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00:03
0
A: Stopwatch that uses the abstract factory design pattern

seheA few random notes. I don't like the mix between "object oriented" and "procedural" here. If a Digit is supposed to "have a" position, then in no way should it be incrementing the y of that position during print (the digit doesn't move!). And, obviously, at print time, the Digit should not ha...

/cc @Borgleader @milleniumbug
@fredoverflow You know, anonymous local types are still local types. And I never said I didn't write them as as named classes (I frequently did).
00:48
double int totSalaries; !?!?!? — Borgleader 7 secs ago
@Borgleader an integral type that's double the length of your regular int, duh :P
/cc @Mysticial
 
2 hours later…
03:07
I love the message in this video.
03:44
getting car battery changed
@Telkitty How...exciting for you.
more like ... 'interesting', reminds me of my young and poor days when my crappy old car broke down all the times
now the car is not old, but the same brand and almost as crappy
 
1 hour later…
05:02
was afk ... watching battery getting changed
got it
05:30
@Telkitty What car is it?
The Holden Captiva is a crossover SUV produced since 2006 by Daewoo, now known as GM Korea. Sold under the Holden name for the Australian and New Zealand markets, the Holden Captiva range comprises two similar vehicles, the Opel Antara and the Chevrolet Captiva, both of which are sold alongside each other....
Last car was Toyota echo, it has hardly given me any grief ...
the one before that was a holden as well, native car ...
05:51
@Telkitty That does not look too crappy.
unfortunately car's performance does not depend on how great it looks from the outside.
06:11
@Telkitty Of course it does.
Do you honestly claim you'd need to do some research to figure out which one is faster?
:-)
of course lower one is faster ... unless it has broken down >_<
06:49
In Layered architecture can we have parent child relationship in two classes of two different layers, seems to be not valid to me w.r.t. layered architecture
07:00
every heard of popups?
but more seriously: modal and modeless Windows
interestingly ios has this concept: z axis, android doesn't have it
z axis decides what's on top
@JerryCoffin everyone knows the red ones are faster
that's more like ... orange though - to be technically correct
is it bad to buy a vinyl just to hang it on the wall?
07:56
I am retarded - I am writing this new function which I have already implemented in the same class a couple years before.
08:08
@Telkitty Alzheimers.
Inheritance is an advanced technique and shouldn't be taught to beginners.
discuss.
The concept itself is pretty easy...but if you don't have your mind wrapped around things like functions / passing by value etc..those kind of get on the way.
Different animal classes share common functionality at a base is intuitive.
It was more of a **** trying to understand instance vs class, even though that now seems obvious.
@nwp I'm watching this
09:15
@sehe local class seems to mean named local class in Java...
@wilx wait until the day when I come online by habit and asking you PHP questions ...
@nwp Nice!
09:32
@fredoverflow we're you forgetting functions in functions or classes in functions?
It's an odd thing to allow, but I can see how it could be useful, even if I can't think of much use myself
I mean, lambdas are almost surely better than functions in functions (if you could even really tell a difference, other than maybe you can return a lambda). Class in functions though, I think I have used that...
Was doing some funky stuff
@thecoshman I disagree. I'd rather have named local functions than lambdas
(if I had to pick one)
oddA :: [Int] -> Int
oddA = length . filter (\x -> x % 2 == 1)

oddB :: [Int] -> Int
oddB = length . filter isOdd
  where
    isOdd x = x % 2 == 1
@thecoshman Named classes inside named functions. (Java does not support named functions inside named functions.)
@thecoshman Functions inside functions is useful if you want to start a recursive helper function.
@fredoverflow ah yes, recursion boot strapping :P
@BartekBanachewicz except you can name a lambda, and thus you can call it like a named function but also return it... I guess you just need a lambda to be able to capture itself...
09:48
@thecoshman you can return local functions as well
and e.g. Haskell local functions also close over the parameter scope
@BartekBanachewicz ah well, if you have that feature sure
 
3 hours later…
 
2 hours later…
14:39
14:50
5 hours, 1 post, new record for lounge 'peace' :p
15:04
Fortunately I was there.
15:17
#out-of-context
The app I am currently working on is full of holes ... the more feature I add, the more holes will be added in
I am a holey developer
nwp
nwp
15:56
9
Q: Hurry! Ubuntu is quickly running out of ram, and my computer is headed for a complete freeze! What command will save me?

