wikipedia article is just worthless.
Trying to answer to that:
> .reserve is most likely just premature optimization. I doubt the amortized O(1) allocation cost of std::vector will ever become the bottleneck over the non-amortized O(1) of .reserve in this particular case.
who is bullying you with this
it would be easy to explain this as 'if you reserve first, you pay the costs up-front whereas if you don't you spread those costs over the successive pushes'
08:30
+ other costs
that's not quite the full story since the costs of an initial reserve could have been paid before, too
Ven
Ven
the vector is created right there, so, don't think so.
yeah from an empty vector then it's the same either way
Not including costs of moves/copies even though that's outside the equation strictly speaking
Ven
Ven
right.
08:32
How are copies outside the complexity?
nwp
nwp
@LucDanton hmm no. Successive pushes require the data to be copied. With reserve you avoid that.
yeah I need to point out I was speaking from a complexity analysis pov, fine-tuning is something else
@nwp doesn’t matter for asymptotics
Ven
Ven
wait what, std::thread's move constructor is not noexcept Oo?
You get at most N copies. It's accounted for.
It's not the same operation you are counting (for PODs it is but that need not be the case)
08:34
@LucDanton Though, IMO, it's pointless to just reason from the complexity angle when working with vectors
That's a Java fallacy
@slaphappy well, the question was counting something and the best tool for that imo is CA. if fine-tuning, starting with benchmarks rather than counting should be the better call
If you know the final vector size beforehand there's no real reason not to reserve
Unless you don't care
Ven
Ven
"premature optimization" or something
please tell me
that's not what premature means
08:37
why are the fastest languages the ones whose users talk the most about optimization
Ven
Ven
@slaphappy that's what the guy argues ;)
while ruby users don't give a fuck
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz ?SufficientlySmartCompiler
@BartekBanachewicz culture
Ven
Ven
wait, if I have a std::vector<std::thread>, and it needs to reallocate, it can't move (because it's not noexcept), and it can't copy (because it's deleted)... wut
08:39
@BartekBanachewicz Because people who want OMG SPEED pick a language they perceive to be fast.
@Ven Allocate dynamically and use std::unique_ptr<std::thread>?
Ven
Ven
how does this work...
@Ven gimme a sec
the implementation you’re using has a non-throwing std::thread (easy to check)
@LucDanton Not sure. Without reserve, it's amortized O(1), and with reserve, it's O(1). Are they considered totally equal in all cases?
Ven
Ven
08:43
@LucDanton okay, but that's not required by standard.
@Ven now I don’t quite know what the throw spec for the move constructor of std::thread is, but that’s because I don’t know how to read the class synopses of the standard. there is this, however
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton do you have a link to provide?
@Ven that's not premature.
That's responsible resource usage
Ven
Ven
I don't think I know enough about this to keep arguing, so I'll leave it at that myself. (and I'll consider he's right for the cost thing //cc @LucDanton @DmitriBudnikov)
Sorry I suck at C++, lounge :P.
user1804599
08:57
      withSystemTempDirectory "" $ \outdir -> runEitherT $ do
        let outpath = outdir ++ "/out"
        fuckSyncExceptions $ callProcess r [pagePath w pid, outpath]
        fuckSyncExceptions $ runX (readDocument [] outpath)
  where fuckSyncExceptions a = EitherT $ first RenderFailure <$> try a
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz :D :D :D
1
Q: Expressing Logical Constness In Haskell

Ami TavoryData structures have mutating and non-mutating operations. For example, a dictionary insert can change the the state of its underlying data structure, but a lookup typically does not. Some data structures mutate their internal structure - even on logically non-mutating operations - but in a mann...

this is an interesting question
@Zoidberg lol
surprisingly this is a topic that attracts a lot of noise, even Bjarne has commented on it
@Ven lmao arguing on internet (particularly github)
You know what? I am starting to like the Times New Roman font and lookalikes a bit.
Ven
Ven
08:58
@DmitriBudnikov rooh du calme
@DmitriBudnikov tu veux pas aller nous départager?
About the cost of moves being included or not in the complexity, it's true if you reason from the ADT perspective, but in practice the story is a bit different, hence why I say it isn't
@Ven lol that discussion
Ven
Ven
@DmitriBudnikov please post it ;).
@BartekBanachewicz what?
idiotic bikeshedding
From an ADT perspecting the reserve doesn't exist anyway

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