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15:01
Someone just got his C++ question closed on SO, and I'm trying to figure out why.
I'm learning `Ogre3d` game engine. The first tutorial contains the line, that create root object of Ogre. This line gives error

`Error`

    *** Error in `/home/myprofile/NetBeansProjects/OrgeProj/dist/Debug/GNU-Linux/orgeproj': free(): invalid next size (normal): 0x0000000000629b20 ***

`Line`

    std::auto_ptr<Ogre::Root> lRoot(new Ogre::Root(lConfigFileName, lPluginsFileName, lLogFileName));

What's wrong with it?

Compile with `g++ 4.8` c++ standart `-c++11`
Link to question?
It's deleted. I could undelete, but I've posted it in its entirety above.
It's also using deprecated auto_ptr, albeit that seems like a hardcrash, not a compiler error.
user1804599
People can see deleted posts.
"Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself.
Seems he did that.
15:03
"voluntarily removed by the author"
I can't see it because I'm a low-rep pleb. q_q
It was closed first.
Close reason seems legit. There's no SSCCE.
Would you need that to deduce the problem in a single line of C++ code?
Or is that the wrong line? I don't see a free call anywhere there.
It seems like the SSCCE is not complete, there's no completely command line... and a link to the tutorial might help too...?
I don't see anything wrong with that particular line other than the fact that he's using deprecated auto_ptr.
15:07
Other than that it's not a particularly offensive question, nor do I think it's a dupe.
Just lacking in information.
user1804599
OP uses new, instant close as "too localized".
52
A: How to check if a CPU supports the SSE3 instruction set?

MysticialI've created a GitHub repro that will detect CPU and OS support for all the major x86 ISA extensions: https://github.com/Mysticial/FeatureDetector Here's a shorter version: First you need to access the CPUID instruction: #ifdef _WIN32 // Windows #define cpuid(info, x) __cpuidex(info, x,...

