Technically, you're not allowed to index a __m128. GCC allows it as an extension. But it won't work in MSVC or ICC on Windows. Since you're using that extension and the indices are compile-time constants, you're better off. The optimal sequence for r[0]+r[1] is shufps; addss. Not sure if GCC will be able to generate that.
I'm unsure about the horizontal add. Internally, the processor breaks it into a vertical add + shuffle. But I wont' know how many shuffles. If it's more than one, then it's better to do it manually.
Here are some versions tuned based on Agner Fog's microarch guide's microarch guide and instruction tables. See also the x86 tag wiki. They should be efficient on any CPU, with no major bottlenecks. (e.g. I avoided things that would help one uarch a bit but be slow on another uarch). Code-siz...
@Telkitty Regardless of whether it's really aimed at you, I think quite a few of the articles I've see have basically qualified as trolling, with one exception. On one hand, like trolls, I think in most cases the authors were fully aware that they were basically writing nonsense. On the other hand, unlike trolls, they weren't just trying to annoy or cause fights--they really wanted their nonsense to be believed.
@Mysticial I think his idea with movhlps is that it's helpful on older CPUs and harmless on new ones.
I am annoyed because their bullsh!t articles make women sound weak - like they can't take criticism, and the foundation of sexism builds on the idea 'women are weaker'. So in a way, they are reinforce sexism ...
And they misuse the term 'troll' - like anyone who expression their dislike towards those journalists are all trolls. It's not like they are saints, and even saints disliked by some people.
it freak interferes with freedom of speech
because there is no hatred in the world </sarcasm>
that's why those women's whine about trolls are wrong on multiple levels
@Telkitty Matter of viewpoint, I guess. 50 years ago, OCR, handwriting recognition, and speech recognition were all considered "AI". Now they're all pretty routine. My general rule of AI is that it's never achieved, because as soon as we figure out how to do something reasonably well, we decide that's not really AI after all, and move on to other things.
@MarkGarcia Probably. It fits in well with my racism, sexism, ethnocentrism, atheism, etc.
@MarkGarcia So far, I think most of what we've come up with is artificial idiot savants. They (at best) do one thing reasonably well, but make no attempt at all to extend that ability into other areas. Train a net to recognize every breed of dog extremely well, and it still has no clue about anything related to cats.
also she grew her own food, never lay down, survived temperatures of below −30° Fahrenheit (−35°C) - I find it hard to believe, but then maybe I just have a shallow mind
religious people are capable of doing extreme stuff ...
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how do clr enums work? when i declare public enum class MyEnum inside a header and include that header in multiple cpp files, the linker complains about multiple definitions: LNK2022.
@login_not_failed I'm not agreeing with that. It's not an open source compiler where the bleeding-edge version can be "unstable". It's a commercial product so I would expect VS2017 to be reliable with code that compiled well under VS2015
2017 has a few bugs, but 2013 is just old, and if you have any bugs i doubt MS is going to fix it, and least with 17 you can report it and get it fixed
But a team that works "around" us uses VS2013 and if we want to pressure them into actually producing something, we need to use the exact same VS version they are using
@BartekBanachewicz If you can separate them you can have a virtual function process for A that handles the A part and an overriding function in B that handles the B part after calling A::process.
I’ve been working on an experimental new C++ language feature tentatively called “metaclasses” that aims to make C++ programming both more powerful and simpler. You can find out about it here: Current proposal paper: P0707R1. I hope the first ten pages give a readable motivation and overview. (The best two pages to start with are […]
had an interesting situation in my D&D session last night
I took out a loan from a loan shark, and it turns out he entered one of his best guys into the gladiatorial arena, and I subsequently killed him to live/win
then his enforcer told me that he was out for my blood
then everybody else was surprised when I promptly stabbed the enforcer
what else is that supposed to mean except that he's gonna try and kill me and I should just use my surprise round before he can use his
@BartekBanachewicz They could, but doing that well is a fair amount of extra work (especially on Windows, where the installer doesn't know about dependencies, so you have to handle them all manually).
@thecoshman More to the point, racism was still alive in 1944. In fact, but current standards racism ran rampant back then. Years ago I read through some (US) want ads from the late 1930s (or so). Lots of them were blatant about things like "no jews", "no irish", etc. Quite a few sounded more like you'd expect on a dating site than a job ad: "Wanted: pretty blonde girl between 18 and 20 to answer phone. No Jews, WOPs, niggers or Irish."
@JerryCoffin oh god yeah, comparatively speaking, racism is not an issue now. Sadly, it still is. But yeah, it's so much better now... well, maybe it's just not as honest
@thecoshman I think there's some of both. People who really are strongly racist aren't nearly as open about such feelings any more. At the same time, decades of reduced visibility and widespread disapproval has (I think) reduced a lot of the underlying racist attitudes as well. These attitudes don't happen without somebody teaching them, and the likelihood of learning them is drastically reduced when few people feel comfortable openly stating them.
@Abyx - I've removed the message you flagged. However, I'll say this: if people are repeatedly telling you that they find the things you are saying to be disgusting, maybe this chatroom isn't the place for you. Or even Stack Exchange chat itself.
@Mysticial This isn't totally unexpected when you look at the last ten years. But I hadn't heard from him in a while, and the first warning I had that his state had deteriorated was when I heard Sunday night that he'd been admitted to the hospital in the morning. He never even woke up again.
I have listened a lot to Nick Cave these past two days. :-(
@Mysticial It seems he was sick the last few days. I dunno, though, nor does anybody else, because he lived alone (and wanted to), and by accident all the friend who check on him once in a while were away. When they found him, he might have been unconscious for days. His days before that might have been bad, though.
@EtiennedeMartel Not old enough to die, certainly. But then he was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2008 and was given 3 years at most. In the end he died of bad habits causing his kidneys to fail, though.