AkivaI need a google result for this, because this happens pretty often to me when I am compiling software in the background and suddenly everything starts to slow down and eventually freeze up [if I do nothing], as I have run out of both ram and swap space. This question assumes that I have enough ...

@nwp download moar RAM!
I know--but somebody was going to do it, so I figured I might as well get it out of the way so we could move on...
nwp
nwp
@JerryCoffin But what if you cannot open another tab? Darkest Dungeon voice "The trap has sprung. Escape is impossible."
@nwp Use wget, obviously.
Think of it--downloading more RAM, recursively!
nwp
nwp
I wonder if wget --ram already exists somewhere.
16:05
@nwp Looks like "wget -ram" should be allowed.
2
user784668
16:25
Is it normal for the CPU to reach 80°C when operating at max FLOPS?
Depends on the CPU, but yes.
@Fanael Modern CPUs are often thermally limited, so if you make good use of the instruction-level parallelism they support, they'll reach the maximum temperature allowed, and then start scaling back the clock to keep from exceeding it.
user784668
@JerryCoffin If by "modern" you mean "anything made in the 21st century", yeah.
user784668
It didn't throttle, anyway.
@Fanael In this case, it probably equates to something like "not obsolete" (though some fairly obsolete CPUs fit the description as well).
user784668
16:37
Barely 65°C when using SSE instead of AVX though.
user784668
Is AVX really this power hungry?
@Fanael At one time we jokingly referred to them as "screaming Cindy extensions". Apparently Cindy doesn't scream so loudly any more.
@Fanael Probably. You can generate a first-order estimate of power consumption based on the number of operand bits per cycle. SSE allowed only two 128-bit operands, for a total of 256 bits per cycle. AVX 2 allowed three 256-bit operands, for a total of 768 bits per cycle. AVX 512 (obviously enough) doubles that again (1536 bits per cycle).
From there you should look at instruction level parallelism--how many of those instructions you can execute each cycle--but I believe that's usually pretty close to a tie.
16:53
@JerryCoffin Speaking of throttling, I spent much of the weekend studying that on my Skylake X build. Not sure if I mentioned it here yet, but the processor has a form of "architectural throttling" that turns off half of the AVX512 execution resources when certain thermal limits are hit.
The clock speed of the CPU stays the same, but the AVX512 throughput halves and the performance drops. The temperatures also drop as well.
user784668
@JerryCoffin That's not how P6 worked ever, though — the execution units don't care about output operands, they only get the inputs, so in a way, SSE has three operands as well.
@Mysticial I don't think you'd stated it directly, but it was pretty strongly implied.
@Fanael Yeah, good point. The output only really controls where the result gets written to when it gets retired.
@Mysticial The other implication, however, was that it's probably not controlled entirely by temp. As I recall, you mentioned adjusting the maximum power draw in the BIOS, and that allowing the full throughput AVX 512 at times that it wasn't happening otherwise.
@JerryCoffin correct
@JerryCoffin There was temperature throttling as well. If the temps go above 95C, it drops the frequency, but it doesn't turn off the half the AVX512.
Though the temperature throttling took a bit longer for me to notice because of the large radiator that I have.
The amount of fluid in there is more substantial than my previous builds. So it takes a few minutes for the water to full cycle to where the warm water passes back into the CPU block.
@Mysticial At the rate things are going, my computer may soon have a bigger radiator than my car...
user784668
myth confirmed: mentioning vector instruction sets summons @Mysticial
11
17:08
@Mysticial So if you're using AVX 512 (and you value speed) chances are pretty good that you want to allow it all the power possible, and throttle based solely on temp--it'll almost certainly be able to maintain more than half the rated clock speed.
@JerryCoffin If you assume conservation of energy, the temps will be perfectly correlated with the power draw since all the energy dissipates as heat. So throttling on either one is probably the same.
But even if you have perfect cooling, there's a limit to how much current you can safely draw before you start damaging the hardware.
So I'm hesitant to pull more than 400W out of a socket that's only designed for 165W.
17:21
@Mysticial On a purely theoretical basis, yes. On a practical basis, however, throttling allows you to reduce power draw in much smaller increments. Assume your system has the cooling and power supply to support 90% of AVX 512 at full clock speed. Clock throttling lets you run at just about exactly 90%, and life is good. With full- vs. half-throughput AVX, there are only two possibilities: 50% and 100%. If the system can't sustain 100%, it immediately drops to 50%...
