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11:07
@Griwes Mostly because no one is foolish enough to think they can provide a warranty.
Software is special.
If hardware malfunctions, you can fulfill the warranty by simply replacing the unit with a new one.
You can't just send the user another copy of the software, though. It will have the same malfunction.
I don't understand system load numbers. 39.2 21.3 10.3
Oh, think I figured it out.
The kernel counts processes waiting for I/O as "load".
^ /cc @Luc @PatrickM'Bongo (@Ven is French too, right?)
11:44
good afternoon
is there a difference in speed between calling an object's function by pointer or by . ?
when there is no vtable involved
добрый день
@iksemyonov Yes, no, maybe.
sorry?
@iksemyonov it depends. look into the assembly for details
@R.MartinhoFernandes for a moment I thought that it's a ru.so chat
thing is, i have a proxy object for a multi dim array, instead of using a c++ multi dim array
with an overloaded operator()
and there is a class that loads some scientific data and a few classes that use the data
so, i'm considering returning just the data pointer from the data class, and letting the clients have their proxies
or returning the pointer to a proxy
and which one is faster
since you have all the codes, compile them with -S or /Fa
or do a benchmark ffs
11:50
might do, if i knew here to look, but ok, note taken
ffs doesn't belong to SO, sorry
@R.MartinhoFernandes well that came out of nowhere (to me)
@iksemyonov ffs is a hiss onomatopoeia.
if only
@iksemyonov The answer could be any of those three. You have to measure yourself.
ok, that was expected
bet i overdesign with all those classes..
it's easier to write in c sometimes
11:56
lol no
> Absolument, je suis à peine en 3ème année de médecine et déjà j'en ai ma dose des anti-vaccins sur internet (mais aussi IRL d'ailleurs).
@R.MartinhoFernandes actually, I did know about it. I’m surprised of the extent of it though.
also why use classes if you don't know how to use'em properly? you can write in C++ without "classes"
@LucDanton Me-ᴅᴀᴛ too.
2to4me
because with classes i think it's still easier, not to mention that i use Qt
12:00
> Après avoir sous-estimé pendant des années la montée d’un sentiment de défiance à l’égard des vaccins, et souvent balayé d’un revers de main les inquiétudes sur d’éventuels effets secondaires graves, les autorités sanitaires se trouvent aujourd’hui acculées au débat.
nwp
nwp
QList<std::unique_ptr<T>> doesn't compile due to QList not being aware that move semantics exist... guess I'll just leak memory everywhere...
meh
Ven
Ven
ô.o
and, i need to learn to use classes
qt is cancer
12:01
@R.MartinhoFernandes in hindsight browsing some of the news paints an ugly picture :(
your opinion, and a rude one.
you do not know what cancer is, obviously
an animal /s
yeyeye
Ven
Ven
I know you just gave it to me.
the animal is called crayfish
cancer is, at best, a horo sign, if you want an animal
12:02
biologist itt!
but i know you said a different thing.
Ven
Ven
@Columbo first one is an anime name, so
interesting how search results change when you introduce an apostrophe
@Columbo right, the only interesting thing there
12:06
> Because while the study showed 41% of the 964 people interviewed said vaccines were "not safe", 83% said they were "necessary".
I love how when you add "sleep with", it proposes ".. your second cousin? maybe?"
@R.MartinhoFernandes that’s from the comment section (it appears multiple times, too), but I can’t source it since the link is dead
> Because while the study showed that 99% of Christians deny science can answer big questions, 99% said it was necessary to solve almost all of their problems"
12:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes I found an online copy… but unless I’m doing something wrong the figures are too small
12:49
In front of my parents house ... parked bumper to bumper ...
always leave yourself 2-3 feet in front when parallel parking...
nwp
nwp
@ratchetfreak that is barbaric
user1804599
@Ven lol no TLS
water resistant ... except explodes
@ratchetfreak If you don't have enough feet, just find a pedestrian crossing.
13:02
void foo::bar(…garbage…) const::Prev
sure thing c++filt, sure thing
@ratchetfreak I think that white car parked when the middle one was already there ...
const::Prev?
lol
IIUC it’s likely to be something like const void foo::bar(…)::some_local_type some_scope::Prev
13:25
> Thanks for the abstract. Your talk has been accepted and your name
changed to ThePhD.
