anyone know of a way to normalize a template parameter pack list? e.g, if A, B, C.. etc are types, I want to transform the parameter pack <C, B, A, E> to <A, B, C, E>
doesn't need to be alphabetical or anything, i just need to be able to get a single canonical form for a permuted list
@sehe huh, I had to add an --exclude '^.*\.pyc.*$ flag to the inotifywait invocation since upgrading Python. almost thought I had to add something for swap files until I remembered vim doesn't have the same 'directory' default as nvim does and Iām used to the latter now. all this tweaking is annoying though
I'm developing an application. I have a button btnSendEmail to send a
password email from server to user email. My application is able to
send a email but It need to know the password of my PC. In the
future, if I build this application to another server, I also need to
know that password of tha...
Pointless question of the month: 'I am taking a user input from a serial interface where they can write commands with arguments. I would like to know what is the fastest method for jumping to a function from this input' - who cares?
> This means the near future could ā at least partly ā still belong to the internal combustion engine and motorcycles can play a role in urban transport as the cleaner, faster and less space needing alternative to cars.
@Horttanainen what is the fastest method to get my coat off after 8-hour long flight
As far as I know, there is no equivalent in the standard C++ library.
There probably is something similar in some 3rd party C++ library. Unfortunately I am not aware of any such library as I do not do C++ programming for over 15 years...
2001: A Space Odyssey is a 1968 epic science-fiction film produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. The screenplay was written by Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke, partially inspired by Clarke's short story "The Sentinel". Clarke concurrently wrote the novel 2001: A Space Odyssey, published soon after the film was released. The film follows a voyage to Jupiter with the sentient computer Hal after the discovery of a mysterious black monolith affecting human evolution. It deals with the themes of existentialism, human evolution, technology, artificial intelligence, and extraterrestrial life. It is noted...
below expectation ... real life technology advancement that is ...
@Fanael That's the case for Skylake. But probably not for Haswell since the FP-add latency is shorter. It's not obvious whether it's even using the same adder but short-circuiting the logic or if it's just a separate adder-unit. The latter needs more area, but is easier to implement.
Oh and Intel might as well be screwed on the HEDT line. It's been revealed today that Threadripper is actually a 4-die/32-core chip with two of the dies disabled. IOW, a AMD Eypc server reject. There's nothing to stop AMD from putting 32 cores into the HEDT line.
I think my packaging algorithm is getting way to abstract... I have packages in sale order lines packed in splitted in multiple packages which are then stored in meta packages which are then packaged in boxes which are actually also packages...
the fun part is the meta package which allow me to have 1 single package rotated in all direction to find the best match in the box... When its used I remove all the facets too
quick but stupid question, (I'm from a windows world), if I have several programs that all take the same input / produce same output. I want to generate a datapoint for each input that includes runtime & memory usage
You're lucky I saw that because you didn't ping me. Answer is yes: SSE3, SSE4.1, XOP: Windows MSVC > Linux GCC > Windows ICC x86, AVX, AVX2, AVX512: Windows ICC > Linux GCC > Windows MSVC
Things I haven't tested: Clang, GCC/MinGW on Windows, ICC on Linux. And I have no intention to do it since maintaining compatibility for 3 compilers and 2 platforms is already enough of a headache as it is.
@Mysticial I was about to reply that game programmers probably care but then I checked the steam hardware survey and saw that 86% of steam users have AVX
I recently obtained a Phenom II X3. A friend of mine left it at my place when he upgraded his box to Ryzen (using the same case) and he doesn't seem to want it back.
It's unlockable to 4 cores. Though I had to redo the thermal paste on it or it would overheat and hard shutdown.
@Mysticial darnit, I come back to this and I can't make a stig like "some say" about you as a joke... but seriously I'm not actually sure what you do for a living, but I'm convinced it requires setting computers on fire and they refuse to give you matches
@Mgetz Other than, they probably wouldn't mind if he set a machine on fire every once in a while, as long as they make at least a few million times its cost before its gone.
I can't go into the details, but one of the ideas we floated was to hire one of the top LN2 overclockers and have them sit in front of an open-air box pouring LN2 the whole day.
LN2 overclocking isn't just about preventing the CPU from overheating at absurd frequencies and temperatures. The colder the CPU, the faster the gates react. So being colder lets it clock higher.
@Mysticial Yes, but Liquid Helium is (quite a bit) colder than liquid nitrogen. It also cools better--LN next to a warmer surface forms a thin layer of gaseous nitrogen, which acts as an insulator.
Supposedly this is due to super-conductivity. But I'm missing something because the temperature/resistance curve is reversed for semiconductors like silicon.
@Mysticial it is but different materials behave differently, CPUs aren't pure silicon is my bigger point, so it's fully possible that the gates could superconduct while the silicon itself stops leaking current
regardless, the bigger issue is driving a board that fast because memory and other devices need to keep up. most of the materials on a board are not designed for that sort of cooling and would likely become brittle if cooled that far.
Boards like the Asus Apex and Rampage series are designed for LN2 overclocking and can handle 1000W+ on the VRMs. LN2 overclocks use insulation blankets to cover the motherboard from condensation. And some motherboards even include that.
The Asus Apex series sacrifices memory lanes to limit it to 1 DIMM/channel to maximize signal strength.
K|ngp|in cooling sells LN2 tubs that mount directly to the processor and let you pour LN2 into them.
@Mysticial ah, that makes sense. My statement about overall perf still stands, the boards are not designed for long term use in that configuration nor do they support the peripherals needed to get the optimal performance out of that clock speed
@Mysticial if you're looking for maximum chill, you use a closed circuit cyro-fridge where the expansion plane is the heat spreader of the CPU
bth I'm kinda surprised nobody has done that before, it wouldn't be hard to make a block for it and then hook it up to existing hardware. The biggest challenge would be manufacturing the brackets and insulation for mounting
hehhe that sounds fun; I built a stock simulator at one point... nasdaq itch/outch 4.x compliant and everything , even built the ach (trading reporting) part of it, worked with a guy who had a drop feed at the exchange.. never went anywhere, but it was interesting
there was custom hardware deployed, you would do things like create a hardware queue so that you could crack certain packets faster
@Mgetz There are reasons why it isn't done. Mainly that LN2 extreme overclocks aren't entirely stable. And the cost of the system going down during trading is higher than what you'd gain from having that extra speed.
Furthermore, the latencies to the exchange have more variation than what you'd gain from a super-clocked system.
alright, I'm a total n3wb, help me out here.... "error while loading shared libraries: libstdc++.so.5: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory" I've installed the packages... not sure what to investigate / check next.
@Mgetz Actually, at least pretty close to that has been done at least a few times. For sealing, it put a (thin) plate between the evaporating liquid and the CPU, but it was about as thin as they figured they could get away with.
Especially with the multi-chip situations like Epyc and Threadripper, it'd probably make sense to remove the heat spreader entirely, and seal the evaporating chamber directly to the substrate.
@MarkGarcia If he does the Threadripper vs. Skylake X review using y-cruncher, y-cruncher is gonna be the only benchmark where Threadripper gets thrashed head to toe - especially if he uses the latest version with AVX512.