@Mysticial With truly perfect cooling, that probably wouldn't be much of an issue either. Damage from high current mostly comes back to wires/traces overheating and vaporizing. But it's certainly true that the motherboard power traces aren't what people normally consider when it comes to cooling...
Ah, you were talking about something else. :)
I would've much preferred if Intel did the clockspeed throttle instead of the AVX512 throttle.
But I guess they needed a way to market these chips as "4.0 GHz all cores".
And btw, 4 GHz all cores is really fucking fast for normal workloads. I haven't done any direct measurements yet, but compiling sure as hell felt a lot snappier than on my Ryzen or 8-core Haswell box.
@Mysticial Sure--but consider that number that will ship in Dell/HP/etc. systems with, say, a 400 W power supply...
@Mysticial Not sure if you saw it, but Anandtech has a bit about that: anandtech.com/bench/CPU/1857
@Mysticial I'd expect it is. And considering the amount of code that currently uses AVX 512, that's probably a lot more important to most people anyway.
user784668
@Mysticial Intel anthem is "marketing, marketing über alles", after all.
17:38
@JerryCoffin The clockspeed throttle provides more than just finer granularity. It also lets you drop the voltage on the core.
OTOH, if your other hyperthread is running scalar code, then the clockspeed throttle will hurt that thread. An AVX512 throttle won't.
@Mysticial Yeah--and that gives quadratic power reduction, where the power drop from AVX throttling is almost certainly linear.
@JerryCoffin Cubic. F * V^2
@Mysticial Cubic if viewed at a given time, yes--but it stretches the computation over a longer time. The quadratic reduction is looking at total power expended to accomplish a complete task.
@JerryCoffin True. Though the "at a given time" component is the part that matters with respect to the ability to dissipate the energy with cooling.
Of course, neither is really entirely accurate--for example, in both cases, you typically have execution units stalled waiting for memory at least part of the time, in which case the theoretical clock speed doesn't make a whole lot of difference to the time taken.
17:48
Speaking of memory, the memory bandwidth bottleneck is so large that even without the AVX512 throttling, my pi program only gets like 10 - 20% speedup over AVX2.
Single-threaded, the speedup is about 50%. That's still less than what I had hoped. But I wont' be able to investigate until I get updated profilers.
Whoever makes a breaktrhough in RAM tech is going to make a fucking fortune off of it. (If ever one were to happen)
Overclocking my memory from 2133 MHz to 3200 MHz made something like a 20% difference in run-times. I'll need to re-run it again to see if I remember correctly.
user784668
@Mysticial Not calculating useless shit like digits of pi noone cares about will make it even faster :P
@Borgleader Or we could go the Cray route. The Cray 1 used SRAM for its entire main memory. Lots of power, but really fast. It had three complete sets 64 registers (64 bits apiece) and the system was capable of sustaining reading one set of registers from memory, operating on the second, and writing the third to memory, every clock cycle.
user784668
@JerryCoffin Intel will beat that with AVX32768
17:54
@Mysticial I'd have thought Intel would have had VTune ready for AVX 512 quite a while ago.
@JerryCoffin That's what I thought too.
But it's an architectural thing. They don't have the drivers and the hardware counters setup for Skylake X yet.
And they only just added Knights Landing.
It's not like AVX 512 was just suddenly introduced at the last minute and came as a big surprise to anybody, or anything like that.
user784668
@Mysticial Hardware counters prob didn't change much from Sandy Bridge
@Mysticial Sure--but KL is a niche product at best. Skylake X has been available for about a week, and they've probably already sold more than they have of KL.
nwp
nwp
What is the optimal time of day to post an SO question (to maximize the likelihood of smart people seeing and answering it)? About 5-8 hours ago?
18:06
@Mysticial That's like 1.5A on 110v or 0.75A on 220v What kind of socket do you have that handle that small amount of current...?
Unless you're living in a old house, it's unlikely your socket can only handle 165W
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I'm talking about the processor socket and the integrated on-die voltage regulators on the chip itself.
I think he's referring to processor sockets
wall sockets in the UK are 230V, 13A or something like that
user784668
@nwp smart people don't use SO
18:09
I'm also not worried about pulling 400W through the motherboard socket. These boards are overdesigned to handle liquid nitrogen overclocks which easily pull over 1kW. I'm just worried about the processor internals.
