It is in with the puzzles because it is a puzzle. The box contains hundreds of puzzle pieces.
Lots of them are solid white.
More of them look like pieces of black and white pixel art.
It is for another day. I put it back and pick up a flower puzzle.
@edition yo
...Two days later I am done with the flower puzzle, a Georgia O'Keefe number with strange puzzle piece shapes that judging by the ragged edges hasn't been assembled too many times before.
I pick up the Chrome extensions puzzle again
and bring it back to the room to assemble it.
This thing
this thing
This thing is a QR code, and every piece is borderline-identical: two opposing in sides, and two opposing out sides. It is also missing pieces.
So I'm trying rewrite the FLOPs benchmark. ICC is really had at optimizing synthetic code. So I write the loop body in inline assembly. But ICC spills all vector registers on entry and exit of the inline asm block. So I try to put the loop inside the inline asm block, and ICC says, "labels not supported." FFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
ICC's had the ability to generate AVX512 on Windows since 2014.
On the topic of FLOPs, I'm finding it almost impossible to get anywhere near 4 FP instructions/cycle on Ryzen. The only reason FLOPs can get close to it is because of the HT.
There simply aren't enough registers for me to come up with the 20 dependency chains to do it with one thread on one core.
I haven't tried streaming through memory, or using the expand/collapse tricks. But those are hard to get right.
@Telkitty Since you seem to have missed it, this is essentially the same compiler. In any case, we're talking about its code generation, not something like an IDE that ships with it.
@SpongyFruitcake it’s a bit deceptive though, I think it’s meant to be able to copy/move e.g. std::optional<int> but I’m not sure it’s going to work for std::optional<literal_class> due to language limitations
> Another important point to mention is, that as of the current working draft, variable template constants also have internal linkage and are therefore susceptible to the ODR violation problem unless declared as inline variables […]
well, shit
class-static constants get inline but not namespace scoped ones :(
as there is still no 7 branch that means those things are going into the release unless I’ve missed and/or misunderstood something (which would not be very surprising either)
@LucDanton Before the meeting it conformed with the draft, but during the meeting the draft changed, so it no longer conforms. Sounds like regression to me.
@Telkitty No, it's obviously the person who brings the Python to the table (at a place that serves Python). Don't you know the difference between "restaurant" and "server"?
@SpongyFruitcake it’s your tiem to shine, I gotta repaint the constant in static constexpr auto& pay_homage_to_niebler = constant<functors::pay_homage_to_niebler>;. best I have so far is the unimaginative inline_, whereas the last time I looked Niebler & friends had inline_const
righto, in MPL-style (preceded by the workk of Vandevoorde and Alexandrescu IIRC? it’s been a long while) we hide ints into that int_ thing. you can do the same with bool_<true> and even string<'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o'> if like to live dangerously
well in C++17 you can have that template<auto IntOrBoolOrWhatever> struct demo {}; to handle all these jobs (except the string)
which colour would you paint that?
pre-C++17 you would have to have template<typename Type, Type Value> struct val_to_type {}; with questionable ergonomics e.g. val_to_type<int, 42>. then perhaps have int_ be a alias to that
there used to be maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/place/search, now it's either the nearbysearch or textsearch, which do pretty much the same thing except search itself is deprecated
Welp. I'm having a 0.57% branch miss on my dev machine and 1.04% branch miss in production even though the same process has the whole fucking CPU for itself. Why.
Of course this ruins the performance
If only I could channel my inner Mysticial to cast the branch miss away
> This is interesting, but I am curious why the effort has gone into this C++ tool when Google's own multi-threading-first language, Go, is based on Tony Hoare's work from decades ago, except that it omits the most interesting feature of CSP
@Rapptz I'm starting to look at the discord API to write a layer in CL, it seems "easy enough" – I mean no manual bitwise shenanigans, it all looks straightforward.
Guys, if the Lounge unconference is going to be in Prague, the Czech Republic, and since I am the only Prague resident here, do you require anything of me?