@Mysticial ^ Wow, that's thorough as fuck. Thanks!
It says "x86 ISAs"... This code will still work with x64-bit windows and linux, right?
I kept it updated over the years.
@ThePhD yes
It's not like it'd change because the cpuid intrinsics would continue to work?
Ooh, okay.
15:16
yeah
I might just use that rather than all this processor querying bullshit.
That doesn't tell you the # of physical processors in the system.
Yeah, but I have that covered already with the packages things from Windows.
Now I'm just touching things up to have more explicit listings for the various processor architectures and shit.
I just played that. :B
16:23
I don't like slides like this. It assumes that we don't ask the computer to do more than it did before.
Typical laptop probably does not have an SSD
It's the same reason people cry out that now that our computers are faster, we can throw away C++ and C and assembly and things like that because CLEARLY we've got enough speed and memory that it doesn't matter anymore.
But what they specifically leave out is that we always task that new memory and new processor clock with bigger, harder problems. =/
> "We compile a fast language, C++, to a slow language, for example JavaScript, and then put it through C++ so it runs fast"
Ven
Ven
Nice retardation
@ThePhD we do?!
@ThePhD completely retarded slide even if we did ask the computer to the same thing - not everything has linear nature of growth, this kind of thinking is dumb
16:28
@ThePhD There is that... but I'd rather proto-type and get a MVP in a language that works and gets me income and throw more machine time at right now
Once we've got that income, we can then re-do bits to make them extra fast or whatever, in languages such as C++, erlang or rust
tbh I spend more time battling JS than I would were I to use C++/Rust for the same thing
@JonClements This reminds me that I need to start working on my chat server and also wondering how to make it distributed rather than single-machine.
@ThePhD sounds interesting... what you writing it in (or don't I need to ask :p)
@JonClements C++ for the server, but after that... uh. I'm probably going to be grinding my face into Jabbascript and HTML and the ~~WebStack~~.
To be honest the stack of tech needed to make a website is borderline terrifying to me.
Use TypeScript over JavaScript
16:40
@ThePhD what did you mean by "distributed" btw?
nwp
nwp
Use C++ over JavaScript
@JonClements That only makes sense as long as you are more proficient in some other language. For me the "language that works and gets me income" is C++.
@JonClements Well. I would assume that at some point you can't saturate all 65355 socket file description connections on a Linux machine for a chat server without eventually bringing the machine to a painful limping crawl. So, if you want to have a ~~massive amount of users~~, you'd need to make things more distributed.
Experience tells me I can get an upper bound of maybe 15K users on a single semi-outdated two-core dedicated server machine in the cloud.
... Which, quite honestly. If I can manage that then I think I'd either have enough time or money to make my architecture distributed later. :v
user image
6
yup...
17:03
@Borgleader Haha. I am not that bad but I cannot stand even that much sun as my kids.
user1804599
TIL I found this website wikidata.org/wiki/Q556
17:42
Okay, have to freeze infoware, need to close out issues on lua-bench.
Ugh, graph drawing.
Bashee, TV series, it is such a bullshit.
The early episodes, they would not let him beat all the suspects all the time.
In 3 episodes he basically assaulted loads of people in front of witnesses as a sheriff.
Geez.
Like, if he was not sheriff, OK, but since he is, even though a doppelgänger.
So
I rewrote what I had in Tex into HTML and JS
I think it's gonna work better for me
the only problem I'm facing now is loading files from the client
it all works great w/o a server
but apprently you can only load JS files, not text
and also, heh
instead of writing a book I apparently wrote a JS framework to write books
18:07
@Borgleader I gain more freckles the few times I don't burn.
I guess I have Irish blood.
Which would explain a few things about alcohol.
soooo
page1.appendChild(createChordDiagram([
    {string: 2, fret: 1 },
    {string: 4, fret: 2 },
    {string: 5, fret: 3 }
]));
I could probably turn the former into JSON
user1804599
y u no SVG
Can you use the LilyPond in LaTeX?
ooor maybe just create my own pseudo-HTML
@Morwenn no idea.
Apparently there is a package.
18:11
@rightfold because JS canvas is easier to write for me
user1804599
-1
it really doesn't matter whether I generate JS canvas commands or SVG
it's also utterly irrelevant
it really doesn't matter and it's utterly irrelevant?
