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10:02
@BartekBanachewicz looks more like a fun mess around thing
@BartekBanachewicz especially as you have to break so much for corners
10:19
@thecoshman and you have very limited energy to begin with
so you don't want to waste it unnecessarily
the biggest problem in kers is that it has to work in both directions
meaning both slow you down and accelerate you
the problem is that you want to do the first thing on the front wheel and the 2nd on the rear
using two engines could solve that but would add a lot of weight
well... it wouldn't be very good keRs of ot just slowed you down... it'd just be breaks
hmm... I might start referring to breaks as KEDS, Kinetic Energy Dissipation System
it's "brakes" btw
ffs
I thought that was the destructive kind
I'd much rather have an aerobrake than an aero break :)
hello gentlemen
10:34
@Griwes FFS just don't use C.
anyone into assembly or optimization? I've posted a Q that looks rather interesting, input appreciated!
of course it's in C++
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah. It's broken by design
No C, no C++.
C was never meant to be a fully speced language
The flexibility is both a fundamental flaw and a fundamental escape hatch for ease of implementation
10:35
TurboC++ is a C++ compiler. You might want to tag c++ instead of c (it's just a detail, but it's confusing). — Vultrao Jul 28 '15 at 13:13
noooooooooooo
Subsets? Yes. It shouldn't be hard to write a compiler for subsets of C or C++.
But full-blown C/C++? Stop whining about it.
nwp
nwp
maybe Java would be a better choice for lack of UB
Though maybe there is a valid argument to be made that there is no safe subset of C/C++.
@Griwes isn't this a lie? youtu.be/yG1OZ69H_-o?t=365
@R.MartinhoFernandes which part
The claim that the code has well-defined behaviour on Windows.
He assumes the platform is "Windows", while the platform is actually "a C++ compiler targeting Windows".
10:38
I think the only factual problem I've found in this talk, and I've only found it now, is that he forgot that intX_t is required to be 2's complement.
I think it's an important distinction to be made.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Might be a mental substitution of "MSVC" for "Windows".
Also I'd be surprised if there was a windows-targetting compiler that doesn't have switches to throw an exception for that.
(@Mysticial I love that question; I keep using it as evidence or example all the time)
10:40
@R.MartinhoFernandes ueeeehehghghahgg that syntax for [[expects: p != nullptr]];
@Griwes That still dismisses the very important point that defining the behaviour in the "platform" (Windows, x86, whatever) is not enough for making UB defined.
whyyyyyyyyyyy
It's all about the compiler.
so godawful
nwp
nwp
Since when does dereferencing a nullptr throw an exception? It always caused a segfault for me on windows and linux.
10:41
@BartekBanachewicz Extending the attribute syntax.
A compiler can make dereferencing null pointers defined even on platforms where such dereferencing is not defined.
@nwp "and set appropriate option in your compiler"
Also please provide a better proposal and present it to the committee if you want a different one. vOv
@nwp segfault is an exception on Windows.
Personally I think it's not that bad.
10:41
@nwp A SEH exception, not a C++ exception.
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah, that makes sense
@Griwes how about one that doesn't require me to repeat the name of the variable *yet the fuck again
A segfault is an exception on all x86 hardware.
Just a hardware exception and not a software one. :D
@BartekBanachewicz Err, you can have arbitrary expressions there, dummy.
@BartekBanachewicz That's it? That's the big issue?
class C {
    int* complexNameMember;
    C(int* complexNameMember) [[expects: complexNameMember != nullptr]] :
        complexNameMember(complexNameMember)
    { }
};
@Griwes sigh
10:44
That's just bad code, not bad feature.
why do you even need that in the first place
why not encode that in the type
@BartekBanachewicz Don't sigh on me, if it was int * [[ notnull ]] foo you'd whine that the feature is not complex enough.
@BartekBanachewicz Because types can't change and the results of constraints can.
can I do using nonNullPtr<T> = T* v [[ expects: v != nullptr ]];?