Well can't say exactly, but what really matters is the voltage you pass it too. The CPU will use as much amps it can
that said if you try to push more current into it, chances are you'll fry the cpu.
If something would have to break it's more likely the motherboard than the cpu.
@Mysticial Hello. There is a thread called "X299 VRM Disaster" over at overclock.net, there actually is a problem - watch out for single-8-pin mobo's.
@JerryCoffin Hello. (I'm being inclusive tonight.)
@iksemyonov I've seen that video. My mobo has 2 x 8-pins.
@Mysticial Watercooling? Which parts exactly if yes?
18:21
@Mysticial Ah, so VRM on air.
From what I'm reading, the Gigabyte boards have the worst throttling. The ASUS ones don't. But the ASUS ones have the worst VRM problems.
@iksemyonov No VRM problems for me on that board. That heatsink looks real. And it also has a heatpipe going to the side panel which has another heatsink.
The ASUS boards also have shit RGB.
So I'm most likely going to keep my Gigabyte board despite the throttling.
@Mysticial I prefer to have none at all :\
user784668
@Mysticial But how's their YUV?
18:23
Or hope that someone finds a way to turn it off.
@Fanael It's full spectrum.
oooh Mysticial is there
@iksemyonov ?
since you're an expert in PC building, you can tell me if it makes sense for me to buy another GTX670 :3
I'm not a video card expert.
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz A what?
18:24
@Fanael a GPU
I have one and they go now for abt €100
@Mysticial EVGA used to have really solid boards back in the days, not sure about the current state of their mobo team
so I was thinking about buying another one for shits and giggles
@iksemyonov I haven't seen any recent EVGA motherboards.
@Mysticial With decent overclocking records etc. and a really nice VRM though it used to run darn hot most of the time
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz Sell it and buy a 1060.
18:26
@Mysticial Why, there is an X299 series, Dark - FTW - Micro, but I can't see it on sale yet.
@Fanael see I think that adding another 670 should give comparable power for cheaper
I don't think I need the newest architecture anyway, I don't do 3D or VR or anything
@iksemyonov Oh you're right, they do exist. Well they didn't advertise it well enough for me to notice.
the most GPU intensive tasks I run is a few UE4 games and rendering
@Mysticial pcper.com/news/Motherboards/… here you go with dual 8-pins on the e-atx ones
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz 1060 is faster than 670 SLI though.
user784668
18:30
@BartekBanachewicz But if you want to spend as little as possible, why not?
@Fanael But buying a 1060 is probably more expensive than buying a 670
@Fanael yeah it was a completely random thought
@Puppy certainly
user784668
@Puppy Pretty comparable if you sell your 670 first tbh
not really
1060 is about €400
670 go for €100
so if I sell mine I'm still €300 short, and buying another one is obv. just €100
I'd need to buy the SLI bridge but those are really cheap
user784668
@BartekBanachewicz You can get a used one for 1200 zł.
user784668
18:34
So that's 200-300 zł difference really.
wow
I have attempted to purchase some clothing online, and I have found a retailer with the worst possible experience
@Fanael and a hassle to sell mine
it took me five minutes to figure out how to search for just jeans instead of all menswear, and they do not permit you to buy individual items or choose a size
you can only add them to some kind of "outfit builder" for which you must choose at least three items
also wow the new Surface is apparently covered in Alcantara
oh just the keyboard
I think I will go so far as to Tweet at them what a crap website they have
user784668
18:39
@BartekBanachewicz The Bayern footballer?
@Fanael it's a synthetic fabric
19:15
I want to propose namespaced expressions for standardization, but I'm too lazy to write the proposal -__-
@JerryCoffin So I spoke to a couple other overclockers and they are also noticing the "phantom" throttling on normal (non-AVX512) benchmarks as well.
Now I have no idea what's going on in the chip.
They hit it at the 4.8 - 5.0 GHz range. I never did because I didn't try going above 4.2 GHz since I was mostly testing the AVX512 itself.
One Robot might appreciate:
user image
8
@Mysticial Interesting. The obvious possibility would be some clock-gating, but you'd need to do some pretty extensive testing to figure out anything really meaningful about what parts they're gating or the circumstances that would prompt it.
19:31
I also found out there's another thermal limit that I didn't know before: amperage limit.
@iksemyonov Hello. I'm still quite exclusive...
I've only tried increasing the TDP limit (140W -> 400W). But I don't remember if there's also an amperage limit option in my BIOS.