just so you can see how little does it matter
oh good I was getting confused for a second there
"so it doesn't matter but he's not said it's irrelevant so it must be relevant"
"how can something not matter and be relevant?"
18:14
I will need to work on the fretboard rendering more to get it to automatically render scales
but that shouldn't be that hard
"wow he must be a wizard to deal with such complex thoughts all the time"
A higher level of defeatism.
but yeah one cool thing in JS is that you don't need to download 2.7GB of Tex to render the book
just open the html and click Print
there's probably a Tex package that does exactly what I want
or rather, that does almost exactly that and getting it to work would take ages
Benchmarking shit is hard.
@Xeo @Mysticial Damn that Kabaneri.
user1804599
18:31
@BartekBanachewicz unless emscripten
18:44
@StackedCrooked cliffhanger?
More like shit hit the fan.
Or something. Everything's messed up.
@rightfold what
6 messages moved to bin
there's a shitload of resources on how to add those libraries to a project
there's zillion configured examples
there are explanation for every possible compiler error, including undefined reference and missing headers
The guy got booted. He can't see your messages.
@macroscripts ^
19:42
@ScarletAmaranth So I decided to rewatch ep 3 of Erased.
dem feels
why that particular ep?
Didn't want to start from ep 1.
Remember the lunch money theft thing?
Never mind. I'm drunk :P
Guess I'll watch ep 4 then :)
Anyway, that lunch money thing was a kinda powerful scene.
Or maybe my judgement is clouded.
nwp
nwp
turns out I don't know how libraries work. If you objdump -TCw somelib.so you can get the same symbol be defined at multiple addresses in that lib.
19:48
IIRC the symbol can be marked as "duplicate allowed".
It happens a lot in C++ code when stuff is defined in header files.
Either as inline or template.
However, the duplicates should not be present in the resulting binary.
nwp
nwp
qt creator told me that if (0) produces a dead code warning and if ((0)) doesn't
rip static analysis
Why doesn't the C++ standard library include a networking library?
Because no one got one standardized. Your free to propose one to the commitee.
19:52
@nwp Probably (( suppresses
@nwp ((0)) is the secret to longevity
Btw, are you sure qtcreator told you that? It's the compiler's job.
nwp
nwp
well, qt creator ran clang, clang raised the warning and qt creator told me how to suppress it
with a handy dandy shortcut to automatically fix it for me
Is it also because in the C++ community there might be less emphasis on what the standard library can do for you and more emphasis on what you can do with the actual language itself thus differentiating it from other high level programming cultures
I dont think those two things are mutually exclusive
@MoonOwl22 wtf
The C++ community is totally supportive of the standard library.
19:59
Hi everyone
Ven
Ven
hi
20:19
@MoonOwl22 wot
@rightfold I made a logo for skorbut, beware my design skillz:
user1804599
yay
Now I just need to find a Unicode character that looks like a mouth with bleeding gums :)
@fredoverflow Where I'm from thats how very close to how you write scurvy
@Borgleader Very close? Like replace orange with the letter o? ;)
20:37
@fredoverflow lol, k -> c
LOL @StackedCrooked I love this talk
21:18
Hey guys - does anyone here remember the median of medians deterministic selection algorithm? It's so black magic..
Not me
Just wanted to share it with you guys, it's blowing my mind right now.
@MoonOwl22 Not at all. In fact, as more and more features get added to C++, they get added to the library and not the core language. The reason why there's no networking (yet, but it's coming) is because, while the comittee is slowly starting to realize that the library needs to get bigger if C++ wants to improve, it's also a comittee, so it's slow as shit.
nwp
nwp
@OneRaynyDay what confuses you?
@nwp Mmm, nothing so far has been an obstacle in trying to implement it, but I'll let you know if some freaky bug happens :)
I'm just amazed at the fact that there's 2 recursion calls but it doesn't diverge into at least O(N^2), and it calls itself twice in one call(what?)
21:24
@BartekBanachewicz Now you're just doing that to fuck with me. I was supposed to see less blurry since I got my new glasses today
@набиячлэвэлиь Today it does. Not in 2014
@EtiennedeMartel Oh god. That's horrible
@EtiennedeMartel Even C has sockets
For a language that originally was developed for distributed computing, it's interesting that the language would have no networking library
@OneRaynyDay That's usually the way that leads to O(log n) or O(n log n) really. It's not about recursion. It's about how many operations really result. Much like a loop isn't about looping. It's about terminating
