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00:00
So if it is a CPU errata or an OS bug, it's unlikely they would've hit it unless they ran that benchmark or something similar that triggers it.
My memory instability issues seem completely unrelated. But that certainly didn't help me isolate the FLOPs crash.
user1804599
They'll sue you.
00:16
@R.MartinhoFernandes guess we keep missing one another, let’s push that back to another time
00:36
that means, you are not sincere enough
making banana bread with orange zest and experimenting with glazing it with reduced orange juice
it smells amazing
:D
make friends with local wildlife if you like to experiment with cooking
so any failure will not be wasted ...
nah, I force myself to eat my failures
it makes me actually think about what I'm doing
00:58
why do I always type palpay instead of paypal 😂
Hey
My presentation went great yesterday
nice
hm
This looks good, except for the black edges where the excess juice pooled when the bread rose in the oven
less juice next time, or more reduced
probably just pouring off the extra once it had completely coated the surface of the dough would work
01:16
@LucDanton Tu aurais préféré Miaous ou Miaoux ?
01:31
@AldwinCheung Professeurs Miaou voyons
@wilx It's catchy :)
mrow meow meow meow hello it's sunday
01:51
Caturday is Saturday, also 2007 was 10 years ago. knowyourmeme.com/memes/caturday
02:05
so swiftly do we tumble down the slope of time
@Mysticial IMO it's most likely you just had bad luck with your CPU. No reports of system crashes out there.
@MarkGarcia Sample size is only two right now. The other guy reporting the crash with the FLOPs benchmark also has the same motherboard. But he had the 1700 instead of the 1800X.
Oh there's another guy.
The guys on the overclocking forum are ignoring me. They obviously don't give a shit.
You could make reddit.com/r/Amd folks test it.
02:09
It was someone on a math forum that tested it and said it also crashed his system. But not immediately.
@MarkGarcia That's a tough one. I don't have a reputable reddit account. There's nobody people are gonna trust a new user to run a binary from the internet - even if I put source code next to it.
@Mysticial Just link to your twitter, git hub, grub hub account
I posted on HWBOT since that's the only place that has a fair number of Ryzen owners and I have a reputable account there (I own the y-cruncher benchmark).
@Mikhail The one place I control that a lot of people visit is my fucking website. I'm gonna mention it on my Pi Day release of v0.7.2.
@Mysticial Try going direct. PM these guys: reddit.com/r/Amd/comments/5x4hxu/…
/u/AMD_Robert is active.
Yeah, just pm /u/AMD_LisaSu, threaten to disclose unless she pays you ฿100
And tell us insider info so we can gauge the market's short term reactions.
02:17
I'm legally prohibited from buying Intel stock until May 2017
What about derivatives and options on Intel stock? :P
Well its not insider trading if you don't get caught
Anyways, I'll be dead before May as I've recently contracted cancer by reading /r/Amd/
just place the call to your broker once you’ve safely left the house or office
@Mikhail Try /r/AyyMD.
02:25
lmao
w/e the only thing that will end my chagrin is to note the number of cores on my desktop,
ain't no AMD that can do that
of course :)
02:33
with a sweet face like that?
<3
@Mikhail Wait a minute
what
gotta go fast
@Mikhail sanic?
02:43
yeah, this is some good stuff
Anyways, the only solution to the CPU energy consumption problem is to scale up, literally, build a fucking CPU cube.
@Mikhail And then what? CPU hypercube!?
that’s like a bouillon cube right
mmmmm computation broth
Good, now I can go and eat
@Borgleader I was going to say we need a CPU Time Cube (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Cube), but apparently somebody already took the name (cseweb.ucsd.edu/~a2gupta/timecube.html)!
03:02
@Borgleader nice
 
4 hours later…
06:52
anyone?
@Mikhail you here?
07:19
@набиячлэвли you here?
ScY
ScY
07:39
I'm here
:p
@AlexCerry why are you pinging random people
@milleniumbug really i don't.
@milleniumbug can you explain this uint16_t y = ((x & 0xff) << 8) | ((x & 0xff00) >> 8); .
