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13:50
Would anyone like to share some PC hardware advice? I want to build a new machine, since my current one is a six year old laptop.
I thought about basing the new box on a LGA2011 Intel. Some sort of i7.
@KerrekSB for what purpose?
@rubenvb General Awesome Power
NVidia GTX something very high
@KerrekSB then buy a i7 3930k, 16GB RAM
680 GTX
OK, cool.
or an AMD HD7970
13:52
I got stuck picking a CPU cooling system
H20 is best
I prefer silent
There's premade CPU watercooling kits that are silent
Who is H20?
H20 aka water
lol
13:53
Oh OK.
Any particular brand?
(Not of water. Of cooler makers.)
noctua nh d14
oh and don't forget a big SSD
@KerrekSB my systems (except for backup/fileserver) are all silent. As in: completely
For LGA2011?
@sehe Are they powerful?
@bamboon your wallet doesn't forget about about SSD
@bamboon I actually don't care too much about SSD or HDD...
13:56
@KerrekSB 1 is a Intel Core2 Q9550/8Gb
Money isn't so much an issue. Noise and power are.
The other (mediacenter) is a i7 2600S with 4Gb
@sehe Isn't that like 10 years old?
@sehe I see. How do you cool it?
@KerrekSB It has a huge TDP. Still a quad core.
@KerrekSB you should, that's the upgrade you will really feel every day
13:57
@KerrekSB More like 5. Yes, that's "oldish" but it blows most current i3 (some i5) out of the water mainly because I do everythin on SSD and (importantly) tmpfs
@rubenvb OK
@KerrekSB This will help when looking for silent components: silentpcreview.com
I feel like I could waste all day just selecting the cooler. I'd rather just make a decent choice now and move on.
The Noctua one looks good.
Will it fit into any old case?
@KerrekSB it's quite big
age isn't really a factor for cases, just the size and airflow
@KerrekSB I 'cheat' on both: the media centre is a tranquilpc build so it is entirely passively cooled
14:03
@sehe Hm. That's going over board... a normal case with water cooler sounds sufficient.
The workstation has a Zalman or Scythe cooler (don't remember quite which one I picked) and it runs on minimum rotation always, so it is effectively inaudible
remember to put an alternative gpu cooler in there too, especially NVidia's get quite hot
@bamboon I'm confused by the fans on the cooler: Do they just vent inside the case, or do they go straight outside?
Right now I'm hardpressed to tell whether it is even running, when I'm sitting at 30 cm distance
@sehe Yes yes, I believe that your aquarium is very silent :-)
Scythe also looks interesting, but seems hard to get in the UK
14:06
@KerrekSB how do you mean that? they basically just blowing the fins from the cooler
@KerrekSB I don't have watercooling?
@bamboon I thought there might be an additional opening in the side of the case... is there not?
As a matter of fact my fileserver which is running is annoying me with just the sound of the system fan, while it sits in an closet at 2 meter nearer the ceiling
@sehe Oh .. just passive cooling?
Will that work for an i7?
@KerrekSB well that is for top-blow coolers
like this
14:09
Like I said, the i7 system is totally passive (see tranquilpc.co.uk)
The Q9550 was /cheating/: it really is inaudible through just single CPU coolor (Scyth/Zalman?) and no system fan, passive nvidia GPU
I have a sysfan, but I disconnected it 3 years ago after plotting temperatures and finding it cools okay in my spacious desktop
@bamboon Ahh, I see.
if you go for the i7 3930k, you won't be able to go completely passive
@KerrekSB I'd say, don't try it yourself. Tranquil really has a special heat-pipe design going that makes it possible
@bamboon What about the 3820?
@sehe Oh OK. I won't then. Thanks!
I hear that some of those active ones are really quiet, though, like the Scythe one
@KerrekSB well if you only want a quadcore like the 3820, you could go with a sandybridge/ivy bridge system like sehe does
14:11
@bamboon Too late, I'm now mentally committed to 2011. :-)
I only make forward progress in decision-making :-)
(Though I may upgrade the processor later, non?)
OK, I think I can live with the i7 3820 plus Noctua fan. I'm now looking at three different Asus mainboards to go with it.