@Mysticial s/amperage/current/
@JerryCoffin Or rather, there's TDP limit (watts), and a current limit (amps).
In my case, I was dealing with low clocks and low voltages. Since the voltage is much lower than normal overclocks, I'm more likely to hit the amp limit than the watt-limit.
@Mysticial It's only a guess, but my immediate guess would be that what you adjusted in the BIOS really is the current limit, and the "TDP limit" is really the maximum temp you'll tolerate.
19:36
@JerryCoffin There's a seperate limit for temperature. That one I haven't been hitting.
So 3 limits:
- Temperature (degrees) = 95C default
- TDP Thermal Design Power (watts) = 140 default
- Current (amps) = ?? default (internet says it's on the order of 100 - 200 amps)
If I'm pulling 400 W at 1.1 vcore, that's 363 amps.
@Mysticial So actually three separate limits: current, total power, and temperature. Power limit would basically protect you from spikes too short term to affect the (measured) temperature.
@JerryCoffin I can see why Intel is making it so hard to get around these limits. Turning on all the dark silicon at once (intentionally or unintentionally) at the wrong time will destroy your chip.
@Mysticial Yeah--I wouldn't be too surprised if (without limits on power/current) you could ramp up power usage so much so fast you could toast the chip before the outside of the package was really starting to get more than slightly warm.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, and they don't want a ton of people trying to RMA their chips because they overclocked to 5.0 GHz on scalar code and then decided to run something stupid like Linpack AVX512. (which I don't believe exists yet)
19:51
@Mysticial They, of course, would rather nobody RMA'd a chip (ever). And, of course, anybody who wants more speed than stock should pay an extra few thousand to get a "real" server chip, or KL or something like that...
20:02
Intel has already had AVX architectural throttling since the Sandy Bridge days. The upper half of the execution units were power gated and took something like 500 cycle to turn on. During that time, the processor could still run AVX, but at a large penalty. On Haswell, that warm up period is also when the CPU would talk to the voltage regular to force the clock down and adjust voltages before the real AVX started.
Apparently Skylake X also has the ability to architecturally throttle scalar code as well.
"As long as the user sees 5 GHz, they're happy! Who cares if it's actually performing at that level."
meh, if they are getting better performance from other areas of the chip, seems like a fair choice to me
20:33
@Mysticial Well, take a 3 GHz Pentium IV as the baseline, and tell me if this is at least 1.7x as fast? :-)
21:04
I feel like getting an X399 just for the sake of being different enough.
@iksemyonov 100 better than Intel's best!
21:34
There's a guy who's been trying to run my pi program on an AMD Epyc system (64 core/128 threads).
there's a guy who's been trying to your face
But the program fails on anything larger than a few million digits. I can't reproduce locally and it looks like the machine has stability issues.
there's a your face that's been trying to some guy
damn
last commit in the Wide repo was 4th of April 2016
last commit to your face was right around now :)
the truth hurts
not as much as looking your face though
1 message moved to bin
Xeo
Xeo
21:48
@Puppy Work finds a way, eh
@Telkitty I wouldn't with PHP on my worst enemy.
heh
eh, really, it was just too hard to convince Clang and VS to play ball
apparently Clang 4 mostly works with VS so I am thinking about ressurrecting the project now that I might be able to escape needing the excreble MinGW
@Puppy You can now use Clang in Visual Studio.
@wilx You could before, technically, it just didn't work to any useful extent.
but apparently now they did implement things like exceptions, debug info, etc
so if I could compile and run Wide with the VS Standard library, then I could add exception and debug info support, then a project type, and then I might be looking at something much more compelling
@Puppy It seems to work ok enough for my non-templatey things.
21:54
that... is not very encouraging at all.
@Puppy lol, no, I mean I do not have template heavy code. I did not mean that it fails on templates. :)
22:23
I know
but it was still not very encouraging
@Puppy maybe if you didn't suck at using Linux :P
Linux doesn't have anything that seems to be worth using
@Puppy It has a "shutdown" command...
@thecoshman If you're going to push something UNIX-like, at least use BSD.
Linux would always have been somewhat easier to integrate with
the problem is that you're then integrating with Linux
at least with Windows, when you're done, you have something good at the other end

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