@sehe I have a handful of harnesses to verify that such-and-such is, in fact, a range or not. then I run the harness on e.g. flatten(input) where input is a forward range, a multi-pass range, a bidi range etc. so it all multiplies together
@AlexCerry you really do
@AlexCerry it's an endianness swap for a 2-byte int
@BartekBanachewicz what is the purpose to use 0xFF00?
07:47
@AlexCerry pretty much none. x >> 8 should work just as fine if I'm not mistaken
@BartekBanachewicz I know. You are totally correct. But my professor say some compiler show error but he did not explain why.
@BartekBanachewicz suppose x is 0x0003.
so why we cannot send like this why need to shift?
@AlexCerry to turn it into 0x0300
if the receiving end expects LSB first
similarly 0x01020304 should be turned into 0x04030201
@AlexCerry Might be related to integer promotion rules, so, size of your number.
@BartekBanachewicz If the receiving expects LSB then we need to shift otherwise we can send like 0x0003?
@AlexCerry it's just them matter of interpretation. You want both machines to end up with a number "3". They simply expect the bytes to be in opposite orders.
if you have one-byte variable, there's no confusion. If you have two, then one of them is "more significant" and the other is "less significant"
Endianness refers to the sequential order used to numerically interpret a range of bytes in computer memory as a larger, composed word value. It also describes the order of byte transmission over a digital link. Words may be represented in big-endian or little-endian format, with the term "end" denoting the front end or start of the word, a nomenclature potentially counterintuitive given the connotation of "finish" or "final portion" associated with "end" as a stand-alone term in everyday language. When storing a word in big-endian format the most significant byte, which is the byte containing...
if two intel processor. Why they both cannot accept same bytes ordering?
07:56
@AlexCerry happens vOv
@BartekBanachewicz uint16_t y = ((x & 0xff) << 8) | ((x & 0xff00) >> 8); .
if you send 0x0003 it will 0x0300. if you send 0x0300 it will 0x0003 correct?
@AlexCerry yep. it's fairly easy to see
@BartekBanachewicz Its confuse me more. So its mean this macro can used for two system which have different bytes storage system one with LSB and another with MSB correct?
@AlexCerry it just flips the byte order of two bytes
if we only need to send to LSB system. We just simply used x << 8 correct?
08:02
@AlexCerry that works for 3, since 0x0003 << 8 is 0x000300 == 0x0300, but if you had say 0x1234, you'd get 0x123400, not 0x3412
@BartekBanachewicz So if i use x >> 8 then i will get 0x3412?
@AlexCerry by using the x >> 8, the 0x12 at the beginning is moved to the right
0x1234 & 0xff00 >> 8 | 0x1234 & 0x00ff << 8
0x1200 >> 8 | 0x0034 << 8
0x0012 | 0x3400
0x3412
@AlexCerry here
@BartekBanachewicz Thank you. You explain very good. When this method is usefull? In my project i need to send some data from pc to arm machine.
@BartekBanachewicz :(?
@BartekBanachewicz you online?
08:23
@AlexCerry You shouldn't be bothering people with the pings.
@MarkGarcia Sorry, i very worried.
@AlexCerry is the ARM machine little-endian
Let them answer at their leisure. Or understand that they may not / cannot / would not.
@AlexCerry lol don't be.
@BartekBanachewicz unsigned short ntest = 0x03;
unsigned short high = ntest << 8;
high = high & 0xFF00;
@BartekBanachewicz yes
@BartekBanachewicz The last step high & 0xFF00 is important?
41 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@AlexCerry pretty much none. x >> 8 should work just as fine if I'm not mistaken
I've already answered that one
so, listen, doing this correctly in C or C++ requires knowledge about the language
if you're not sure how to do it correctly, find a library
08:29
@BartekBanachewicz so why some developer use it if its not important?
@AlexCerry because developers aren't perfect
The fact that someone, anyone did something in a certain way doesn't mean that it's optimal or even correct
@BartekBanachewicz agree.
@BartekBanachewicz But in visual studio 2013 i check in Memory1.
@BartekBanachewicz If i not use 0xFF00 its show me 03 read color don't understand.
Oh my! I got a task to generate "valid" CA and certificates for our test deployments, in Java, probably.
@wilx why in java? Just use easy-ssl
generating CA is pretty easy
and it shouldn't be automated anyway for the master CA
@BartekBanachewicz What is that?