...somehow?
@BartekBanachewicz void f(int* a, int* b) [[expects: a != b]]
Have fun encoding that.
@R.MartinhoFernandes f(nonequal_pair<int*, int*> ab)
actually "noncomparableequal" because otherwise it needs just one type parameter I guess
10:46
@BartekBanachewicz Maybe I want to pass a reference to something that is actually nullable, but must not be null when the function is called?
@BartekBanachewicz You just shifted the issue to the constructor of nonequal_pair. Try harder.
@R.MartinhoFernandes which is where it should be, no?
linear/affine types though
@BartekBanachewicz ...no?
The contract is in f. The definition of f is where it belongs.
@Griwes the lift from the nullable type to the nonnullable one should do the check
10:47
@BartekBanachewicz a reference
@BartekBanachewicz nonequal_pair::nonequal_pair(int* a, int* b) doesn't have a != b anywhere.
@Griwes it's technically outside of f. f shouldn't be called if the contract isn't fulfilled
foo::foo(int* a, int* b) is indistinguishable from nonequal_pair::nonequal_pair(int* a, int* b).
void f(int *& p) [[ expects: p != nullptr ]]
{
    process_data(p);
    free(p);
    p = nullptr;
}
Have fun encoding this.
4 mins ago, by Griwes
That's just bad code, not bad feature.
10:48
lol I said that about style.
@BartekBanachewicz And how is it going to be there?
This code is perfectly valid and surely found in a lot of places.
@Griwes I'd say your code is infinitely worse
@Griwes it's also perfectly terrible while we're at it
@BartekBanachewicz f is the owner of the contract.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, in the Ctor?
10:50
@BartekBanachewicz HOW
Write it down.
void f(unique_ptr<int> p) [[ expects: p != nullptr ]]
{
    process_data(p);
}
Good luck encoding this in the type.
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
foo::foo(int* a, int* b) is indistinguishable from nonequal_pair::nonequal_pair(int* a, int* b).
nonnull_unique_ptr is not a type that can be expressed in C++.
@R.MartinhoFernandes well throw if a == b?
Or, it can be expressed, but can never be moved.
@BartekBanachewicz baaad
10:50
@BartekBanachewicz That doesn't go in the interface.
Ven
Ven
@Griwes sounds fun =P.
The feature is a feature for hardening code.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think I see what you mean
Throwing is not a solution.
Also the proposal offers you a way to handle contract violations in a custom way, pretty much. (Or, requires such a hook to exist, IIRC.)
mm, okay, maybe sorta
10:51
Also the proposal allows for a mode where it can be disabled.
having a special "place" to put the validation rules is actually bringing value
Also this being a property of the interface and not just a throw allows the optimizers to do additional magic.
I mean I don't doubt it that they will fuck it up one way or another
but maybe just maybe it could be useful
@R.MartinhoFernandes but I'd still tag the latter using that most of the time I guess
Xeo
Xeo
@Griwes Do you need it to be movable? :D
@Xeo I do, if I want to pass it to a function by value... :P
(And no, I can't .release() for the same reasons I can't move.)
Xeo
Xeo
11:01
@Griwes Well... do you need it to be available anywhere but where you pass it as an argument? :D
@Xeo ...
Xeo
Xeo
(what I'm getting at, it is possible, but the resulting type is not super useful)
I need it to be movable to be of any use whatsoever.
You can't do it safely without linear types.
I can do it (slightly unsafely) with permissive destructive moves.
11:04
What's "destructive moves"?
What I mean in this instance is a thing where after auto bar = move foo;, foo no longer exists.
That's linear types.
Eh, not exactly.
I agree that it's the same general idea.
Yay for unsigned arithmetic.
Xeo
Xeo
n == 0?
Hm, does any compiler implement guaranteed copy elision yet?
