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user1804599
14:07
> When your body burns calories and you lose weight, obviously mass is leaving your body. In what form does it leave?
user1804599
OP has never pooped.
@rightfold Helium, obviously.
@rightfold Actually it's water.
user1804599
Poop contains shitloads of water.
CH (fat) + O2 => energy + CO2 + H2O
9th grade chemistry, right here
user1804599
14:09
FOOD + SPORT -> POOP + HEAT
It's the only thing I know about chemistry.
user1804599
Chemistry is super rad.
Xeo
Xeo
@StackedCrooked Actually it's CO2 :D
Damn, you got me.
user1804599
14:11
I want a bottle of CFClIBr
Xeo
Xeo
I read something about that a few weeks ago, most "mass" is exhaled as CO2 or something.
user1804599
Humans contribute to CO2 content of the atmosphere and therefore must be eliminated.
user1804599
Forbid humans.
@Xeo So if you want to lose weight you should... breathe more? :P
Xeo
Xeo
14:16
That's not how it works :P
If you wanna lose weight, eat less, the CO2 is automatic :P
@Borgleader Break down sacharides into H2O and CO2 by breathing
> I'll even let you warm your freezing hands inside my butt crack
there is already a saying:
you scratch my butt and i'll scratch yours
@StackedCrooked i think you mean shitty lyrics
:P
I've had hit YT playlist on for a while now.
As a non-american I wasn't aware of all the stuff he put out in the past.
user3790646
14:26
@StackedCrooked I should've sent that video to my ex when we broke up
user1804599
Noun: APLer ‎(plural APLers)
  1. (computing) A programmer who uses APL.
  2. 1984, Byte magazine
  3. ...his disappointment that APL was not chosen over BASIC as IBM's premier language for the PC. Having established his credentials as an APLer, though,...
  4. 1985, Lib Gibson, Joshua S Levine, Robert C Metzger, Application systems in APL: how to build them right‎
  5. This leaves two situations not covered — the repetitive task being done by an APLer, and the highly unstructured task...
(4 more not shown…)
user1804599
lol
^ They are very able as well.
Ven
Ven
yo y
This caused me to spend 1 hour of my life trying to figure out why all promises would hang for hours
That "." instead of "," at the end of "tag._id"
14:35
dynamic typing ftw
Why didn't Javascript say that that shouldn't parse is beyond me
@rightfold Lexing and parsing are traditionally described as two distinct phases, yet in practice, they are always interleaved, in the sense that the parser asks the lexer for the next token whenever it needs one, right?
because it's totally legit syntax
@Shoe pizza :)
What about parsing and semantic analysis... Until now I was convinced that compilers first build a parse tree, and when the tree is completely built, semantic analysis begins by walking the tree. Is that what happens in practice, or does the parser push little bits of information to the semantic analyser as soon as they are encountered, like "here is a declaration for you to analyse"? Because I could certainly get rid of some logic duplication in my compiler with the latter approach...
14:36
@fredoverflow They are two distinct phases, lexers just happen to sometimes be lazy.
@Puppy How so?
What does "tag5._id." means?
@Puppy What exactly do you mean by that? Should lexers convert a string to a list of tokens before the parser starts?
@Shoe It's tag5._id.tag1._id, but with a space
oh boy
But shouldn't the space be an error?
It's as if you wrote struct A { int b; } z; z . b = 5;
14:38
Does that imply that I can do "tag5. _id" to begin with?
yes it's an operator like any other
@Mgetz but that's a recent thing, and it doesn't change the fact that people use the word (with all sorts of meanings).
TIL
You need a space in here 2 .a_method() because otherwise it'll be interpreted as a float literal, for example
> For efficiency, we don't store CV-qualified types as nodes on their own: instead each reference to a type stores the qualifiers. This greatly reduces the number of nodes we need to allocate for types (for example we only need one for 'int', 'const int', 'volatile int', 'const volatile int', etc).