@bamboon Here's what Tranquil have on offer, CPU-wise: tranquilpcshop.co.uk/intel-3rd-generation-core-processors
@sehe Do they assemble the whole thing to order? I'd pay to have someone take the work off of me.
@KerrekSB They do. I have the older ixLS casing they now have a newer model that they spin from a single piece of aluminum at their own factory:
@KerrekSB you really can do that yourself
14:16
@bamboon Well, I've spend two hours and haven't even selected the main board... if someone can make me the whole thing in one go, I'd be fairly happy with that :-)
Building a PC?
I should finally do that, too.
Stupid RAM-less laptop.
@KerrekSB just get a mainboard with good slot arrangement, and the memory/cpu support you need. Doesn't have to be fancy at all.
@sehe Wait, that one doesn't have super-duper 3D power, does it?
@rubenvb I'm trying! :-)
14:18
I just go for the cheapest with the best chipset
@KerrekSB what's superduper. Intel builtin graphics on 2nd or 3rd generation intel i7 are pretty good, I hear.
@sehe oh please.
@sehe NVidia GTX 800
Intel GPUs are shit.
All of them.
For my entire life I have never had 3D power. This will change today.
14:19
@rubenvb If you intend to do CUDA, go buy a nvidia powerhouse :)
@KerrekSB I've never needed it.
Why did CUDA get all the fun. Is OpenCL so sucky?
@sehe cool stuff they build
CUDA was first.
@rubenvb I dunno. Never needed it.
@bamboon I'd have to agree. I have their BBS system as well (seems they don't sell it anymore, since they went to minimal form factor with their own chassis machine, but here's a pic from earlier in chat:)
@sehe I guess this would be very nice to have for a server.
14:26
@KerrekSB It's ok :) I'm not sure whether I'd buy again, since I hate the fact that I can still hear the sysfan. You see, I'm pretty serious about noise. Or hum. Or sound in general :)
My real intention was to keep it 'always on' with the disks spun down. In practice, I find myself shutting it off, even though it only uses 21W reportedly
@KerrekSB maybe something to take into account: a HD7970 is a bit cooler than your GTX monster, and about as fast: anandtech.com/show/5699/nvidia-geforce-gtx-680-review/19
I once returned a Samsung SyncMaster flatscreen because... it would start making noise when brightness was <100%. That's a problem since the screen is pretty darn close and your ears are directed towards it.
Now it's time for RAM. I have 8 slots for DDR3 up to 2.4GHz. I think 4x4GB would be a good start. Does it have to be cooled?
nope
@KerrekSB It just draws power, so tune the PSU
14:35
@sehe Passive cooling at least?
And yes it will heat the system up ever so slightly, but the graphics card already means that you will have to maintain airflow throughout the case
@KerrekSB Not usual for memory. Some chip makers do include heat spreaders on top, so it gets distributed better
I picked this Asus board: "8 x DIMM, Max. 64GB, DDR3 2400(O.C.)/2133(O.C.)/1866/1600/1333/1066 MHz". Can I put any number of DIMMs inside, or only multiples of three or so?
@sehe I see. Thanks.
@KerrekSB you probably can put in any number but should put in multiples of 4 to get the advantage of quad channel
@bamboon Ahh. Nice. Will do. I'll get 4x4GB then
What's a good SSD?
crucial m4, samsung 830 series
14:43
Oh - they're all 2.5".
Will they fit?
Oh, the Samsung one comes with a 3.5" mounting kit
I am searching launchpad, however when I input some tag to search for, it lists me all the relevant data to that particular word, how can I disable to show me bug commitments and things like that, and only to show me code repositories?
Found it!
@SerenityStackHolder launchpad.net/ubuntu/+ppas
Oh sorry, that's probably not even what you meant :)
@sehe Thank you anyway for the lodged effort. ;)
15:05
@bamboon quad channel?
oh new stuff
ok
AMD G34 has it for quite some time now
@RadekdaknokSlupik is that your realname (RS)?
@bamboon that's dual cpu, not sure how quad channel vs dual dual channel that is
The Vishera CPU will have a quad channel memory controller though
ie, ++bulldozer.