11:09
should have used a long long parameter
> mysterious breakage 150 years from now
@Xeo GCC trunk, apparently.
22 hours ago, by Morwenn
Guaranteed copy elision and template argument deduction for class templates in GCC7 /o/
Xeo
Xeo
Hm. Maybe all the online compilers don't have that yet. Wonder how long it's been in.
Or maybe I'm misunderstanding it
@Xeo the way I read the proposal, it doesn,t upset the status quo too much
Xeo
Xeo
But IIUC, it doesn't require an accessible copy or move ctor when it guarantees elision, right?
11:11
godbolt should have it?
then what would there be to elide?
Xeo
Xeo
Well, similar to how return { ... }; doesn't require an accessible copy / move ctor
Hmm, I don't think godbolt has it yet.
ugh no feature test macro
@Xeo there’s one case that has wording for that and that’s for trivial copy/moves
I don’t think any other part that refers to accessibility
> Why is size_t unsigned?
lol
11:21
@milleniumbug In case you wonder why you get an influx of upvotes:
This is disturbing. I almost think it's a better idea than current C macros https://twitter.com/velartrill/status/784160255425085440
@R.MartinhoFernandes In his defense, anti-matter once wasn't thought to exist
Ven
Ven
I do agree it's not the worse idea ever.
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton hrm
@sehe :D
@Xeo that being said I still have trouble parsing the modified 8.5 :|
nwp
nwp
@R.MartinhoFernandes why is that lol?
11:26
There are many pieces of code on the linked question. Search and you will find. At least now you know /what/ it is you wanted to do — sehe 8 secs ago
@nwp It's a running gag among C++ personalities that unsigned size_t was a mistake.
@sehe thanks, I was wondering after the "spreading through twitter" comment
> If the initializer expression is a prvalue and the cv-unqualified version of the source type is the same class as the class of the destination, the initializer expression is used to initialize the destination object. [ Example: T x = T(T(T())); calls the T default constructor to initialize x. ]
namely that bit, I get the intent but I don’t get the wording: how does the initialization take place, exactly?
@milleniumbug I've only just unearthed the link to your post
As this is now spreading on Twitter, Reddit etc. people please remember - just because you can or could doesn't mean you should. — Esko 2 hours ago
It's sad that this was the occasion at which I first found out your name is a misspelling
Xeo
Xeo
@LucDanton That reads very tautological
Ven
Ven
11:32
seriously, the bot is just like honey for internet jerks they spend hours and hours yelling at it https://t.co/y8igW3osm7
As this is now spreading on Twitter, Reddit etc. people please remember - just because you can or could doesn't mean you should. — Esko 2 hours ago
lol
nwp
nwp
MSVC: "This file has unsaved changes. Lose your changes or lose the other changes?". Why is there no option to see both? Why is that a modal dialog so I cannot copy my changes before applying the other changes so I can easily paste over it if I don't like it?
We could try using PHP to generate the magic incantations needed for Boost.PP to work. :D
@nwp lol, MSVC modal dialogs.
11:41
@nwp Because MSVC is not your friend.
@R.MartinhoFernandes They should be system wide modal. To really drive the point home
@Griwes That's literally 5 messages up
Missed it. Sorry :(
@Griwes frankly the CPP is so bad that PHP really could be a viable alternative
Oh. Just a mad villain. Carry on
11:44
it's not rocket science to paste files together or replace text with other text
nwp
nwp
I always imagined that a c++ compiler doesn't actually copy/paste headers, when it encounters an #include it just opens that file and continues parsing that.
it's equally primitive
@nwp On the conceptual level it is copy-pasting everything.
nwp
nwp
And by c++ compiler I mean that the preprocessor is integrated so it just behaves as if.
Whether it merges the buffers or not doesn't matter.
nwp
nwp
11:46
But with PHP you basically force to actually copy/paste, which probably hurts something.