> As an added efficiency bonus, instead of making this a pair, we just store the two bits we care about in the low bits of the pointer. To handle the packing/unpacking, we make QualType be a simple wrapper class that acts like a smart pointer. A third bit indicates whether there are extended qualifiers present, in which case the pointer points to a special structure.
holy balls
14:42
@fredoverflow sounds like the usual push-vs-pull issue.
Well the low bits are zero due to alignment anyway, so they can be used for something useful instead
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow they WHAT/store HOW?
@fredoverflow Hot damn
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow depends if you can, or can't, do that.
@milleniumbug Huh that was not obvious to me
14:43
So they get const and volatile for free. That is really clever.
Ven
Ven
@Borgleader wearebadlets.com :[
@Ven if the pointers are aligned to, say, 4-byte boundaries, the lower two bits are constant zeros. So you can use them to store other data there.
@Ven I guess modern languages build the parse tree first due to forward references?
@R.MartinhoFernandes This is one of those optimisations that makes a ton of sense once someone tells you but that I never would have come up with myself.
I actually think Webkit does something similar in its locks now that i think about it
The lock is basically a pointer and 2 bits saying if its locked and if there are threads queued
It's pretty common, I think.
14:46
Apparently a lot of lisps do it
@R.MartinhoFernandes "A third bit indicates whether there are extended qualifiers present" says 8-byte-aligned, right?
user1804599
@fredoverflow The phases are still distinct; it just happens that the lexer is lazy.
user1804599
Make the lexer strict and the behavior will be the same.
In computer science, a tagged pointer is a pointer (concretely a memory address) with additional data associated with it, such as an indirection bit or reference count. This additional data is often "folded" into the pointer, meaning stored inline in the data representing the address, taking advantage of certain properties of memory addressing. The name comes from "tagged union", and the additional data is called a "tag" or "tags", though strictly speaking "tag" refers to data specifying a type, not other data; however, the usage "tagged pointer" is standard. == Folding tags into the pointer... ==
14:47
Didnt realize it was a "safe" optimization when I read the webkit article, because they didnt mention the alignment thing
@rightfold Except you may get a different error reported if the lexer is eager ;)
user1804599
Not if both the lexer and the parser are total and pure.
@fredoverflow right. Which is common if they point to int64s or structures containing them.
user1804599
@Ven in APL how do you do a ternary function
@R.MartinhoFernandes I wouldn't be surprised if clang had its own memory allocator that guaranteed 8-byte-alignmend for everything...
14:48
On linux you can use the 16 unused bits. On top of that you can do steal bits that are unused due to alignment.
@Borgleader it's generally safe if actually stored as an int, not a pointer. Some architectures trap on loading invalid pointers.
@набиячлэвэлиь C++ implementation I made
@fredoverflow malloc does.
@milleniumbug Yeah, I remember that
@R.MartinhoFernandes Oh, it already does? Nvm then :)
14:49
Because it has to be aligned to the most strictly aligned fundamental type.
Right, otherwise double * p = malloc(sizeof *p); wouldn't even work.
long double
Since you can put anything whatsoever in the memory, it has to be either aligned to the max, or leave it to the user to do it.
I only learned about long double two years ago.
Never knew it existed. And I had been doing C++ for 10 years then.
long double is the same as double on Microsoft compilers, right?
14:50
It's fairly useless IMO so meh
(Note that in general this max alignment doesn't include SIMD types, so bets are off on those)
Dunno. AFAIK it's an 80 bit floating point rep.
@StackedCrooked nah, in VC++ it's just double.
@StackedCrooked on x87, yes
The 80-bit thing is what it is intended to be, though.
14:52
sizeof(long double) == 10 then? :)
Xeo
Xeo
16
Because common FPUs do everything in 80-bit or something.
@fredoverflow o u
@R.MartinhoFernandes x87 does, dunno about SSE
@fredoverflow likely 16 for alignment purposes.