@BartekBanachewicz It is purely for the testing of the application. The certs and the CA will not be usable outside single deployment/test.
08:34
@wilx might have misremembered the name, but IIRC there was a wrapper over SSL cmds that made the process even easier
@wilx and you need a new one every time the test runs?
@BartekBanachewicz Well, yes.
oh well
yeah, that's kind of a special case
I mean SSL scripts most certainly have "quiet" mode of operation
your job will be mostly in writing the config files for them
Xeo
Xeo
@Fanael 'cept it does.
@AlexCerry it works perfectly fine for me
@BartekBanachewicz Sir, i wanna show you effect in memory check in visual studio.
@BartekBanachewicz unsigned short high = ntest << 8; (00 03) this 03 is read
high = high & 0xFF00; // here (00 03) is normal
*not read red
08:42
@AlexCerry you're either doing something wrong or you're misinterpreting the results
@BartekBanachewicz no no please try this:
int main()
{

unsigned short ntest = 0x03;
unsigned short high = ntest << 8;
high = high & 0xFF00;
return 0;

}
nwp
nwp
@AlexCerry you are not supposed to do that by hand, you are supposed to use htonl and ntohl which will also avoid having to deal with bitshifting
@BartekBanachewicz yeah, pretty sure those line ending characters aren't valid c++
@AlexCerry wrong order of operations
@BartekBanachewicz Sir, please explain.
08:50
>Sir
>Bartek
@AlexCerry It's "Sir Bartek", frist of all.
Your Highness is fine
@AlexCerry you're supposed to do the bitmask first, shift second
user1804599
@Ven I'm gonna make purescript-argonaut-goggles which wraps purescript-argonaut-core with type JSON = Json.
Sir @BartekBanachewicz not understand.
9
@AlexCerry if that's too complex, then go back to your book
user1804599
Delete your code.
08:58
@BartekBanachewicz Recommend book please.
user1804599
> I am just a beginner in MFC c++.
user1804599
RIP
@AlexCerry there's a recommended list on Stack Overflow
@BartekBanachewicz This link only have questions.
sigh
search for it
user1804599
09:01
Bartek, you don't get it.
@BartekBanachewicz I don't know. You want to refer to which book c++ or computer organization?
user1804599
You see, it is you who should be doing the work.
user1804599
For you are slave to the vampire.
I feel drained alright
Enlightening.
user1804599
09:01
Someone just upvoted a two year old answer of mine.
@rightfold I not vampire.
7
well, you are, you just don't know it yet
@AlexCerry You Tarzan.
I mean most help vampires don't think they're doing anything wrong
user1804599
Lounge<Dracula>
09:03
@BartekBanachewicz Ok if you say. My professor taking my blood so i need someone.
user1804599
Go is really cool.
@BartekBanachewicz refer me one good book about this?
user1804599
@StackedCrooked Mysticial is Tarzen.
@BartekBanachewicz High School student ask me question why left shift operator look like this << why not KK.
Look great wall moving bits.
ScY
ScY
Can someone explain to me how this works: 0 >> 0 ?
09:08
meh, button no longer clickable after moving slightly down the screen, commented out the moving code, it started working again
nwp
nwp
Lounge<Q&A>
if only there was a room for it
also ... that time of the month
user1804599
More like Q&A<C++>.
ScY
ScY
@nwp I looked around for 9 seconds couldn't find anything sorry...
nwp
nwp

C++ Questions and Answers

Solve problems and approach solutions. Just ask and lurkers wi...
09:10
was 9 sec rounded?
ScY
ScY
@Telkitty yes
front double or float?
I ask question in C++ Questions and Answers.
ScY
ScY
neither
Ven
Ven
09:19
Hi
Trump, the movie, imagined by horror writer Stephen King
Ven
Ven
Duck Typing as a Service
user1804599
ugh scala
@Ven is it fair to call this bizarre even by Scala standards?
Ven
Ven
09:36
@LucDanton well it's not that bizarre in scala terms
can you compile-time 'hello, world' with this beauty?
user1804599
TIL PEMDAS
user1804599
WTF multiplication doesn't have precedence over division
@rightfold Why should it?
@rightfold they are equal and a/b = a*(1/b) just like a-b = a+(-b)
user1804599
09:45
Thank you for explaining, I didn't know.