15:09
@rubenvb no, I am talking of quadchannel memory interface
@bamboon ah yes, the Opteron already has quad channel it seems.
Hehe. Guess what interests me most about the following video fragment:
Alright, this is making good progress. Thanks everyone!
@KerrekSB Let me know what you end up with and what you like/dislike about it. My workstation is gonna be due for a rebuild indeed.
1 hour ago, by Kerrek SB
@sehe Isn't that like 10 years old?
hey in banker's algorithm, if the need is (7,4,3) and the available is (7,4,5) can the process request be granted ?
15:20
@sehe Since no one guessed it: the fact that apparently it encodes to only 143Kb of stuff. Contrast that with a random drawing of my youngest made today
@Failed_Noob bankers algo? That only reminds me of rounding.
The Banker's algorithm is a resource allocation and deadlock avoidance algorithm developed by Edsger Dijkstra that tests for safety by simulating the allocation of predetermined maximum possible amounts of all resources, and then makes a "safe-state" check to test for possible deadlock conditions for all other pending activities, before deciding whether allocation should be allowed to continue. The algorithm was developed in the design process for the THE operating system and originally described (in Dutch) in EWD108. The name is by analogy with the way that bankers account for liquidity c...
already checked the wiki, still getting confused
user784668
@sehe +1
@Failed_Noob The wiki was for me :)
@sehe lol
We're always learning stuff here.
Don't have time to read through that, unfortunately
15:25
@sehe Will do. I'm just finishing off by selecting a case, PSU, and disk drive.
@sehe with "'daknok'" removed, yes.
15:42
Oh, what's a good monitor? 24", I suppose?
LCD? CRT? Plasma?
are doing something else besides coding?
@bamboon I would at some point like to play one of them 3D games people have been talking about.
Like Doom
@KerrekSB well, LCD is the standard of the day so, I would go with that one, but besides that an older TFT will probably do it too
Am I the only one who is annoyed by C++'s "one-way" parsing?
Dell has a screen with "premicolour black", which is twice as expensive as one without
@FredOverflow What's "two-way" parsing, by contrast?
15:49
I find it so nice that in modern languages, you can simply call functions that don't exist yet, and then write them further down.
Oh, what about LED monitors? Are they any good?
Calling functions that haven't been declared yet works inside of C++ classes, but not outside of C++ classes :(
@FredOverflow That's because member function bodies aren't actually parsed straight away
@KerrekSB I have been trying to buy a 24" monitor for years now, but I simply cannot decide on a specific model, so I stay with my 20" monitor...
@KerrekSB I don't think the C++ standard mandates any specific parsing strategy.
@FredOverflow I think it does. It says that the body of inline-defined member functions is parsed as though it were written immediately after the class definition.
15:52
Of course I could just use static methods inside classes... but that seems like a hack.
@KerrekSB oops sry, I wrote LCD up there but meant LED
@KerrekSB Oh, interesting. Where exactly does it say that?
Damn. My wireless suddenly decided to suck balls.
And your balls don't like that?
It's not my balls, that's the problem.
15:55
@FredOverflow Not sure, let me check
@bamboon Is LED good? What about this extra blackness?
How about this NEC monitor?
@KerrekSB well, LEDs can turn off pretty fast ->black. TBH I don't know nothing about that NEC monitor
@KerrekSB That's a lot of money for a 24" monitor, I guess it must be good ;-)
@FredOverflow Cool. That's a good enough argument :-)
@FredOverflow Which problem, though?
@KerrekSB Wanting to call functions without having to declare/define them above.
16:08
Well, you just wrapped everything in a class...
16:25
It is done - a massive order has been placed! I'll let you know when I have it up and running :-)
@KerrekSB A massive order of what?
Is it a bad place to post about php ?
Hey guys.
How's life going?
rainy day
Really? It's hot as hell here.
16:39
where do you live ?
19℃…
Netherlands xD
:)
me from Paris
hey someone can have a quick look @ my question ? I'm getting frustrated not finding a solution on that rainy crappy day stackoverflow.com/questions/10666226/…
Objective-C y u extremely long method names.