I'M GOING TO SPEAK SOMEWHERE! :O
11
Ven
Ven
@ThePhD YAY <3<3<3<3
/cc @jaggedSpire @Borgleader
omg, totally forgot about this email address of mine, then I found a bunch of interesting emails, ranged from app idea, to job application to free source code not to mention the usual boring SEO, app/website development offers.
finally found it: the best programming language visualization of all time http://www.onthelambda.com/2014/12/22/what-does-flatland-have-to-do-with-haskell/ https://t.co/4OALwhyF1c
13:40
after a bit of analysis 15% of my symbols involve std::_Tuple_impl somehow. I do love tuples, but when compared to another object file that’s still a big outlier cc @Xeo
@R.MartinhoFernandes No, he's from Paris. Know the difference.
@ThePhD On Sol? Which conf? Is it being streamed? <3 <3 <3 <3
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah I'm not really surprised, people are wary of vaccines (not because they doubt their efficiency), but because there are concerns over their side effects and because they are a milk cow. (Yes I realize this is what the article says)
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton Tuple tuple tuple.
13:49
@ThePhD Is it outside your basement
@PatrickM'Bongo Yes. :D
> 'Harambe McHarambeface' wins Chinese zoo's gorilla naming contest
Gregor did it before it was trendy
@ThePhD Cool, congratz :)
14:07
@ThePhD Cool :D
@PatrickM'Bongo spiked by 6k instant unblockable aoe damage
that dazes
and that lingers on to inflict more of the same kind of damage
all is fine
reminds me of the early combos with sigil of fire + sigil of air on berserk + ruby thiefs
good times
the rune of air cheese as well
also that was on a heavy-armor user
but hey loss streak going on, so soon the matchmaking algorithm will put me in one-sided matches that’ll propel me up a tier
14:16
pvp used to be fun I swear
it’s literally only the matchmaking algorithm that’s painful
the unblockable damage isn’t as big a deal
but the matchmaking creates weird teams and then you’re put with the teammates that get caught by the dragonhunter traps and it all goes to cock
> OpenCl clEnqueueMapBuffer doesn't properly?
you a verb
@LucDanton ah yes the famous match-me-with-losers algorithm
lol teef walked into my trap
@PatrickM'Bongo yup won something like 500 to 150
14:40
extra folds for bigger love!
3
14:50
@Aaron3468 The May release unit tests did not fail overnight. So this morning, I booted up my September 1st backup (before my labor weekend refactor) and both AVX2 binaries failed within 20 minutes. It takes like half an hour to build, so I didn't have to time to start another one before work.
I probably have around 20 - 30 backup snapshots between the May release and September 1st backup.
The hard part will probably when I get down to two binaries. Since I don't use any real version control, the diffs between backups are on the order of days which could be hundreds of files or thousands of lines if there was some refactoring.
@Mysticial good morning (i reckon)
@Mysticial You're maintaining a 350K line code base without using version control? I'm not sure whether to respect the accomplishment or worry about your lack of sanity. Probably both, now that I think about it...
@JerryCoffin My "version control" is the backups that I do every time I've done a large change or enough small ones.
@Mysticial Like I said, without version control. :-)
15:03
So you're maintaining it without using version control.
o.O
version control is less relevant when you are the only developer maintaining the code for like ... ever
So far I've only had to do this "binary-search through the backups thing" twice in the last year. Both of those traced back to bad refactors. If it becomes a bigger problem, then I'll consider it.
The vast majority of my fuckups get caught either by the unit tests, or global the redundancy checks.
I used to upload source code on to a remote server until the sys admin stole the server (I am still the one paying for it)
@Telkitty This is a bit like saying "I don't need to worry about natural disaster Foo, because where I live that only happens 4 or 5 times a year at very most."
speaking of version control, do you guys find it OK to upload crappy code to github?
15:11
@iksemyonov yes
i seem to have got an impression that VC == high quality production ready code
All my github repros are examples of that.
it’s the only kind of code you should upload anywhere
not to mention that someone might see it and then it appears on an interview e.g.
@LucDanton why so?
