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00:00
@ThePhD I thought the free upgrade was Home or wtv
@JerryCoffin I actually noticed that in other occasions (e.g. plain constexpr auto i = reinterpret_cast<int>(0);) GCC lets the reinterpret_cast slip
Nah, Pro for Windows 7 Ultimate users.
@ThePhD :O
Damnit I have Windows 7 Pro on this machine :(
that it disallows it in my example is… inconsistent at least on the surface, although perhaps under the covers reinterpret_cast<template_arg> is handled differently
00:03
@StackedCrooked I have to watch the latest ansatsu
So do I.
Lmao
This dumb laptop BAKED the Windows 10 bootmanager
Into the Bios
So I can't just boot into a USB stiick, I have to go through this stupid setup first.
@LucDanton Yeah--hard to guess when it's all handled by a built in (though I guess gcc's code base isn't as nasty as it was the last time I looked...)
alright I'm getting to grips with it, the reinterpret_cast<X>(0) is dependent because X is a parameter, what I quoted before applied to operator names which is not relevant
now to figure out the ties between constexpr 'checking' and dependence
cant u just typecast? (float)value;
00:15
> If every valid specialization of a variadic template requires an empty template parameter pack, the template is ill-formed, no diagnostic required.
hey, I was going to rely on that… stop disallowing fun
@Charlie srsly
i just saw an example recently
> If a hypothetical instantiation of a template immediately following its definition would be ill-formed due to a construct that does not depend on a template parameter, the program is ill-formed; no diagnostic is required.
where reinterpret cast was used, and typecast was so much simpler
2
...
dumbest thing I have ever heard so far today
but it's still early/mid morning so ...
00:18
im talking about something completely different i think
yeah, that’s what I thought. It makes sense and it’s sensible. I’m more confident now that the previous program was in fact valid @JerryCoffin. As I understand it, even though int[reinterpret_cast<X>(1)] is never valid stricto sensu, it's still dependent enough to not get caught by that rule.
it's obviously against the intent though, it’s just that it’s really hard to write the rules so as to get everything right
right, reinterpret_cast<X>(0) was a typo as I don’t want an invalid 0-sized array type. fixed, and now GCC's gig is up
> If no specialization of the template would satisfy the requirements for a constexpr function or constexpr constructor when considered as a non-template function or constructor, the template is ill-formed; no diagnostic required.
to avoid that rule methinks you can change to members of a class templates
interestingly I don’t think dependence has any bearing here
@LucDanton yeah, with it being 0, there's not much of anything you can supply for X that would result in a valid instantiation, but 1 fixes at least that (i.e., with 0 it is ill-formed in a way that doesn't depend on a template parameter).
It's not letting me install Windows 7. :(
@LucDanton Sure do wish there were fewer of the "no diagnostic required" phrases in there though...
00:29
I know what you mean :/ I’m not sure everything is even tractable though
@ThePhD Are you using an OEM license?
What's that?
A license you get with a pre-built PC (as opposed to one you get at best buy for example)
Could be that.
IIRC OEM licenses are tied to the PC they came with
store bought ones aren't (i think) maybe @JerryCoffin knows
00:31
@DmitriBudnikov speaking of cool Vim stuff, I'm using marks right now! I haven’t used them in a while so I’m a bit rusty, but that’s a 4kloc file so they’ll come in handy
No mention of OEM license on it
@LucDanton Probably not, but some of them are. In this case, it seems like diagnosing the 0 would probably be possible. I'd agree that the "If no specialization..." clause is probably intractable though.
@ThePhD No I mean the Windows 7 you tried to install
@Borgleader Nope, it's regular vanilla RTM.
yeah that’s a result of reinterpret_cast<type>(expr) being dependent as long as type or expr is, which is overly generous. i.e. it’s not fine-grained enough, probably for the sake of keeping the rules tame
00:33
@Borgleader If you buy Windows separately from a machine, you're not supposed to get an OEM license, but a few stores have probably sold OEM licenses separately at times--at one time, it was a pretty serious problem.
I think newegg/ncix were selling OEM licenses at some point
@Borgleader Probably--definitely various local stores did at one time (but if memory serves, it was probably XP time frame).
newegg.com/Product/…-32-4‌​16-892--Product
Microsoft Windows 10 Home - 64-bit - OEM
rofl, its still a thing
Oh.
So my boot file "wasn't signed"
Since I burned the USB myself from hte vanilla Windows 7 Ultimate RTM
So I had to disable SecureBoot.
LooseBoot Activated
00:39
... But now it's frozen on the "Staring Windows" screen. :l
@ThePhD How do you disable secure boot? you undo the bootstrap :P
@Borgleader .... Groan
your fondness for my puns has ^
q_q
Borgleader pls
It really does seeem like they're going to forceme to use Windows 10 Home
But I don't want windows 10 Home. I can't do things like mess with Hyper-V with Windows 10 Home.