@Jamescoo lol PHP.
yep but it says it's the best room :P
and ppl from php chat suck :D
If we talked about PHP positively here, this wouldn't be the best room.
16:42
Haha
Php's the best
2
In fact I don't know any other languages...
You're talking English right now.
No, using google translator
You're talking French to Google Translate right now.
No, coding php to french to english
Stop confusing me.
16:45
Ok, enough with bad jokes :P
Why are the chartrooms so empty ?
Objective-C really sucks balls. It's a mix of two crappy languages, with extreme verbosity and type-unsafety combined with horrible performance and pointers all over the place.
And not even a single chance for the compiler to inline anything.
@Jamescoo because they suck.
@FredOverflow PC hardware :-) I'll be a new man come next week.
@KerrekSB What have you ordered exactly?
17:00
@FredOverflow Everything. A Coolmaster case plus 600MW "Silent" power supply. An i7 3820 CPU. An Asus Deluxe mainboard. Some sort of Nvidia GTX 580.
A Samsung SSD; a Noctua CPU cooler (silent?); 4x4GB DIMMs (with kick-ass looking heatsinks). And a 24" screen.
@KerrekSB A 600 megawatt PSU? What on earth are you going to do with that?
@FredOverflow Power the entire universe. Mwahahahaha...
17:51
I'm writing a diff GUI.
It's fun.
@RadekdaknokSlupik "Objective C's horrible performance". Source please
> Because Objective-C uses dynamic runtime typing and because all method calls are function calls (or, in some cases, syscalls), many common performance optimizations cannot be applied to Objective-C methods (for example: inlining, constant propagation, interprocedural optimizations, and scalar replacement of aggregates).
> This limits the performance of Objective-C abstractions relative to similar abstractions in languages such as C++ where such optimizations are possible. However, this is an unavoidable tradeoff because such optimizations would be rendered ineffective by categories or other Objective-C runtime features that are impossible in C++.
Objective-C is a reflective, object-oriented programming language that adds Smalltalk-style messaging to the C programming language. Today, it is used primarily on Apple's Mac OS X and iOS: two environments derived from the OpenStep standard, though not compliant with it. Objective-C is the primary language used for Apple's Cocoa API, and it was originally the main language on NeXT's NeXTSTEP operating system. Generic Objective-C programs that do not use these libraries can also be compiled for any system supported by gcc or Clang. History Objective-C was created primarily by Brad Cox ...
Last paragraph.
Yes, it does say [citation needed] :) but for example inlining cannot be done in Objective-C (think about it, anything can change at runtime).
@RadekdaknokSlupik what's that from? former Yugoslavia or is my language sensor way off?
@sehe Poland. d:
And daknok is just my nickname online.
@RadekdaknokSlupik You have somewhat surprising ideas of fun. I'd love to think that's fun
@RadekdaknokSlupik Oef. That's like way off :)
18:00
@sehe well, writing the actual code around the Diff Template Library, so it does some more pretty line-based comparisons is fun. :P
For example, an added line after a deleted line is potentially just one edited line.
If the edit distance is low, we want to display it differently than a deleted line followed by an added line.
@RadekdaknokSlupik yeah the joys of unidiff vs s-b-s
@RadekdaknokSlupik edit distance is traditional Hamming?
{| align="right" |- | | |- |colspan=2 | |- |colspan=2 | |} In information theory, the Hamming distance between two strings of equal length is the number of positions at which the corresponding symbols are different. Put another way, it measures the minimum number of substitutions required to change one string into the other, or the number of errors that transformed one string into the other. Examples The Hamming distance between: * "toned" and "roses" is 3. * 1011101 and 1001001 is 2. * 2173896 and 2233796 is 3. Special properties For a fixed length n, the Hamming distance is a metri...
It's a value that indicates how much two strings differ.
(onebox fail :))
@RadekdaknokSlupik So you have a proprietary metric then
18:03
It's all the documentation says. :P
> Edit Distance is numerical value for declaring a difference between two sequences.