@sehe you're right. What I think I meant was more towards the side of "Wow.. partially sorting the 5-groups is O(N), but yet it still does enough to the array for the decay to be geometric"
@BartekBanachewicz You suck.
nwp
nwp
@MoonOwl22 C has as much sockets as C++ has
Ven
Ven
21:33
just like threads!!1 oh wait
@nwp Yeah but it would have been lovely to have a C++ standard networking interface that abstracts to streams
The Dust Bowl, also known as the Dirty Thirties, was a period of severe dust storms that greatly damaged the ecology and agriculture of the US and Canadian prairies during the 1930s; severe drought and a failure to apply dryland farming methods to prevent wind erosion (the Aeolian processes) caused the phenomenon. The drought came in three waves, 1934, 1936, and 1939–40, but some regions of the high plains experienced drought conditions for as many as eight years. With insufficient understanding of the ecology of the plains, farmers had conducted extensive deep plowing of the virgin topsoil of...
TIL 1930s weren't so good if you lived in the prairies.
I HATE reading C-centric C++ code that was written to be high level
For example seeing macros drives me mad
@nwp Oop, I think I ran into a problem, implementation-wise
> During the drought of the 1930s, the unanchored soil turned to dust, which the prevailing winds blew away in huge clouds that sometimes blackened the sky. These choking billows of dust – named "black blizzards" or "black rollers" – traveled cross country, reaching as far as the East Coast and striking such cities as New York City and Washington, D.C. On the Plains, they often reduced visibility to 1 metre (3.3 ft) or less.
Damn.
21:36
What k would you pass to the median of medians vector? The size is now N/5, so should the k be N/10 logically?
user1804599
21:51
$report = new HTMLReport('<strong>hi</strong>');
$report->render(EchoWriter::instance());
user1804599
look at my code my code is amazing
It's PHP, therefore no
nwp
nwp
yay for getting downvoted for advising against using new -.-
@nwp here, have an upboat on it
Horace and Pete is a nice series.
21:56
Is it gay porn?
That sounds like gay porn
fucking nab
posting pictures randomly on the internet
Now, there's nothing wrong with posting pictures
Reposting photos of other people was a bit over the line, I admit
2
Ven
Ven
what a faggotry
I have accepted it as a lesson and that I succ
<insert insults towards me here>
I'm unable to insert the insult there
22:00
Do your best and insert below
Ven
Ven
how unloungy of you
@набиячлэвэлиь below where?
@Shoe below the provided place you are unable to use
but if I'm unable...
THEN USE THE PLACE BELOW WHICH YOU ARE ABLE
Kids these days...
nwp
nwp
22:02
TIL trolling > insults
The biggest insult is Jeffff's existence in and of itself, but
I ate Lebanese tonight. It was probably my first time at a Lebanese restaurant.
2
it's 4 effs though
my name was with 3
It was really good even though some things were unknown to my mouth.
3
are you still answering to me or to some other jeffff?
22:04
@Shoe I remember that you hate your name being spelled with an even amount of "f"s
that's a nice one
touchè
22:18
@набиячлэвэлиь It's a comedy/drama(?) series written by Louis CK.
And it has Steve Buscemi!
Why don't you marry him, then?
He rejected me :(
@Morwenn Kinky
@набиячлэвэлиь But mariage doesn't have anything to do with love :o
@StackedCrooked Don't be jealous :p
@Morwenn it definitely helps
next to money
@Morwenn How big was the kebab?
22:23
@Morwenn That's even more kinky.
(inb4 its not lebanese -.-)
@StackedCrooked Mh f...
@StackedCrooked oh god yes
S T A R B O Y S
@Borgleader I ate kibbeh.
That's an exotic name.
(lack of "a" or "some" helps, too)
22:25
Of course, that's fucKing Lebanese.
Make the "k" capital plz
@набиячлэвэлиь Done.
On the other hand, I feel like one or two smaller C++ nightmare are waiting ahead.
22:37
> Amazing chest ahead
@Morwenn Have you tried venturing in The great outdoors?
34 mins ago, by Morwenn
I ate Lebanese tonight. It was probably my first time at a Lebanese restaurant.
> >at Lebanese restaurant
> >outdoors
I know the town enough to know that there is nothing to do outdoors here :/
He was actually walking backwards?
Must have taken a few takes.
@StackedCrooked Yup.
22:43
Nice.
@StackedCrooked Yes, that's why lipsync is kinda bad and arm swings are weird
I see. He did a pretty good job though.
lol ESET keeps switching to game mode when I foreground FF in fullscreen
I had seen the clip before and never questioned why the horse was walking backwards..
@StackedCrooked It's surprisingly good, yeah
22:47
Yep :)
Hey guys - could anyone who's familiar with the Median of Medians algorithm please take a quick gander at my code? It's well documented so hopefully I don't invoke any headaches: pastebin.com/pyR43FAi