00:53
Ugh. Guess I'm stuck with Windows 10 Home for the time being...?
concept being a specifier you can write template<…> bool concept Foo = …;
> The definition of a function concept or the initializer of a variable concept shall not include a reference to the concept being declared.
@AndyProwl woops, should have seen that coming
(gives concept bool F() { return F<typename T::type>(); } as an example of ill-formed code)
@LucDanton Why are you dealing with 4kloc files in the first place
01:08
@DmitriBudnikov it’s not my code
I believe this
largest files of mine are ~1k1, my optional and variant implementations
attempts to reduce the boilerplate that inflates those line numbers have so far resulted in new and interesting ICEs
@LucDanton How dare you let your code be limited by actual compilers? Next you're going to just give up and try something else when they generate bad code too, I suppose!
I'm not confortable with anything above ~800-1k
@DmitriBudnikov I think I’m the same, I’ve really tried to keep those two files down
I have a bit more tolerance because there really is repetitive boilerplate that I can scroll though, esp. in the case of optional
it’s like there’s one interesting optional primary template, a duplicated spec to account for trivial destruction, and two uninteresting partial specs for references
it’s… not very nice
01:24
poor references
ffs why do I still have readline quirks
cos I don’t upgrade things often enough, possibly in this case Powerline
01:40
@ThePhD I updated it to detect the parameter types automatically, in case you are interested
@ScarletAmaranth Just saw most recent ep. Yep, Assassination Classroom is good :)
@doug65536 Neat.
still need to optimize storage and fix new. Planning to do small-object optimization else store pointer like this does
a vector/deque of pairs with small object optimization would be better, I dont need fast lookup by name
01:57
warning: narrowing conversion of ‘strtol((&(& fields.std::vector<_Tp, _Alloc>::operator[]<boost::iterator_range<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<const char*, std::basic_string<char> > >, std::allocator<boost::iterator_range<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<const char*, std::basic_string<char> > > > >(0ul))->boost::iterator_range<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<const char*, std::basic_string<char> > >::<anonymous>.boost::iterator_range_detail::iterator_range_base<__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<const char*, std::basic_string<char> >, boost::iterators::random_access_traversal_tag>::<anonymous>.boost::itera
the who
lost me at fields.std
oh, c++ template errors
how I love you
(not very much)
I like how I want to buy windows 10 Pro
And Microsoft's site is so shitty I can't even find where to do that.
You can upgrade from the OS itself
IIRC
I like how you're using windows
we can emotionally support one another through the trials and tribulations
I just picked up a 16GB flash drive. I told the guy trying to upsell me to a 32GB I only needed it to put stuff on it for a friend, and he looked at me weird. :\
it's radio shows I actually purchased
02:04
@ThePhD I think if you press Win+Break, it will have an upgrade link near the bottom
> $200.00 US for Windows 10 Pro
Ha ha ha haaaaaaaaaaaaaa.
yeah, a bit crazy
user406009
@ThePhD Don't you work for MS? IIRC, they have a pretty severe employee discount.
user406009
Especially for their OS products.
@Lalaland Interned a few times, didn't stock up on product keys and shit.
user406009
02:16
Oh, and I guess you are not heading back there this summer?
Nupe.
user406009
Eh, the Pro features are mostly useless anyways.
user406009
But then again, I dual boot and only use Windows for gaems.
The pro features are necessary for things like Client Hyper-V and shit.
02:40
I really like kvm virtual machine manager in linux
03:00
> Add cross-map team chat.
what the hell is /team for then
Only works on non cross-maps
03:19
iocb->ki_filp
input_output_control_block->kernel_int_file_pointer
probably
03:30
> Minstrel's EXOTIC set costs more that 400 gold...
I don’t see a problem, it’s garbage stats with no offence
@ThePhD what happens when you use [](int& ref) { ... }? Error by-design?
@doug65536 I have no clue what happens with that, actually.
I should try it sometime. :B
I think it just compiles since the arguments are held somewhere...
yeah, I added std::string support and added support for taking std::string const& for strings containing null
26ns for char const*, 41ns for [](int value, std::string const& str) ...
I should support std::pair<char const*, char const*> ranges for string-with-null support
03:47
omg I just discovered ~^Z in ssh
productivity gainz
anything is better than 0, I hear you say
@doug65536 Would rather just wait for string_view or somethin'.
hello guys
hi
Hello
I am just new
but this chat won't go down on its own
@ThePhD yeah, for now I offer std::pair<char const*, char const*> begin/end pair
it is as fast as char const* if you must support nulls
I am so happy that the compiler does exactly what I wish with that recursive parameter unpack chain. I wouldn't ask for better codegen
Inlining OP
qq someone opened an issue on sol2
I dun wanna fix iiit.