Meaning that the compiler cannot show you macro expansions in error messages and so on.
the overhead of copying files is hardly the problem
nwp
nwp
Or, well, unexpanded macros.
the fact that it goes over everything a zillion times is
well, once-per-TU, which is just short of a zillion
Any of you guys at work right now?
@Madvillain me
11:48
@BartekBanachewicz me too, only 2 more hours to go, so bored right now..
nwp
nwp
Now he blows up your house... or work... whichever one is more mad
@Madvillain go read about turboshaft engines or something
very nice
I read about engines when I get bored
11:49
what engine boring do you prefer?
I need to get off work so I can go home and water my cactus
12
Ven
Ven
12:01
@Griwes IIRC boost has a few perl or python files to generate some headers?
12:15
I /think/ they use the preprocessor. But they /do/ save some pre-generated versions of it
12:28
@velartrill I love the "for serious uses" aside. What are they smoking ... @flowblok
hehehehe
@TobySpeight: chroot works well against this type of attack. For example, attempting to compile @Ville's file on Coliru simply gives an error of: main.cpp:1:50: fatal error: ../../../../../../../../../../dev/zero: No such file or directory (and similar for the file he links in the comment to Colin Cassidy's answer). — Jerry Coffin 20 hours ago
Loungers Win!
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz how retarded can one be
the minimum spanning tree problem is interesting
I'd say it's even more interesting practically than TSP
@Ven is that a dare
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton It's okay, I know you're doing your best already
13:01
@BartekBanachewicz But it's not NP-complete which means it's not talked about so much
@milleniumbug which is kinda sad
@Ville-ValtteriTiittanen Are you trying to demonstrate that this is a problem or is not a problem? Doesn't seem to have caused any harm to ideone. — jpmc26 13 hours ago
> out of memory allocating 2147483664 bytes
Yeah, even the naive algorithms are just O(n log m). :P
I remember a friend teaching me the MST problem and saying that there's the inverse Ackermann in the complexity
back in high school that was way above my head
I wasn't one of those cool algorithmic kids
Hi, I assume some of you use XCode here?
13:04
hell no
@Basj I guess it's better to not admit to that
nwp
nwp
Is there a name for asking a trivial question first to persuade people to answer the actual question?
@nwp: lubrication :)
@nwp it's an inverse of a follow-up question
@wilx CA: Where bad software goes to die.
13:06
@nwp Bait-and-switch maybe :D
@Basj Careful. If somebody were to flag that as offensive, I'd have a hard time claiming that it was really invalid.
Indeed, there was another question... I'd like to set "Implicitly Link Objective-C Runtime Support" to No directly by modifying files, instead of doing it with XCode's GUI
Why the hell you want to use PHP as C preprocessor. Are you serious? There are a lot of C preprocessors and you use the fucking PHP? — alem0lars 11 mins ago
all of them listed as the answers in this question...
can anyone recommend a resource about flywheels?
@milleniumbug I flagged that as rude.
@JerryCoffin This word has a engineering meaning, isn't it right?
13:09
I have a recursive function with three different arguments, and each call is split into three different subproblems. I can't really figure out how to set the base case because its depending on three different variables. any thoughts on what I could do?
In which file is saved a project settings like "Implicitly Link Objective-C Runtime Support" ?
nwp
nwp
maybe pinning the Q&A room did do something after all
@Basj The X-name is offensive to many software engineers (specifically, all those who've had to use it, and have even the slightest hint of competence).
@ERH your base case can be set on any combination of parameters
consider:
@nwp needs more data, so lets pin it again ;)
13:15
@bar
add a b = add (a + 1) (b - 1)
add a 0 = a
the crux is that I want to stop 1 of the recursion when one parameter is zero
@ERH well then, return a value in this case?