14:52
10 * 8 = 16
4
Otherwise you cannot have an array of long doubles.
An array of long doubles. The concept somehow feels threatening.
If you make them size 10, either they are overaligned to 16 (so effectively size 16), or the second element of an array will be aligned to 2.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It isn't intended to be any one particular thing. Quite a few machines had more than two floating point types, so they accommodated a (potential) third standard type.
Meanwhile Intel doesn't care about misaligned pointer access. I do wonder though. This must imply that the CPU performs a check on alignment. So it involves a cost even for aligned dereferences.
Ven
Ven
14:55
@fredoverflow well, if there are bits of information you can pickup along the way, add 'em in. but often you can't
@rightfold i.e.?
user1804599
f(x, y, z) = x + y * z
@fredoverflow SSE doesn't. Oh, and x87 does by default, but you can change that (there's a couple of bits in the floating point control word to specify the precision it uses).
Ven
Ven
@rightfold {⍺ ⍺⍺ ⍵⍵ ⍵}
@JerryCoffin That's where Java's strictfp keyword comes in.
I have been thinking: if people started with a maths system other than 10 based: e.g. binary or hexadecimal based, would the maths system have been developed differently?
Ven
Ven
14:59
@rightfold the doubled version can be operators, i.e. 3 {⍺⍺ ⍵⍵ ⍵}+ 4 (otherwise you need parens)
@Telkitty Is anything in math dependent on the base?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold i.e. 3(4{+/⍺ ⍺⍺ ⍵⍵ ⍵}5)4
APL stands for APriL fools, right?
How do you even type these characters?
@fredoverflow different base can cause different intuition maybe?
@Telkitty Probably not to any significant degree. The French language makes it apparent that people in that part of the world used based 20 for a fair amount of time, but it doesn't seem to have led to many differences.
user1804599
15:00
@fredoverflow With an APL keyboard layout.
user1804599
@Ven oh nice
user1804599
Also I think you mean e.g.
Ell
Ell
@fredoverflow with an APL teletype of course!
@StackedCrooked dunno about that, but even if so, the cost of unaligned loads is significantly higher because a single word can end up straddling cache lines.
@JerryCoffin 20? did they use both of their hands and feet?
also 20 based is still slightly from 2 based
@fredoverflow Originally by doing some overstriking, in at least some cases. IBM made some special balls for Selectrics to do APL.
I don't understand why people don't realise this but no one uses their hands to count.
@rightfold i.e. vs. e.g. is a classic
@R.MartinhoFernandes I do
Ven
Ven
15:02
@fredoverflow I just type `+character
Sometimes
Ven
Ven
@fredoverflow it's very fast (if you don't like `, you can change it of course)
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think children do when they start to learn maths
@Telkitty There are at least a few jokes about the French going barefoot...
Children don't develop any mathematical systems
15:02
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah that could happen. But the principal overhead is that it requires the CPU to read out both words and apply some kind of bit shifting operations in order to get the result wright and then write both of those back.
Ven
Ven
@JerryCoffin that's not what other APLers told me -- apparently those were already existing characters
10 fingers, 10 based system, that's totally a coincidence ...
I recall reading an Intel document saying that we shouldn't worry too much about it since the overhead is only around 10%. Oh, wait it was 40%.
Plenty of historical evidence for non-base-10 systems out there
I think people overestimate powers of ten again and again.
> How much of a penalty hit will you experience? Empirical evaluation using a 2.8 Ghz Pentium® 4 processor system shows that an unaligned 16-byte load contained within one cache line (128 bytes) is only moderately slower–about 40%–compared to an aligned access. The cost rises sharply though when the 16-byte chunk crosses a cache line boundary. Such cache line splitting loads can be up to five times slower!
15:04
Being able to do multiplications and divisions by shifting is a property of any radix system
The biggest problem with unaligned loads/stores is not overhead, it's loss of atomicity
@Ven I've done it. In fact, I've fixed a few APL programs that looked right, but the overstriking had been done in the wrong order.