@iksemyonov no one actually browses every source file
15:13
ok, alright
@iksemyonov when it gets older, you can tell how much you have progressed since that time and that you've been writing code since 19XX
yeah, i'm probably overthinking things where having little coding experience i'm trying to impose more strict regulations on myself to improve
@milleniumbug oh, didn't think that way
since 2xxx for me
@milleniumbug What about: "I've been writing code since long before github (or git) existed at all"?
nwp
nwp
debian broke the brightness settings and now I have to live with minimal brightness until they fix it :(
@JerryCoffin They'll say "you're overqualified" and won't hire you :P
15:15
@milleniumbug Who will? Besides, I'm pretty stupid, so just doing something for a long time doesn't necessarily mean I'm any good at it. :-)
@milleniumbug A few months ago while I was cleaning out my mom's computer, I found a copy of Pi program's source code dating all the way back to December 2008. Which is two months prior to the first release.
I remember doing some testing on her computer during that Winter break.
And holy shit my code looked nothing like it does now.
I didn't start making (permanent) backups of code until late 2009.
@Mysticial maybe i should show you my matrix multiplication code for the school competition.. :)
bet it will be worse than that
and, yeah, 8 years is a long way if you practice non-stop
@JerryCoffin removable harddisk to the rescue
I do use version control when working with other people
@iksemyonov That's a big can of worms. Since matrix multiplication routines can range from the shitty to the really good.
well, i managed to get 227 out of 295 GFLOPS
15:26
Maybe not quite as bad a large integer multiplication. But it does have that long tail of large improvements that give large speedups.
then i think a hack got me all the way up to 250+ but it was after the submissions were in
@iksemyonov Oh, that's pretty good. All in cache? Or out of cache? If the latter, then that's very impressive.
Impressive either way.
i think it was out of cache cause 8000x4000
ty ^^
and i was fiddling w/the caches
Oh, that's really large.
Very impressive.
was on sandy 2670x2
15:27
So AVX and everything.
well, that's if i'm not mistaken, it took a fee seconds to compute
right, avx version 1
256 bit without fma or scattergather
Max throughput from both add and mul pipes. Not easy to do.
they told us about that hack, and i used a nice scatter gather piece of code form so (about 4 lines)
You didn't need to do any prefetching right? It's an O(N^3) algorithm on an O(N^2) data.
yeah, it wsa you i think who told me that it was only half of the throughput i was assuming
i added some prefetch later but it seemed to noop really
liike a percent +/-
15:29
Prefetching is very tricky. It tends to work when there's a lot less locality.
basically the biggest speedup was switching from the manual gathering of the 4 parallel operation results to the smart code form here
if you know what i mean, in my brain it looks like 4 vertical pipes of 4, then a horizontal bar, 4 wide
Do you even need to gather? I imagine it's just broadcast loads on the column and vector loads on the row.
so the pipes are add/mul and then the bar is just add. i used to have an in-memory "bar", then made it a register operation and it flew
it's not really gather
gah, better to have the code handy you know :)
this what i'm talking about right now is the kernel, of course
the one in l1 cache
@Mysticial paste.fedoraproject.org/427628/14737809 judging by the file name, it's the one that netted me 227
and this here paste.fedoraproject.org/427630/73781128 is the even faster one
(probably)
i think broadcast wasn't there on sandy
15:48
@PatrickM'Bongo I think I understand why people want death penalty back now.
Ven
Ven
hi @Morwenn :3
Yoh, what's up? :)
@iksemyonov yes. If you have to wait until your code is not crappy you might never commit. If you do you will have still waited too long.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn boring stuff
@Cubbi That's some high-level dabbling then :p
15:49
Also: what if you accidentally blow away a big change locally? Or your hard drive crashes?
Commit early, commit often. :)
@Ven Oh, too bad then.
Using SVN at work right now and I do not like that I can't commit until I am done and the code review has been completeed.
@caps ok will do, though i commit locally a lot
I save patches intermittently, but it is not the same.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn also maintaining some PHP websites from 2004 :P
Bad thing is that it's become more supportable to rewrite some 2004 PHP code than to write C++.
15:51
@iksemyonov Committing locally is pretty useful. Still want to push it at least 1x/day to preclude catastrophic failure.
@Ven The last place I worked my job was to replace PHP server-side stuff with C++.
Ven
Ven
..good for your C++?
@Ven Probably coded while listening to American Idiot.
@Ven Huh?
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn I have bruce springsteen playing. Not that far off..?
