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00:18
@sehe lol, using ^A while the cursor is on the first digit of foo-0.1.0 leads to foo1.1.0. ^X acts as a workaround though!
 
2 hours later…
01:52
no wine sold in Utah warmart, lol
 
1 hour later…
03:12
The probability of my catching any opportunity is excellent - my failure rate is greater than 99.98%!
 
2 hours later…
05:38
sometimes over the internet, you can't be sure whether someone is genuinely praising you, trying to help you out or just mocking you ...
Uh huh. Why are all of Twitter's assets not loading and returning 404? E.g., abs.twimg.com/a/1504900621/css/t1/twitter_core.bundle.css
Just like you see a large bird soaring high in the sky, you think of eagle and congratulating yourself for sighting a bird of prey. Then the bird land on a tree near you, it's a large crow ...
also airbnb sms verfication service does not work properly
@Telkitty Where are you now?
06:22
Utah
tomorrow I am going to be in the Bryce Canyon national park
nwp
nwp
@wilx loads for me
06:48
@LucDanton I'm completely accustomed to this. I never fall for it (used to be even worse with screen, where you'd mentally adjust for ^A^A too).
@LucDanton The thing I hate is that ^A/^X cannot be used as de facto motion commands, because with the cursor at the start of a line this package is best described as foo-1.0.443~ubuntu6.deb, pressing ^X does jump to the first digit, but undoing also moves the cursor back. :|
@Telkitty Everybody was clearly praising you.
Also, smart to go with Malt War! Choice of the locals
I am a hoarder, it's my nature trying to keep things alive when they really should not being
That's weird. Nobody else call me "being"
nobody called you a human being?
poor bear ...
07:27
@nwp It does now too.
@sehe score another point for tmux!
@sehe I think I prefer it that way even though I had the need to jump to a digit once or twice
@LucDanton Oh. I frequently "use" ^A/^X as a shortcut to "jump to the number" even if all I want is to ciwXXXX there
Likewise, I use % for motion a bit. The worst case is with c++ lambdas :) (%%v%l%l% to visually select one, starting with the cursor somewhere to the left of [...])
> Also, i will recommend turbo c++ software to write the c++ codes.
https://www.quora.com/Is-there-anyone-who-is-a-C++-developer-if-I-really-need-help /cc @Cicada
nwp
nwp
07:52
Changing static types. There may be a way to do this in a non-terrible way.
08:03
@nwp not
Ven
Ven
what happened to you bartek
nwp
nwp
He didn't read the room title.
@Ven I use this list to start arguments with people at work
nwp
nwp
This makes me think licenses more complicated than WTFPL/CC0-style or "all rights reserved" are not viable in practice.
The amount of unintentional copyright infringement by well-intending people with lawyer guidance is stunning.
Ven
Ven
08:18
oh, they're removing doc rep?
nwp
nwp
I read they are preserving it, which is somewhat tricky to do.
@BartekBanachewicz it is possible, yes
Ven
Ven
I guess it makes sense to preserve it. You did contribute then and there.
Wow, MSVC finally implements two-phase name lookup :o
@Morwenn any links to this? I'd like to know more about it
No problem, it was honestly a real pleasure to help my fellow developer.
Didn't it feel honest and convincing? xD
08:57
nope
now I feel empty inside ._.'
Ven
Ven
If you do C++, you definitely felt empty inside beforehand.
Hi guys, would anyone be able to help me build a qt5 project?
but they pay me to do it, every single day!~
@Ven I was about to say "no", but I'm not sure anymore.
I've tried all I could think of
sorry if I'm disturbing your conversation
I'm trying to build github.com/meganz/MEGAsync on macOS
Ven
Ven
09:00
@Morwenn See, told you.
@Ven I don't think i was emty inside because of C++, but it probably helped to start writing C++.
nwp
nwp
@Lukas Wrong room go here.
oh right, thanks @nwp
09:30
I'm browsing cereal's documentation
Read benchmarks and stuff
"Wow this looks cool!"
Then I remember there are raw pointers spread all over our code base
FML
And that's how you got rekt.
Also poor man's polymorphism (well not poor, just stupid): base class with an inner enum used to make dynamic_cast everywhere
Instead of designing a sound class hierarchy with proper interfaces
this triggers me so much
nwp
nwp
Can a 200 rep user close their own post as a dupe? Or can they dupe-hammer their own post once someone casts a dupe close vote?