Ven
Ven
@LucDanton you could before
Ell
Ell
@Ven oh lord
user1804599
Templates are memoized macros.
Ven
Ven
textual* macros
capitalist* macros
Ven
Ven
omg capital
user1804599
Capitalism 😍
@wilx Is this real life
@Daniel I know as much as you do. :)
user1804599
No it's a movie.
09:52
It's an anti gravity hack :^)
Ven
Ven
Sigh, here starts the C++ shit for school.
on a much small planet, anyone can fly
user1804599
XD
user1804599
@Ven Open-source it.
09:58
> In the event of a power failure, carbon fiber flywheel power storage can keep the networking and storage infrastructure running for up to 16 seconds.[37] After 2 seconds without power, diesel generators fire up, taking approximately 7 seconds to reach full power.
wow
Ven
Ven
@rightfold why
user1804599
Because it'll be good code.
Ven
Ven
they want me to create an abstract class with 2 void virtual members
@rightfold how can it be good code if it's C++??????
(and if I wrote it)
@rightfold amazing
(J/K AWFUL)
user1804599
XD Tcl
Ven
Ven
@rightfold 1 2 + 3 + print works ; D
but upvar doesn't work inside a lambda (apply) because Tcl sucks.
user1804599
10:01
Hey VS Code doesn't detect 8-space indentation for my COBOL file.
user1804599
I am pleasantly surprised.
Ven
Ven
\o/
what are you using COBOL for?
@BartekBanachewicz why carbon fiber? it's too light to really hold a lot of rotational momentum
@LucDanton Twas bed time :D
unless it's has ballast weights...
user1804599
10:04
@Ven Do numeric variables defined in WORKING-STORAGE SECTION always start at 0?
user1804599
@Ven Fun!
@R.MartinhoFernandes it’s now or never! or at your earliest convenience
@Ven What are you making
Ven
Ven
@rightfold you can use VALUE to specify an initial value
@Daniel a faux forth
user1804599
10:05
@Ven I know, but what happens if I don't specify an initial value.
user1804599
Will it be zero? Or is it undefined?
@R.MartinhoFernandes alright so suppose we group. we take the first grouping, iterate over that, and all’s well. next up is the second grouping—how is this all setup so that the second grouping really has the second key, and say will not accidentally repeat the first grouping?
Ven
Ven
>Will is it
For strings, the default value is spaces. For numbers, I think it's 0.
user1804599
Thanks.
@Ven To understand how forth works? Or just for fun
Ven
Ven
10:07
@Daniel mostly for fun, and to write some bad Tcl
@Ven a faurth, if you will
user1804599
@Ven Seems to be 0 if it's fully numeric.
user1804599
        IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
        PROGRAM-ID. foo.

        DATA DIVISION.
        WORKING-STORAGE SECTION.
        01 x                           PIC XXX999.

        PROCEDURE DIVISION.
            DISPLAY x
            GOBACK
            .
user1804599
This prints six spaces, not three spaces with three zeroes.
@LucDanton Before we go further, I haven't considered my idea in a non-GC environment.
10:09
@R.MartinhoFernandes oh no I’m asking from a C# perspective
user1804599
Ven
Ven
@rightfold thanks
@rightfold What language is this?
user1804599
I recall rules in the standard about when a picture is numeric.
Ven
Ven
@Daniel COBOL
10:12
@Ven How much of forth are you actually going to make urself?
nwp
nwp
I consider myself a decently smart human being, and some day I will be able to take a shower without puring shampoo into my eyes.
user1804599
And pictures with decimal points must be numeric.
Ven
Ven
@Daniel no idea. I'll probably add lambdas
user1804599
For example, XXV999 is an invalid picture.
Ven
Ven
@nwp I don't remember this being an issue since I was like 9
10:13
@Ven Can you share it when you finish?
Ven
Ven
@rightfold I didn't read the COBOL standard. I need to check my COBOL book.