04:07
guy is nice
FIX IT
BWUUUUU- fine. :<
04:55
@Borgleader Wow. It's "for a friend". AHA
@Mysticial MY CURIOSITY HAS BEEN BURNING, SCREENSHOT MEE.
@ThePhD I'm impressed by the sol2 project.
@DmitriBudnikov
@edition Thanks!
yeah guy didn't attach a mcve ._.
05:24
> Baltimore : un homme déguisé en panda a menacé de se faire exploser
@Mysticial ... Damn, what a TRAINwreck.
1) take pictures of homework, 2) feed it into stack overflow, 3) twiddle thumbs or whatever you do nowadays, 4) profit
Ven
Ven
05:58
@DmitriBudnikov il est pandémoniaque !
@doug65536 5) watching your question getting downvoted 6) adding comments, trying to revert the downvotes 6) realizing that the question is closed/deleted 7) going on to meta to complain 7) account suspended 8) creating new account 9) repeat the process ...
@ThePhD a poor man's string view (pair of char const*) is a lot faster than std::string temporary
That's iterator_range
06:14
yeah, not in C++14 right?
iterator_rage
Ven
Ven
8:20 blaze it
hey guys, i need some suggestion about improving the looping on a big size of vertex/ Vector3d
Ven
Ven
Well we do have our local CUDA expert
looping?
06:25
well its affect my rendering when i have a 200000 size of vector3d.
yeah i am trying to get the coordinate of my boundingbox everytime the object move
you can optimize that very easily with SIMD. but that isn't the real solution
bounding spheres let you move one vector3d and it is done
you dont transform everything, then turn around and read back all your vertices
you could store 2 vector3d's. one for the center, one to represent the height/width/depth. then do a few little operations and find the bounds
you arent seriously digging through all the vertices are you? that will never go fast
use one vector to represent the position, and one vector to represent the shape, then you can rotation-only-transform that shape vector and find the OOBB very quickly
@CarloowLescano that code is optimized for simplicity, obviously you dont dig through every vertex of every object every frame
how many GB/sec are you expecting to have available? lol
yeah i liked your idea. thank you.
06:34
im sorry im still new to this. i will do some study first to make it lol
basically im just a web programmer and never been on a application development like opengl. But im thankful that i will experienced this one. thanks again. LOL
@CarloowLescano noticed a mistake in what I said. I should have said, use 4 vectors, one for the position, one for the width-only vector, one for the height-only vector, one for the depth-only vector. then you translate-only transform the 1st one, and rotate-only the other three. from there you can determine the up/right/away directions from the 3 size vectors + the position
fits nice and cozy in one cache line on typical modern cpu
actually im just setting the boxcoordinates
that works too, if you dont mind a bit of extra "size" when it rotates.
should be fine, simpler and accurate enough
if the shape is really a box then it really does get wider when it rotates. depends on the shape you represent
06:55
do you have some links about your algorithm?
yes the size of the BB will update if i rotate it.
google AABB and OOBB (axis aligned bounding box / object oriented bounding box) and google hidden surface determination, culling, and frustums
ok thank you
Does anyone here have experience with this kind of linking//destruction issue: 1, 2, 3?
How is it even possible that the linker makes it so that there are two static variables destructors pointing at one static variable?
because it merges duplicate definitions (you mean two different "functions" with the same address, right?)
@doug65536 Yes, it seems so.
But I do not get it why should there be two instances in first place that get merged.
07:05
yeah. if it didn't do that then it would be very bad. templates could cause a ridiculous amount of duplication
Why I am asking is because a user of log4cplus thinks he hit the same problem with it.
nevermind, I see
uh, what is the problem? are there supposed to be two "use" prints?
@doug65536 The dude sees a crash on exit. He is using dlopen() to load his stuff.
well don't exit then
problem sloved
@wilx if both a static lib and a dynamic lib provide the same symbol, and you need the symbol, then whichever one is first on linker command line wins, in g++
07:11
> Unfortuantely,
if the dynamic lib needs the symbol itself, it will use its whatever came first when linking the dynamic lib
@doug65536 But that does not make any sense to me. What symbol would my library provide that would also be provided by the main executable?
your question says you link both a static and a shared lib at once, doesnt it?
if that shared one uses the static library, then a copy of the static library one will link into the dynamic lib
if the exe uses the static lib and the shared uses the static lib, then the exe will use static one and shared lib code will use its own copy of static lib code
the shared lib wont magically rewrite itself because the program that loaded it uses that static lib too
sorry I keep mixing up shared/dynamic. same thing for the purposes of what I am saying
That seems weird scenario. Dunno. It is a mess. TBH, I actually do not have a test case that would be using dlopen() with log4cplus so it is possible it is broken in that regard.