Well, if it's 2004... Listening to Meteora might have been funnier.
Ven
Ven
15:53
Hmpf. It's actually good. Don't be mean.
Might not be as good as everything else from back then, but still.
Don't worry, there were already loads of crap back then. We only remembered the good stuff :p
Ven
Ven
Well, I barely remember anything, because in 2004 I was 9.
I was probably 11~12.
Sorry, 12~13.
The moment you realize that you are older than whom you are chatting with...
not that much older but still
@iksemyonov nit, lines 83 - 86, you don't need to prefetch 4 consecutive words.
Since the cacheline is 64 bytes.
16:02
@Mysticial commented out it is
ahahah I fail
still, ty :)
it didn't improve anyway
so commented out
If you don't know the alignment, you'll want to prefetch both the first and last bytes.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn perfect age :3
So the load/op ratio is a 10/16 or about 1/2. I guess that's good enough for sandy.
You'll find that it it's trickier on Haswell with the FMAs.
Ven
Ven
16:06
Everytime I read "Haswell" my brain corrects it with Haskell, then sees your avatar and goes back to "Haswell".
I guess my brain's decoder sucks.
10/16 equals 1/2? xD
@Mysticial Reading you talk makes me feel like I'm not a real computer scientist :p
@iksemyonov ish
Ven
Ven
@caps does that to everyone
@Ven People end on prison for saying stuff like that :D
@iksemyonov The algorithm is 1/2. But there's two extra loads for every 8. So it goes up to 10/16.
16:07
@Mysticial see where the "bar" is
a guy posted it here on SO and i added maybe a line or two
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn Bah! It must be around that age you started playing flute, right?
yep, i recall messing with the load compute ratios, and a couple really weren't possible to mask
@Ven Your branch predictor is wrong. :P
@Ven Nope, it was ~7 years prior to that.
Ven
Ven
@Morwenn I see. It was the perfect age to learn flute as well.
(ok, now I'm really going to jail)
16:09
Haswell?
@Morwenn It's a chip. I think.
@caps It was supposed to be a joke with « as well » in @Ven's answer :(
Ven
Ven
it's ok <3
@iksemyonov If you're really up for the challenge try to get over 80% flops on Haswell.
Ven
Ven
I can flop in under a second.
I flopped at life.
16:11
hmm, i have a 4300m handy
You're gonna need to do an extra level of blocking just for the register file.
can you see where the remaining 50 gflops are?
ok, note taken, but not soon i guess, right now i'm up to a thesis
@iksemyonov Not easily. But I can see a potential front-end bottleneck.
and i don't know what exactly netted me the 25 more in the later version
i can see some extra striping in there?
basically the work was mostly about guessing and trying
You have 2 ops/cycle. And then a load as well. So that's 2 instr/cycle not counting _aa_1/2 and the post body overhead. I'm not sure Sandy Bridge can easily sustain 3 instructions/cycle.
16:14
@Mysticial Well... Sounds like you're going to have some fun hunting down the cause. But at least we know code that was passing is now failing in those conditions, so it's not actually your code :)
so i'd have to back down a bit
@iksemyonov If you wanna push higher than what you have right now, you may need to try blocking within the register file even for Sandy. IOW, eliminate some of the loads just to reduce instruction count.
@JerryCoffin Yes it would be great to take a look. Could you send me please?
@Mysticial what is that about?
guess i don't know yet, since it wasn't attempted
@JerryCoffin the program about computes pi. I have seen now your reply.. sorry
16:16
@iksemyonov You were asking how to maybe get the remaining 50 GFops.
yes, right
i mean, i don't know what the reg file is exactly
do you mean i'd load some data straight into the registers?
@iksemyonov Oh, registers.
@caps thanks for reminding me; I've been avoiding VC on bigger projects because my hard drive filled up. Time to buy a TB or two specifically for code
You're cache blocking right? Apply the same algorithm with registers.
but, aren't they busy with the computations? iirc the ymm were all busy in the loop
16:17
So multiple runs within registers so you reduce the number of loads.
Weeeee, removing explicit alignment from an SSE vector removes some audio artifacts.
(It crashes at times, though)
@Mysticial My reaction.
@R.MartinhoFernandes So in other words, some of the explicit vectors are wrong, and the guessed vectors can be horribly wrong?