Ven
Ven
oh, the papers. Funny
@JerryCoffin :O. wow
@milleniumbug If you actually wanted atomicity in the first place.
15:05
@StackedCrooked trashing cache lines is pretty bad
@Ven It did probably depend on the exact APL system you were using though.
Oops wrong ping
@milleniumbug wow, you must really suck if you manage to write code that performs atomic operations on misaligned addresses
Ven
Ven
@milleniumbug don't 64bits write take >1 cycle already?
@Ven Depends on the hardware, but with anything recent at all, mostly no.
15:07
@StackedCrooked Well right, of course you shouldn't. I imagine the problem could arise when someone uses placement-new and doesn't align their buffers.
There is also historical evidence of 10-based numeral systems that don't have the shifting property. Hard to grasp what benefit they provide over non-10-based ones.
@Ven read from L1 cache is 4 cycles IIRC. Dunno about writes.
Writes can be cheaper because you aren't waiting for a result.
Ven
Ven
Oh: "do I mutex my int getI() { return _i; }" :P
Are there assembly instructions that give the programmer control over the cache? Or is the cache a pure "implementation detail"?
I personally find the inability to divide by three without recurring decimals quite annoying.
15:10
AFAIR there are prefetch instructions
There's __builtin_prefetch which has locality and temporality parameters.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Base 12 would solve that. We just need to grow 2 more fingers.
> The value locality must be a compile-time constant integer between zero and three. A value of zero means that the data has no temporal locality, so it need not be left in the cache after the access. A value of three means that the data has a high degree of temporal locality and should be left in all levels of cache possible.
@fredoverflow From GCC docs.
interesting
But yeah, cache is essentially ungraspable by the programmer.
15:12
@fredoverflow the point is that we don't need the fingers
It's just a crutch to help bootstrap
@fredoverflow There's also a few bios settings you can tinker with. Not sure if that counts :D
Yep, the best BIOS setting is "Disable L2 cache"
@fredoverflow there's PREFETCH and PREFETCHW from 3dnow; maybe more
Best prank: switch it on and make someone wonder why everything is so slow
Dunno what gcc uses
15:14
I have a colleague who would be especially susceptible to that prank.
But note that CPUs nowadays have automatic prefetching
@fredoverflow The programmer has control over how he organizes his memory layout.
So it's the usual advice like we give about inline.
Make sure you know you're doing it better than the CPU would
huh, I thought inline was just a linker directive?
j/k
There are forceinline extensions and all that
user1804599
15:17
I just learned how to add two numbers! khanacademy.org/math/arithmetic/addition-subtraction/…
I was thinking
5
I'm a fanatical inliner though. I'm also fanatic about when not to inline.
does "tell don't ask" implies that getters (even non-trivial ones) should be avoided?
By splitting of the cold code into non-inline function calls you can guide the compiler into creating a fast path for the hot code.
user1804599
I wan to eat a gherkin.
15:19
^ picture in my head
Do we need more "metal" languages these days?
@Shoe There's this pure schOOl of thought that says "Getters and setters of any form violate encapsulation, because you probably can't change the internal representation without also changing the getters and setters".
@fredoverflow the first cache came out in 1968. What do you mean by "these days"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't know... are caches, pipelines etc. a problem for predictability of performance?
user1804599
The days after 1968 suck.
user1804599
They aren't good ol'.
the good 01 days ;)
15:23
@fredoverflow the gap betwen C and asm is pretty large nowadays too. Remember, memset(password, 0, sizeof password) generates no asm
right, stupid optimizers ;)
user1804599
@Cubbi make password volatile!
user1804599
Wait does memset even work with volatile objects?
Then it doesn't compile.
user1804599
:'( :'( :'(
15:25
memset takes pointers to nonvolatile.
user1804599
needs more _Generic
user1804599
abstractioff
You simply can't memset volatile data because casting the volatile away leads to UB.
You're stuck with manually writing over it.
