Almost everything that I want is supported by all 3. The ones missing that I can name off the top of my head are: - MSVC's inability to throw move-only objects. (this is blocking my refactor of the entire exception handling system) - constexpr if - nested namespaces
@Ell Those are the compilers I want. MSVC + ICC on Windows. GCC on Linux.
GCC is missing a shit-ton of AVX/AVX512 intrinsics that's pissing me off. And they have some pretty annoying bugs with restrict and header/definition matching.
@Ell MSVC compiles better code for older processors. And it supports AMD. ICC is better for all the newer processors. And MSVC compiles about 5x faster than ICC. So it's more efficient to develop using MSVC even if I intend to compile for ICC at the end.
Yeah, i was right. There's 12 of them: - xmm (no mask, zero-mask, blend-mask) - ymm (no mask, zero-mask, blend-mask) - zmm (no mask, zero-mask, blend-mask) - zmm with rounding (no mask, zero-mask, blend-mask)
12 fucking intrinsics for each FP instruction.
FMAs have even more because you can blend different ways depending on which argument you want to overwrite.
Most of the old intrinsics were pretty standard. And different architectures has similar instructions. That's why it was possible to use the same intrinsic on x86 and ARM.
But with AVX512 and the masking complexity, that's something that is so "unique and drastic", that nobody expects any other arch to pick it up.
And if you're gonna lock yourself to x86 anyway, you might as well just use the Intel intrinsics which are standardized.
Haswell-E already has it. But you don't see it in the OC settings since you can't OC them.
If anything, if Skylake X does not have AVX512 it'll be all the server chips with defects in their AVX512 unit. And I give this a very high probability ~50%.
But I am willing to build a lower-end dual-socket Skylake Purley box if that's what it takes. I need a newer NUMA box anyway. My old Opteron one is showing its age.
@Mgetz Well first of all, I'm not even profiting off of it. In fact, I'm not even using it. So they can't sue me for it. And even if they did, they're not getting any money because I have no money. So that's a problem for someone else who is making money off of it.
I really wish there was an 'advisory' patent, which was basically a way of notifying the patent office you may have invented something that should be considered potential prior art
it was more that if you get asked to testify, don't feel bad for getting paid for it
personally I might do it pro-bono insofar as my expenses are covered, but I wouldn't tell them that
If I was to guess it's because you're trying to access RTTI across modules which AFAIK is undefined behavior. That said without knowing exactly what exception is thrown and what the error console said I can't be sure. — Mgetz32 mins ago
@Mgetz Doesn't matter if they saw it or not. 35 USC §102(a): "A person shall be entitled to a patent unless the claimed invention was patented, described in a printed publication, or in public use, on sale, or otherwise available to the public before the effective filing date of the claimed invention; [...]"
@Mysticial It's both in public use (in your code) and the blog post qualifies as either "a printed publication" or "otherwise available to the public".
@Mgetz It'd cost a little, but you could file a provisional patent application, then abandon it (never file a non-provisional application). Cost is pretty low: $65 for a micro-entity, $130 for a small entity and otherwise $260.
Micro-entity is basically anybody who makes up to 3x the median income, and files fewer than 5 patents a year (or something like that--I'd have to look things up to be sure I had the details exactly right, but most individual people qualify, and those who don't can probably afford $130).
@JerryCoffin One of the "tricks" that my mom made me do prior to starting at each new job/internship is to save a copy of the source code and all documentation - encrypted onto a CD. Then give it to some certified attorney to date, sign, and store.
The assumption is that if the company (or anyone else) attempts to claim ownership of my stuff, I can refer to that attorney to pull out the CD, I'll decrypt it and show that I indeed already had it before anyone else.
I don't know if that holds any water in court though.
@Mysticial It's probably of at least some help. The main thing to go with it would be evidence that it was available to the public at the time. One obvious possibility would be to publish a cryptographic hash of the executable, and ensure that hash is visible via the web archive.
The big question is whether you care about patents, copyright, or both. For copyright, you might want to register the copyright.
@nwp You have a point there. But I don't think it's that easily defeated. For example, two people can theoretically have the same DNA, but the chances of that are almost zero. And yet DNA holds up in court. And nobody understood it at the time.
But that doesn't take away from the point that first time techs are vulnerable.
@nwp I doubt that. The presumed scenario is that he's defending himself against a claim of copyright infringement, misappropriation of trade secrets, or something similar. That means they have to prove their case, and he only has to have enough to cast a reasonable degree of doubt on their case.
@Shoe I actually (sort of) saw John Denver the day before he died. I was in the Bay area for a conference, and that day he bought a Long EZ (a Rutan aircraft), and I saw him flying it around (recognized the aircraft, but had no idea who was flying it at the time). Next day heard he'd died in it.
@Mysticial I had a friend do something similar only involving a notary public and a hashing. He gave a copy to the company so they could verify the hash.
Now and then I think of when I created you, like when you said you felt so happy you were 5. I told myself you were right for me. But felt something wrong was gonna happen.
@JerryCoffin I think I'm actually gonna start doing that. I'll put both the released binary and a snapshot of the project at the time the binary was made in a .zip and publish a SHA512 hash. I can back-date them but that of course holds no value. The only thing that could hold retroactively would be that the source code can reproduce the various binaries that I've released over the years which (hopefully) lives elsewhere on the internet.
Not counting the varies binaries that were sent and timestamped from my gmail which I still have in out sent box.
You can get addicted to a certain kind of excitement, like when your project starts but never ends. So when we found you couldn't mutate, we didn't think too much about it, but I was glad the compiler caught that.
But you didn't have to spew so many errors, make it like I never programmed before and the program was rubbish, and I don't need your love, but you treat me like a noob and that feels so rough.
No you didn't have to fill the terminal with text, have the window scroll for thousand pages and then just be 3 errors. I guess that I don't need that though, that I modified a const was all I need to know. That I modified a const was all I needed to know.