@RadekdaknokSlupik In theory it would be slower than C++ yes, but according to mikeash.com/pyblog/…, it's not that slow. Saying horrible performance makes me think of some interpreted language like Python.
Again with that 'interpreted language' nonsense.
@CatPlusPlus What's nonsense about it?
We've been over this.
18:06
@CatPlusPlus Not you and I
Here is the code for calculating the difference. It's probably horrible, but it works.
Hey finally MacTeX is done downloading.
Tl;dr: it's a property of an implementation, not a language.
And nobody does straight intepreters anyway, everything is compiled.
But as of today the common implementation is by using an interpreter.
So I'll refer to it as an interpreted language
18:07
So Java is an interpreted language, too. And C#.
warning, incoming caps
Is CPython really using heavy JIT-compiling as Java and C#?
Xeo
Xeo
@CatPlusPlus Really? I thought Python was fully interpreted
PyPy has JIT, but that's not really relevant.
Xeo
Xeo
18:08
Except the occasional JIT
@Xeo Python is jitted at first run, IIRC.
It's compiled to bytecode and VM executes bytecode.
Just like JVM or CLI does.
Xeo
Xeo
Oh, ok
Ruby's reference implementation is interpreted, though.
There are also IronPython and Jython IIRC.
Those use .NET and Java, respectively.
18:09
Yes.
@EtiennedeMartel No JIT, but they still have a compiler and VM.
Interpreting and executing from source level is just crappy way of doing things.
LISP or Forth might get away with it.
Not surprising, though. Someone might have realized at one point that pure interpretation is slow as fuck.
@RadekdaknokSlupik oh missed that before. looking now
@RadekdaknokSlupik Looks nice. this would be the source actually
18:19
@Jamescoo because no-one likes charts
@RadekdaknokSlupik C sucks balls. Objective C objectively sucks balls.
Have we ever discussed insertion hints for hash containers?
OK, question: How do I obtain a useful insertion hint for a hash container, and what are the complexity guarantees for hinted insertion?
I posted an alternative approach for const-cast guy's map insertion logic.
18:35
@KerrekSB Yes we did.
@sehe Oh OK. In the chat or on the site proper?
I think it ran down to: you can easily leave the hint out. But I'd have to look back.
Well, unlike for the ordered containers, there's no mention of the hint in the complexity guarantee.
So while you're guaranteed that a correctly hinted map insertion is O(1), you have no such thing for an unordered_map.
Perhaps they just provided the interface so that you can swap one type out for the other.
Though then again there's no lower_bound member function for unordered containers, so that wouldn't really make sense.
Inserting to hashmap is O(1) or amortised O(1) anyway.
@CatPlusPlus That's true...
18:51
Hey, if there isn't a heavy discussion going on.. I have a question.
What do you think is a good place to declare an enum type which I'd use privately within a class ?
class foo { public: … private: enum bar { … } }; døh
@manasij7479 In a detail subnamespace ambient to your class.
namespace foo { namespace detail { enum ...; } class thing { ... }; }.
Hmm.. good idea.
I used to declare it in the class' file scope.. but this would be a better practice.
@manasij7479 I just had a very bad experience with that approach when I decided I needed to turn a class into a template
Someone had decided to make all sorts of ancillary types into nested base class types.
However, if you have a templated base, those type names become incredibly ugly to state.
With an associated detail namespace, it would have been easy sailing.
It's unfortunate that namespaces don't have public: and private:.
19:00
Moral: Don't put stuff inside a class just to protect its name. That's what namespaces are for.
Does that change anything if the class I'm talking about is the base class itself (templates aren't involved) and the private enum holds some extra information returned by a factory method (to quickly identify subtypes without dynamic casts) ?
In this Optimal Page Replacement algorithm, why is 7 replaced by 2 ? (cs.uttyler.edu/Faculty/Rainwater/COSC3355/Animations/…)
@manasij7479 Well, you could just make it a general design principle, so you won't have to change your style depending on whether you're designing a template or not.
@KerrekSB Thanks
Ell
Ell
ahh its good to have the internet back! No internet for 12 hours makes me sad :'(
19:12
No internet for 12 hours make you sane.