@Mysticial well, my doubt is that the vector registers were all taken
16:19
Actually, I'm not sure if crashes. Gotta ask the person who repro'd this.
use some others?
Because the artifacts don't repro everywhere.
I assume it crashes, because the explicit alignment was added to fix crashes. The only change in that code in three years.
Reverting that change removes the artifacts.
Doesn't make a lot of sense.
maybe some code didn't get recompiled that used old alignment
@ratchetfreak That would cause crashes.
not necessarily
16:22
@Xeo What's that convention you mentioned that's usually held in Berlin? MeetingC++?
Xeo
Xeo
ye
Making the alignment explicit should not affect the result when it happens to be produced by sheer luck.
@ratchetfreak How so?
I guess I'll apply to the 2017 iteration of that.
if it just happened to work out with everything else except the offsets of those fields
@ratchetfreak You mean if the offsets are used in the computation?
First thing I checked. No.
16:25
@iksemyonov Yeah, it gets tricky. I'm not sure it's even possible, but you're only using 10 of the registers.
even together with the "bar" hadd code?
somehow i got the impression that it was all the 16
Oh wait, nevermind, I just realized that the baddr loads are being done twice. So you're already 2-way blocking within registers.
-4
Q: How do I count the number of palindromic integers within a range [A, B] where A and B can be up to 10^100000 using dynamic programing?

Duy HuynhWhile learning about palindrome, I have found this exercise. I tried hard but still need your help.

but, i will look closer
/cc @Mysticial
16:28
@Borgleader 10^100000 is a big number.
-6
Q: Simple file compression

K.AzamatI got this exercise in University. I know it is simple, but I am a newbee in programming. PLease help me. . File Compression In this section, you will use a compression algorithm to compress a message. Then you will use a compression application to determine the properties of compression. a. How...

this one too
Worst thing is, I can't hear the artifacts.
Sounds like something is wrong with the code.
Wait, now I hear it.
@iksemyonov more than equals it, even
@R.MartinhoFernandes where?
16:32
15 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Weeeee, removing explicit alignment from an SSE vector removes some audio artifacts.
Sample provided with bug report.
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial One of my student once asked me if it was normal he couldn't create a (C) array with 1000000000 elements.
@Mysticial But this kinda is a question about strings, and length 100000 isn't crazy.
(I wager that this being mostly about strings is the insight the OP is missing)
Ven
Ven
0
Q: Adobe Premiere Pro CC - How to support Unicode?

VicheanakThey normally changed it through Preference -> Titler: with following screenshot: Or However, on my Premiere Pro, there is no Text Engine!? My Screenshot below: How can I make my adobe premiere pro to support Khmer Unicode? This is the wrong result in Premiere Pro: The expected res...

@Borgleader Do you even adobe premier on SO? :P
@Ven It's only 4GB if those are ints. lol
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial whoops >.> I didn't count the zeros. It was actually more than MAX_INT
stackoverflow.com/questions/39474967/… HERP DERP ANSWERING PHP QUESTIONS ON SO
16:40
Hmmm. I can't repro the "fix" after the revert.
Ok, 16 GB isn't that much either. :)
Ven
Ven
When a question has been answered hundreds of times, vote to close instead of answering for some rep. — Ven 26 secs ago
Guess I'm gonna change the code to do both the aligned and the misaligned computations, assert their equality, and send a build of that to the tester.
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial no, but the compiler's error message was about overflow. (and the students only had half a gig of ram on their VM)
16:42
Technically, you can put an array that large on the heap via struct. But I question the quality of the code if there's a need to make a struct with sizeof() > 1 GB.
I got to play Monument Valley this weekend. It's great, but a bit simple, linear and short.
Ven
Ven
@Mysticial don't even ask me ;)
I could spend nights talking about the horrors I've seen about my students' code. But it'd be a bit unfair
@Ven He who never wrote anything terrible as a beginner may throw the first stone :)
9
(Or she.)
I'm beyond being a beginner and I stilll write lots of terrible code. The major difference is that it's usually terrible design now. Not too often that I have syntax issues anymore
16:57
@Ven kek
@Mysticial Oh god, that's like trying to load the whole mountain at once onto a dumptruck. The only way you can move it all is in loads.

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