"stopping" a recursion is simply not evaluating the function for that condition
perhaps more clear if your recursion is expressed in pattern matching like above
F(a , b, c) return sum + max( F(a--, b, c), F(a,b--,c), F(a,b,c--))
I'm decrementing different variables in different calls
so idealy when for example a gets to zero i want to stop doing recursive calls for F(a--,b,c)
13:18
lol don't do that
but thats leaves me with some shitassugly if else statment =D
these are all unsequenced
@JerryCoffin Not all of it is that bad. But yeah, it is true for some...
 f a b c = sum [a, b, c] + max [fa, fb, fc]
  where
    fa = if a > 1 then f (a-1) b c else 0
    fb = if b > 1 then f a (b-1) c else 0
    fc = if c > 1 then f a b (c-1) else 0
@ERH like that?
13:21
oohhhhh yeha smart
yesyesyes!!!!!!!!!!!!
@BartekBanachewicz super thanks! I try it out
you could generalize the above to n variables BTW
that's always going to end up 0 unless you change what is in the else branch
@ratchetfreak there's the sum as well
@Telkitty i wish we had the chance to catch up over coffee . but you are living lol
13:30
Most people in this channel are living, yes.
what is that even supposed to mean
do you only have coffee with the undead
> Energy storage capacity increases with increase in weight but limitation seems to be the
speed driving the flywheel. And performance of system is directly linked with the energy stored. Thus a graph can be
plotted between performance and weight. Optimum value lies between 5 and 8 kg.
dont try to troll an ex troller
that clarifies things not at all
can trolls and former trolls not have coffee
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'm not sure aobut some of us
13:33
who
are the majority of your posts here not in jest
how do you memset all bits in a buffer to 1?
the API of std::memset is retarded
it takes as a value an int instead of an unsigned char
Will this small child ever stop making loud squeaking sounds so I can rest myhead
so while I can do unsigned char value = -1
to get a byte with all bits set
i cannot pass that to memset
@gnzlbg use 255?
13:36
@gnzlbg std::fill
maybe memset(ptr, std::numeric_limits<int>::max(), size) ?
110
Q: Is it safe to use -1 to set all bits to true?

hyperlogicI've seen this pattern used a lot in C & C++. unsigned int flags = -1; // all bits are true Is this a good portable way to accomplish this? Or is using 0xffffffff or ~0 better?

the answer is no because long distance transportation is suffering
I appear to be grumpy today
the second arg gets converted to unsigned char so std::numeric_limits<unsigned char>::max() would be correct
not really
because it gets first promoted to int
hmm
unsigned char -> int -> unsigned char is guaranteed to give the same value?
like in a portable way?
13:38
depends, do you plan on ignoring answers that would confirm that it is?
I'll just use std::fill/std::fill_n
@PatrickM'Bongo ya moma
well it can represent the full range regardless of signedness
@jaggedSpire just slip a dick in it's mouth o_o
@thecoshman ಠ_ಠ
13:40
that's cocknet ryhming slang...
@JerryCoffin whoosh?
that's uh an unconventional solution
so a 20cm 8kg flywheel spinning at 500 RPM (twice the speed of a bike's wheel) stores about 55 joules
increasing the gear ratio to produce twice the RPM stores four times as much energy
and the danger, I guess
@BartekBanachewicz mass isn't everything
@Borgleader lol
13:41
@ratchetfreak that's assuming a solid disk
there is also the distribution of the mass
@gnzlbg Hysterical raisins.
@gnzlbg Why not?
@gnzlbg All conversions roundtrip for values representable in all types involved.
well how much is 200 joules
if you spend it over one second boost you get 200W I guess
that's assuming no losses, which are actually going to be significant
13:45
@BartekBanachewicz 1 McBurger
I guess you'd want the least clutch slippage, while in reality highest RPMs would probably be achieved after a stop.
So when powering up again ideally you'd reverse the gearing in order to generate high momentum on the rear wheel
meh. I guess I can see the problem with practical application now
@BartekBanachewicz 1 ampere over a 1 ohm resistor for 200 seconds.
the electric KERS doesn't have that drawback
and is much easier to control
woah
I was just told I can spend 45eur/month in Azure
niiiice
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, I wasn't sure about that. I just wanted to set all the bits and thought that std::memset(ptr, -1, length) would work because I wrongly remembered that memset used unsigned char.