For some reason I'm not getting the actual median of the array, but it seems "close" to the median.
@OneRaynyDay std::nth_element and you've got median of medians (or even better: introselect) in one line of code :p
@Morwenn Ooh gotcha - I was trying to learn the algorithm for myself - is it possible to see the source code of std::nth_element?
@OneRaynyDay Sorry, I only know about the mode of modes algorithm.
@OneRaynyDay Of course, but it's far from simple.
22:52
I see... I'll go look at the source code and hopefully that doesn't make me more confused than I am right now LOL
@StackedCrooked cheeky :'(
There are even gotos for shit and giggles.
I heard this Rihanna song for the first time only a few months ago. Posted this before. Love it so much.
@Morwenn Jesus. <insert nope.jpg>
And it was released in 2011.
How come I never heard it before :D
Yep, looking at that source code gave me a headache. I give up LOL
23:02
I can do something none of you can do. But it's hard to explain. It's something with my fingers.
Either way, it proves my superiority to all of you.
user1804599
@Ven you should add ABAP's treatment of colons and commas to LiveScript.
user1804599
So that f: x, y is expanded into f x; f y.
23:18
@MoonOwl22 No, C doesn't have sockets. POSIX sockets and Winsock sure as hell aren't part of the C standard.
@sehe You're just not empathetic enough.
@EtiennedeMartel I created a socket struct 9 years ago (in C!). So C definitely does have them.
user1804599
@StackedCrooked have you managed to get your soul back since?
Sockets are in <sys/socket.h>, so its a system thing. I am not aware of a C style library that generalizes, or wraps them in a platform independent manner...
@EtiennedeMartel Do you have a pitbull?
@Borgleader Never owned a dog of any kind. I've always been more of a cat person.
23:24
Ah. So youre not affected by the new rulings.
/cc @Mysticial havent read this yet, but the title alone smells like fucking bullshit
Actually its not bullshit...
No, not BS, just an attempt by intel to bring in a convenient feature, along with all the obvious security holes adding a new wing to a house brings
I have no doubt that a government agencies would be extremely interested in using this to remotely shutdown your computer.
23:35
Oh yeah, but I can send a shutdown message from command prompt too; just need a rootkit to make your system accept the shutdown without warning
Yeah, but in this case you only need the FBI to get the secret entry code and you're fucked, OS independent.
True, but they could get it to happen regardless of OS anyways. Hell, they probably wrapped the different exploits in an interface that makes it look OS independent. It's nothing new. Just simpler, more direct.
So, most high profile exploits like the explosions in Iranian centrifuges were near hardware level hacks. This makes me feel that the software layer, can be secured
So, they put crap at the hardware level where you can't get to it. Another good example, is that your cellphone can be made to record audio without your permission and there is little that you can do on the software side to fix this.
But in the moment before the centrifuges exploded, they threw a CriticalExistenceException
I'm special casing stuff for std::list and std::forward_list. It feels bad :(
23:42
For a lookup table, std::unordered_map is better than std::map?
user1804599
@Aaron3468 do you need order?
@Aaron3468 Can't you use std::vector or similar?
user1804599
@Aaron3468 how big is your map?
user1804599
@Aaron3468 what do you need it to be better at?
a 256 element lookup, can be implemented as a int[256], fyi.
23:44
@Mikhail you mean the stuxnet incident?
@rightfold No, not really, I just need fast lookup. It's a two byte long lookup and it's basically the main loop of my program.
user1804599
Two bytes? Use an array of 256^2 elements.
Yeah, you might benefit from interpolation if your problem can tolerate it, for example image processing.
For example, there is a good paper on using OGL texture lookups for deconvolution. (Its a a highly cited L1 paper, like 300+ citations)
user1804599
It'll use more memory but you only specified fast look up, not low memory usage.
I could use an array, but then I'll have 1/2 of the entries that should return the same default value. It's a classic memory versus speed tradeoff where it probably won't matter which way I lean, so a map is easier to code.
user1804599
23:48
Half of entries return UB!
Yeah, instruction sets are fun that way...
Anybody know if there is a fast, unrolled, polynomial fit for $\alpha x + \beta x^2$ ?
@Mikhail Didn't understand any of that :)

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