@nwp Sometimes happens to me too
user1804599
@Ven Hmm, interesting. 99VXXX is a valid picture. ideone.com/RBkFX0
Ven
Ven
@Daniel well it's on github. But it'll take time, it'll be in Tcl, and it'll've been written by me
Hi everyone, very easy question:
Ven
Ven
10:14
@trilolil no thanks
I have a 2D vector like such: vector<vector<Point> > contours;
Ven
Ven
@rightfold what do you store in that
I would like to check whether the 3rd element of each row == -1
@jaggedSpire <3
@LucDanton So, my idea would be to have each group be some sort of queued enumerator, and there's a shared (ordered) dictionary of such enumerators. Whenever you pull from the source—for whatever reason—you enqueue that new element in the correct slot.
10:15
what is the correct syntax to check that?
@LucDanton When you pull the next group, you pull from the source enumerator until you get a new key in the dictionary, and immediately return that one. When you pull within a group, you dequeue from its internal queue, and when it's empty, you pull from the source until you get a new one, or, of course, until it's over.
user1804599
@Ven Presumably it behaves like atoi and parseInt which don't error out if the input begins with a number.
Ven
Ven
@trilolil all(@countours[*;2]) == -1
nwp
nwp
@trilolil wrong room
Ven
Ven
that's how you do it.
10:16
@Ven Ah I'll check the repo then
Ven
Ven
@rightfold I need to try to set some values and see what sticks.
I tried:
 for( int i = 0; i< hierarchy.size(); i++ )
    {
        drawContours( mask2, contours, i, 255, 2, 8, hierarchy, 0, Point() );
        if(hierarchy.at(i,3)==-1)
        {
            cerr<<"good lines: "<<hierarchy.at(i)<<endl;
        }

    }
@R.MartinhoFernandes can you confidently say that’s roughly linear or at least different enough from sorting + adjacently grouping? my impression is that’s sorting the keys by any other name (with space/time tradeoffs as you shunt this and that here and there etc.)
Which obviously didn't work
@Ven Thanks :) , would you happen to have something which is more similar to my intended solution? I am not a C++ pro so I'd like to keep it easy.
user1804599
@Ven Seems like it's not numeric at all: ideone.com/cEcGSy
Ven
Ven
10:17
:D
e.g. something with nested for loops
@LucDanton It's hard to avoid the storage in C# since the enumerators are single pass, but if you had a "Save" it could be modified to avoid storage at the cost of more calls to the key selector.
user1804599
Ven
Ven
@rightfold yeah that rings true
@rightfold lol
@LucDanton Oh. Hmm. Let me think a bit.
user1804599
10:18
@Ven Also it strips off the C and !.
user1804599
So it ignores the decimal point.
@ven I copied the wrong declaration, this is how hierarchy is declared: vector<Vec4i> hierarchy;
user1804599
Oh right, that's because V indicates an assumed decimal point.
user1804599
It should be . instead of V to display it.
Ven
Ven
mh...
user1804599
10:20
user1804599
wtf
@LucDanton We clearly do only one pass in the source: O(n) key selector calls. Each pull from the source entails inserting into a queue (amortized O(1)) and insertion or lookup in a dictionary (also amortized O(1)). Is there a cost I'm missing?
(Of course it's debatable whether it is faster, but that's different from whether or not it is linear)
user1804599
@Ven This document talks about output pictures: pgrocer.net/Cis12/cobol3.html
Ven
Ven
@rightfold wtf "?"?
(Oh, re: multipass, technically there is Enumerator.Reset() which would enable that, but it's one of those embarrassingly broken interfaces that everyone seriously discussing this just pretends it's not there; it could be more aptly named Enumerator.ThrowNotSupportedException)
user1804599
10:26
@Ven Ah, I get it, 9 and V are used for calculations, then you MOVE it TO a variable with a picture with Z, ., etc for display.
Ven
Ven
@rightfold so you can't calculate anything in the end?
user1804599
@Ven like-a-so: ideone.com/Q4ZXz2
@R.MartinhoFernandes that makes sense. we get multipass(ish? doesn't matter) linear for hashable things. ties in to the no guarantee of ordering amongst groupings. for orderable things you can use sets/maps again, and that orders things (as an implementation detail of course) and I assume that leads to n log n down the line and ultimately to a moral sorting + adjacency grouping
can you hash anything in C#?
user1804599
@Ven You calculate with numbers. If there's Z or . or , then it's not a number, it's text.
@LucDanton Yes; it just hashes references by default, which matches the default equality semantics.
Ven
Ven
10:29
mmmmh.