@gnzlbg Well, it does.
13:58
when I googled std::memset I was like... it needs an unsigned char, but it takes an int and then converts
its like someone thought "what's the best way to trip users into UB", and used that as API design guide..
You can't be tripped into UB.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I could memset(..., unsigned char{-1}, ...), but I just ended up using std::fill instead
The result of memset is well-defined for all values of the second parameter.
Oo, you can use linkedin but not youtube, google, facebook or twitter in China, how lovely ...
@gnzlbg std::memset(ptr, -1, length) works.
13:59
everyone here uses weibo
how to herd people ...
@R.MartinhoFernandes indeed :/ im tired
You can't get UB with memset by changing the middle argument.
Only the pointer or size.
does using -1 set all bits?
@Telkitty they reached deal with china gov that they i will censor stuff posted by china based users
All int -> unsigned char conversions are well-defined (whether they yield what you want is a different matter).
@gnzlbg Yes.
14:00
int(-1) doesn't have all bits set so I guess not
but unsigned char(-1) does
@gnzlbg It doesn't matter. It's not about bits.
int(-1) is negative one.
so when its casted to unsigned char it will be like writing unsigned char{-1} ?
Negative one converts to unsigned as 2^BIT_SIZE - 1.
@R.MartinhoFernandes thanks
The general formula for all conversions => unsigned is (2^BIT_SIZE + x) mod 2^BIT_SIZE
14:04
wow, was I confused
my train of thought made no sense whatsoever
@Rerito Not a lot (don't know what your visitor is doing, not looked at it). Without comment - you can diff it :) coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/d305ac94c24fec79
2
I do think the fancy-pants choices of vertex/edge container selectors mostly makes no sense :) Stick with the simple until you know you needed the iterator stability or ... lookup optimization (pessimization?)
(The hash_setS almost makes sense in that it automatically de-duplicates adjecent edges)
Note I removed the value initialization of the default color map (standard library maps already value-initialize new values)
Note I made things const, removed excess scopes, use of temporaries in favour of direct construction of nodes w/bundled properties
Oh. That's no longer without comment.
@EtiennedeMartel Well they said they were tired of "experts" telling them what to do :P
14:23
@EtiennedeMartel Foreigners can't possibly have any useful advice for international relations.
@EtiennedeMartel ahahhahh
Good job going even more full retard, UK.
There's a one-up contest going on between the UK and the US and quit frankly I don't know who's winning.
@EtiennedeMartel lol
9k points /o/
someone downvote him, quick! :D
14:26
@Morwenn It's over nine thousand!
Yup, but I still need 1k more to see interesting stuff.
@Morwenn 1k until you can see dead people posts
@Borgleader plsno
@Borgleader So far? The UK. The bullshit there actually comes from the powers that be, not just from clowns trying to be those powers.
@Morwenn grats
14:48
@EtiennedeMartel priceless
@Borgleader UK has even beaten Poland. (Poland is also in this contest, and yes, I'm not convinced the US is above Poland in that contest.)
Poland did reject that abortion ban though, didn'it?
See, could have been worse
@AndyProwl Yes, the non-govt proposal.
The govt will introduce another one soon apparently.
14:53
Ah
Kurwa
@Griwes face palm
@sehe Oh just noticed I didn't clean it well enough (that meta_g variable is not used). I'm taking a look on your edit
Ven
Ven
> OS X & iOS Geek. Like compilers, hardware and assembler.
Posts a PR to update the Swift tutorial [on LearnXInYMinutes].
616bd96 2016-10-06 16:02:36 +0200 Fix bad auto-merge
255dff0 2016-10-06 14:45:23 +0200 Fix merge artifacts

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