Ell
Ell
not me :L
@FredOverflow What's happening ? =)
Ell
Ell
is g++4.7 stable?
^ For a few months
Ell
Ell
you mean it will be stable in a few months, or is stable - until a few months?
19:24
It has been stable for a few months
Ell
Ell
right kk that makes sense :L
@Ell I've had my share of ICEs with it. Meh.
example ?
@Failed_Noob are you gonna draw attention to undervalued algorithms every 3 hours now?
@FailedNoob the reason is most likely that 7 is LRU (least-recently-used) and all three pages are taken (701, 7 is LRU so it is replaced with the newly requested page 2)
You can see it specifically exercises page 0 a lot and feeds on 'warm cache' pages for a while (just 0,2,3). Then when a non-loaded page is requested (page 1) you can see, it doesn't evict page 0 (that has been in cache the longest), but instead page 3, since it has been the least-recently-used page
It looks like the eviction rule is: evict the page that was least-recently used of the pages that have the oldest age
I saw this webpage once that explained how to read modifiers on variables with some sort of circular diagram -- does anyone know what I'm talking about, and if so, do you happen to remember the link to it?
19:35
@JamesCuster Circular diagram? Nope. cdecl and cundecl sound familiar (it's part of cutils on any linux/UNIX)
@JamesCuster see e.g. lemoda.net/c/cdecl/index.cgi
@sehe When I say read I mean actually reading the code
@JamesCuster Well, me too. Sorry if I failed to remember your thing :)
oh whoops... it would help if I clicked your link ;)
I probably bookmarked the page, but I have hundreds of links bookmarked just for C++....
@sehe I found it. Keyword was "spiral" not "circle". c-faq.com/decl/spiral.anderson.html
@JamesCuster Same thing. Both don't have corners and go round and round.
@KerrekSB Not the same thing when you're trying to google for the page ;)
19:56
Hi guys! Please help with the piece of advice!

http://ideone.com/SI392 - code here

Question: "How to pass using goto in this code? I want to make it to work without goto"

Thanks,
Best Regads!
@user1131997 "Fired from C++" is the only reaction I have to all those stars.
That is not C++
Ell
Ell
my eyes!
The problem is actual both C++ and C, even in C++ such code with goto could be, cause the question was about from not using goto in it ( even in could be in C# or etc )
@user1131997 Each language has its own way of programming. In C++, the code would look completely different and it would most likely not look like that.
20:02
In C++, use RAII and destructors. Don't use goto for cleanup in C++.
@JamesCuster yes, I know, so could you give me a piece of advice in this pure C code, please? Thank you
Upgrade to C++. xD
@RadekdaknokSlupik CX1 was upgraded
@user1131997 Why not just replace the goto cleanup; with free(indexes); return pass;?
@JamesCuster you want to free the indexes anyway.
20:09
Yeah??
@user1131997 welcome back, prime minister :)
@sehe me? why am I the prime minister? :)
Feb 16 at 23:01, by sehe
$ pyecm 1131997
Factoring 1131997:
1131997
You and this room have a.... lively history, shall we say
@sehe Lively or lovely? :)
Both.
With equal amounts of irony
20:24
@sehe infinite or finite amount? :)
@user1131997 To taste
let me speak from my heart :) What do you think about Haskell & LISP realizations ( VM, interpreater, compilers ). I tried to find good stuff for LISP, but most well-working version is Common LISP. But even CLISP works very bad, it's not optimized at all... For example, GHC ( from Glasgow University ) is pretty optimized.

I wonder, does exist such good stuff for LISP?

Thank you! :)
20:40
@sehe Was Marhtino confused?
@sehe, it's another prime-number-user
well... all of them looks and behaves as one user
but IIRC, that one had green square
@Abyx I'm just a clone :) The green one is dead.
the same plot :) but for SO
How to convert in C++ from 'char *' to 'std::string' ?
reinterpret_cast<T>() won't work :(
@EtiennedeMartel very expensive
@EtiennedeMartel the real cost is $2-3
20:56
My friends gave it to me as a present about six months ago. First time I actually use it.
Ell
Ell
haha

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