@R.MartinhoFernandes lol first time I hear of it I think
user1804599
@Ven And I think such text can contain any text, regardless of the picture, it's just that the pictures tells what happens when moving to it from a number.
Value types get boxed and then those references hashed, which is disastrous. (IOW Kids, either don't write value types, or write them with custom equality and hashing)
Ven
Ven
I need to try some stuff
there’s an interesting insight for the non-hashable case though: we end up sorting just the keys and ultimately the groupings. but as soon as we identify an element as related to an already found key, that's just one look-up. a literal upstream sort_by will sort same-key elements
the things being sorted are not the same, is what I’m getting at
10:35
FWIW, the .NET implementation seems to be eager. github.com/Microsoft/referencesource/blob/… (+ class Lookup in the same file). Note the array member.
Ew.
user1804599
@Ven You should also use USAGE COMP and USAGE COMP-3.
x.GroupBy(f).GetEnumerator() consumes the entire sequence. It just returns an enumerator one of those Lookups, which is a (materialized) dictionary that keeps order of insertion (so the grouping order matches the order of their first elements in the source).
GroupBy is a sort based on f so it need to consume the entire sequence before returning the first result
@ratchetfreak No, it's not, not if you want to implement it O(n).
This whole discussion is about how it isn't.
first and last element could be in the same group
10:38
And?
You only need to consume the whole sequence you ask for the second element of that group.
so it needs to consume the entire input before it can output anything meaningful
(Or, of course, when you ask for the past-the-end element of any group)
@ratchetfreak No, only when it needs to output that one element.
but most uses will be asking for that second element
You're shifting the goalposts.
so why spend time on defering the grouping when it needs to happen anyway
10:39
ugh. TIL that U.S. refuels Saudi bombers in Yemen. Also U.S. provides intellegence. I thought they only sell weapons.
It doesn't "need to happen anyway".
it very likely will
which is enough to just go eager
Some sequences are infinite.
then don't use them with group
@ratchetfreak We don't care. We're not discussing that.
@ratchetfreak What if we want to.
10:41
@R.MartinhoFernandes I’m still going through it but I’m noticing it starts with g.elements = new TElement[1];. so there’s at least some resizing going on
@R.MartinhoFernandes then you get stuck in only returning the first group's elements, then you may as well have used filter
@LucDanton See GetEnumerator: it doesn't resize anything.
@ratchetfreak No, you're not. Please read back the discussion we already had about how this is possible. It details the implementation.
Given x = { 10, 23, 17, 35, 41 }. The first element of x.GroupBy(tens) just needs to have Key = 1. Getting that only needs to consume the very first element of x.
A consumer could then skip to the second group without iterating over that group (thus not needing to consume any element of it)
(Say, x.GroupBy(tens).Where(g => IsPrime(g.Key)))
I wonder if there is a statistic or good example where providing good initial capacity for ArrayList in Java has lowered GC overhead or made application run measurably faster.
@wilx Pretty sure it depends on allocation patterns.
@wilx standard growth is geometric, and there is a reserve member function
so it really only matters when creating a lot of them that grow beyond the standard 16 elements
10:48
@wilx I use to believe java is for those who have little concern about performance
@R.MartinhoFernandes okay now that I have a better grip on the thing there’s also the plain picking off all elements and placing them wherever, all in go, in Lookup.Create
@ProblemSlover I am pretty sure that server side Java applications are concerned about performance to a degree.
Talk of a C# OS on HN, brings back memories about MS Singularity and destroyallsoftware.com/talks/the-birth-and-death-of-javascript
and discovering private members that are never shared outside of the class instance (to provide tighter memory lifetimes) is feasible so on realloc the JVM can know it's the only reference to the old backing array and reuse the memory immediately
@R.MartinhoFernandes well, now I’m torn. that leaves quite a lot of different group_by scenarios depending on what you care about. e.g. adjacent group can be bidi with bidi groupings on bidi input, and that composes well with sorting
10:55
I'd just consider them two distinct operations
Personally I prefer the groupby name for the C# meaning.
oh bikeshedding the names is not a big deal
C# lacks the other one. I called it chunksby when I implemented it.
@wilx damn.. java for web... omg.. way not budget option.. but still everything comes to optimisation of sql shit

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