@wilx: hi
07:20
@Destructor Huh. Hi?
morning
@wilx: can I ask u for a help ?
@Destructor Most likely not.
@wilx: why ?
@wilx No.
07:21
@Destructor There is SO for that.
@Destructor Unless you have a very compelling reason why you are asking specifically me.
@wilx: ok sorry for disturbing. will never bother again !!!
@Destructor \o/
Kids these days...
well it's pretty clear how to fix it
don't use dumb mutable global state
user1804599
TIL there are insurances for buying everybody a drink after hitting a hole-in-one.
@Zoidberg They insure you so that you do not have to pay all the drinks yourself if you do hole-in-one?
07:26
@Zoidberg you cannot be serious
@Puppy good morning
I gotta head off to work
see you later
bye
@wilx I suppose so
which kinda makes sense don't you think
user1804599
@wilx Yep.
user1804599
Apparently it's etiquette in golf that you do a round.
07:36
@LucDanton it's a bit sad
also dat decision of making concepts a template where the first argument denotes the model, I'm not sure I like it
I would have preferred some Self thing a la Rust
user1804599
% (yes | head -n 10) | xargs echo | sed 's/ //g'
yyyyyyyyyy
@sehe Fitting username
user1804599
This is just like Haskell!
07:40
wow!
user1804599
I should learn more about sed.
user1804599
Doing loops and all that stuff.
@sehe How do you feel about using the same answer for more than one question?
I want to spam a small open source lib.
@Mysticial awesome. So sad I can't answer it just to fuck with em
@JohanLarsson comments
If you use answers it would seem disingenuous
lol with the inline badge
add also build failing and deps out of date for giggles
07:45
what build?
> add
user1804599
GB XML FILES
I use them on a daily basis.
07:47
regrets
@JohanLarsson It's for fun. You know. Humor. I know. Strange concept on SO
But I'll not spam it, idea was 1) may be useful someone 2) someone may find a bug.
Not important.
Still for the comments
yeah, you are right of course, thanks.
I'd personally appreciate it if the question was quite recent. It might be useful
07:48
A perfect SO gentlebear. :)
You too, for asking!
@JohanLarsson disclose that you are a contributor if you are. people get mad about advertising without disclosure
Even for free open source stuff?
@doug65536 Not in a comment. That's fine, and even somehwat to be expected
A product would be very ew, agreed.
07:49
@JohanLarsson Yes. But I wouldn't sweat it in the comments
> This, of course, is my opinion but I once tried to hire a guy to maintain that VB6 code for me (so I would no longer have to do it). The guy had taught VB to Jesus he had been doing it so long. I asked him why he would want to come in and work on this block of crap. His response was basically that he had made a great living fixing crappy VB code, he was used to it.
Heh.
ah open source, nevermind then
@Mysticial cliiiiiiiiiiick it
user1804599
uh
user1804599
is it normal that Vim doesn't show anything and uses 0% CPU and does no disk I/O when you search through a GB file with it?
user1804599
07:52
oh wait, that's the other Vim process
user1804599
Maybe I should disable syntax highlighting.
@Mysticial Lol, "it's for a friend".
Ven
Ven
:v
I think some of these post just come from trolls or drunk guys.
07:55
@Zoidberg YCM?
assuming that all men are alcoholic you disgust me
@Zoidberg For 3GB XMLs, I just use vim -u NONE
user1804599
@sehe I just installed Vim.
Ok
user1804599
I didn't configure it at all.
07:55
Syntax (or interrupt with Ctrl-C)
Ven
Ven
I'm so bad at sysadmin, git clone localhost:foo gives me "permission denied (publickey)
user1804599
Yes, disabling syntax highlighting makes searching must faster. :)
@StackedCrooked yeah, "for my friend" because it is unbelievable to be in a programming course and not know how stupid pictures of code are
user1804599
It now searches through the entire file instantly (SSD ftw).
@Zoidberg I created this nice little interface to sanely work with multiGB XMLs in streaming fashion paste.ubuntu.com/16123836 (yes, it can do fds or istreams, but it's not in the public interface yet)
user1804599
07:57
I could've just used grep.
@Zoidberg That's likely not SSD related
@Zoidberg I often have the same realization. I use sed quite a bit to modify test data
I really want to fart
Ask @Puppy for advice
user1804599
bleh, this data is split across two XML files
I forgot the forward declares for xmlpp paste.ubuntu.com/16123860
07:59
@sehe Dat vertical alignment of the exceptions.
Dat eye for detail
user1804599
One with product info and one with price info.

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