15:26
First they need to decide whether _Generic strips const (gcc and clang disagree)
user1804599
Partial derivatives are super rad.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Can't you just write your own safe_memset(volatile char *, char, size_t);?
user1804599
Are non-partial derivatives considered a subset of partial derivatives? Making using ∂ instead of d always correct.
Hello everyone! Can I ask question about CMake here?
No, the chat system will prevent you from asking questions about build tools.
15:28
Thanks. In which room can I ask a question like that?
Uh, my question seems stupid and I don't want to lose reputation for asking it
Well if it's not a duplicate and you made the effort of browsing FAQs, documentation, and still got nothing, it's unlikely you'll be downvoted
Unless you dump it here
Then you will be downvoted
yeah, that
15:32
"The downvote is enormous, there is no escape"
Questions similar to mine have been asked before, but I don't get the answer I wanted
@JerryCoffin actually most European languages don't have a purely decimal system. Not even French as spoken in Belgium. Most of them have special words for numbers between 10 and 20. English, for example, has non-base-10 words for 11 and for 12.
Afaik, Hungarian is the odd one out with a purely decimal system.
Ell
Ell
yeah I don't understand why that happened
like eleven & twelve but twenty-one and twenty-two o.O
Polish's 11-19 all end with *naście
Ell
Ell
or 2 * 40 in french or whatever it is
language is very bizarre
15:34
@Jeremy Look, you can either post the question in a chat room with a dozen people lurking, probably none of which has enough experience with cmake to answer your question, or you could ask on a website that is specifically dedicated to answering programming-related questions which is browsed by thousands if not millions of programmers each day.
@набиячлэвэлиь no +20.
That's one hundred.
"cent"
right, I suck at meth
I wish i could do namespace a { void foo() {} } namespace b { using bar = foo; } (inb4 that wouldnt make sense)
It's 60, 60+10, 4*20, 4*20+10
@Borgleader using namespace a;
15:36
oh wait, disregard this
using bar = a::foo;   // Dunno if this works, but if it doesn't, it would be awesome if it did
But in Belgium they have special systematic variants for 70, 80, and 90, like English
:30961641 I cant do that, the function names differ per OS, I want to using based on an ifdef to have a single name
like #ifdef windows using CreateSurface = vkCreateWin32SurfaceKHR; #elif linux ...
@milleniumbug oh, ok, I know two now :)
@Borgleader if you call them from the body then you'll probably get the function optimised out anywya
15:37
@набиячлэвэлиь i dont see how thats relevant?
@fredoverflow well. I'm trying to install this github.com/gabime/spdlog but I keep getting No such file or directory error
@Borgleader You'll get 100% alias fallthrough, bar will be optimised out
@Ell yeah, I don't know. Latin has systematic words for the teens, but Romance languages ended up with special words for them too.
user1804599
user1804599
Beautiful!
15:39
@Borgleader Doing perfect forwarding is probably the only way
Though, for example in French the words for 11-16 are systematic too, just a different system from 17-19
@rightfold lol, Ctrl-selecting on that table drops perf so hard
coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/3c04b6991058751a <-- what i want /cc @milleniumbug @набиячлэвэлиь
@milleniumbug hmm i guess youre right
Anyone here use regex? How does the regex "et*" find a match at index 9 in this "this has e and t"?
15:40
^ TIL about github shirts
@betarunex "e" + "t"*0..inf, in this case "e" + "t"*0
@betarunex No because when you use regex to solve a problem, you end up with 2 problems.
@Jeremy If you ask that on stackoverflow, you need to provide a lot more details.
user1804599
@betarunex it finds something that starts with "e" followed by zero or more "t"s
user1804599
15:42
"this has e and t" has an e at its 9th position, and that e is followed by zero or more ts
@rightfold Oh, so only the previous character is affected by the *
@набиячлэвэлиь What happens if you wash the shirts?
user1804599
@betarunex yes.
@fredoverflow Eh? Dirt comes off 'em, prolly
Thanks people.
user1804599
15:43
if you want both affected, use (et)*
@набиячлэвэлиь Is the user name you scribbled onto it considered dirt or not?
@fredoverflow How the fuck would I know, mate?
@fredoverflow no need to 2x him
@набиячлэвэлиь You linked to it, so you're the expert!
@JohanLarsson You can 0.5x him...
user1804599
user1804599
15:46
This is the coolest image
Does it explain Monads?
user1804599
Find an isomorphism between monads and divergences.
I should have a Linux iso in my download folder somewhere...
not sure about the pointers or consts, but otherwise you get the gist
15:52
Well I took the original signature from the header added && to all the params and templated each of them -.-;
I really should re-read Meyers' section on perfect forwarding i forgot the rules (i never use them)
You declare the argument as T&& arg, and call std::forward<T>(arg) when you pass it to the function
But that doesn't really matter if all your arguments are pointers though
You could just declare the original signature
@StackedCrooked "4,200 rounds per minute. "
If you have variadic templates, you could go with Args&&... args and then your_function(std::forward<Args>(args)...);
15:56
@betarunex Oh, lol. I was reading the comments.
You wouldn't survive either :P
@StackedCrooked It's basically a freaking lazer
@milleniumbug I wouldn't count on VS for that :(
Yeah, me neither
@fredoverflow do you know them?
user1804599
16:10
I want to apply my new knowledge at work
user1804599
Maybe something like statistics
Ell
Ell
@betarunex * means 0 or more
user1804599
They didn't know * had precedence over juxtaposition
@Ell Thanks. I got it :)
Ell
Ell
Oh right
16:26
@StackedCrooked Just don't get hit
@betarunex Imagine the noise.
In real life. Not via speakers.
is c++'s auto same as c#'s var?
it's similar in functionality, yes
It deduces the type of variable from its initializer
on compile-time, right?
16:34
@R.MartinhoFernandes Fair enough--French is just an example where it's extremely obvious.
@betarunex It'd take a damned powerful laser to dish out that kind of destruction. I'm not at all sure a laser that powerful has ever been built.
@StackedCrooked I've heard (sort of, anyway) the tail gun from a B-52H, which was only a 20mm, 1200 RPM Gatling cannon--but there were 8 jet engines a lot closer, so it had a hard time competing.
user1804599
I just heard a grass mower and it reminded me of the gun.
@StackedCrooked XD. Did you duck and cover?
Nah, I was too busy on my computer.
16:56
@ScarletAmaranth 3xstd::reverse is easy. Doing it by hand without using that trick is a little harder to come up with on your own.
@Borgleader Someone will pull the lever, and run over a family instead.
@JerryCoffin Hm, I can see the appeal.
@StackedCrooked It would be hard to miss...
I almost missed it.
@StackedCrooked Check your pulse. Maybe you died without noticing...
@JerryCoffin Objectification intensity over 9000!
Man, I have 7 Emacs sessions open...
17:24
That's 8 too many in the least
Ven
Ven
@rightfold indeed
@Xeo Wow, Luluco's episode was harsh.
Good Afternoon
It's over 9000!!!!!!!
@rightfold Yes, delta confirmed
was the sports pic flagged?
17:32
Everytime some braindead talks about "objectification" I just wanna burn a Code of Conduct to the ground.
Code of Merit rules though.
objectification doesn't make sense to me
Ven
Ven
@набиячлэвэлиь fight me maths
I think it's just postmodern nonsense. And nothing ever makes sense in postmodernism.
what comes after postmodernism?
@JohanLarsson oh the no swearing rules are here too? Or is it SO wide?
17:50
@StackedCrooked your face
@JABFreeware New rules, or new interpretation of old ones?
Been away from lounge drama for the last few weeks or so.
@caps all I know is good programmers get banned in the C# room for swearing. The mods need to get off their high horse. Didn't used to be this way...

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