09:45
if someone dupe close votes your post a banner will appear prompting you to check whether it's a dupe and lets you dupe hammer it
nwp
nwp
Cool.
heh, I was browsing through the preppers' forums for EMP-safe vehicles
and apparently the best option is just to get a regular vehicle, buy spare ignition circuit, "solder it to a crowbar and keep grounded"
A regular vehicle without an electronic brain I assume
@ratchetfreak it needs some electronics still
I mean when you think about it the mechanical ignition is so unreliable that even though it survives an EMP, it might still just break randomly
the ignition coils and fuel pump for gasoline I believe, though fuel pump can be done purely mechanical
but remember that diesels don't need sparkplugs
09:56
@ratchetfreak bikes don't need fuel pumps :)
gravity feed FTW
@ratchetfreak true, they don't need any electronics at all
@ratchetfreak so in a bike we're talking starter motor (if it has no kickstart), CDI or transistor-based ignition, lights
older ones had cable speedos
CDI modules are relatively cheap and one could just stash them in a faraday cage
@BartekBanachewicz Are you anticipating for a nuke?
@Horttanainen it's one possible cause of an EMP yes
> Because it’s not a new standard if we didn’t make changes to common_type…
hilarious
nwp
nwp
10:11
Maybe there should be three meta sites. 1) I was banned, have no downvoted questions, no deleted questions and the medium-term memory of a colander that's suffering from Alzheimer's. 2) Rants about marauding gangs of elitist trolls, propping up their inflated egos by downvoting like jerks for no good reason. 3) Everything else. — Martin James 14 hours ago
oh look wg21.link's cert expired 4h ago
@BartekBanachewicz what about a lightning strike? (And things being grounded)
@ABuckau I keep my bikes inside
Updated question, sorry.
and well I don't think lighting strikes are dangerous for grounded things, are they?
10:17
Aren't they only dangerous to grounded things?
I don't know..that's why I'm asking :p
@Horttanainen um the idea with lightning protectors is to discharge to ground
I suppose the question was about the area near such a discharge
@BartekBanachewicz Yes but they direct the lighting away from the building. Building is grounded anyway
dunno maybe you can actually just use a faraday cage and not ground the components inside
there are industrial standards for EMP protection so I guess I'd just follow those
prepping is fun!
> Ground all conductive components of the vehicle to a single point on the chassis. Do not ground them to the earth.
Your bikes electronics will be fine if you can direct the lighting away from the bike. Grounding the bike will not do
10:21
but that's the bike itself
I was talking about backup components
> Keep spares of vulnerable parts you cannot replace in a Faraday cage: You may have a vehicle that is mostly good to go, but it still parts like a starter, alternator and voltage regulator that do not contain microelectronics, but could still conceivably be affected. Get some extras and store them in a Faraday cage.
 
1 hour later…
11:38
My coffee machine just saw me coming and decided to shutdown and greet me with 13:37 #therobotshavealreadywon
@sehe did it happen a minute ago
Yup ~give-or-take
that would explain things
I don't get what the fuss about redux (or vuex) is all about
Sounds a lot of boilerplate only to have dos and redos on the browser :/
Ven
Ven
Jefffed.
11:54
You know. I've never had dos. Let alone redos. Gimme some of that goodness
12:36
@sehe Why do I suspect Internet Of Shit?
I have no clue.
Bad UX exists for centuries.
dunno who told me to be on lookout for hunting sleeping bags, but I found a store that sells them
@sehe I don't know. I think bad UX is a pretty modern thing.
That said, How many years did it take to perfect spoons,forks,hammers and all the possible hand tools possible.
Really. Well. Good for you for not working a labour job in early days industrialized England
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix This.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix have you sees some of the first cars?
12:43
(and primitive spelling)
@ratchetfreak with what they had, I guess it was pretty good
but UX wise they were pretty bad
how so?
it's not like they drove their car backward or anything
they actually saw where they were going and the deisgn pretty much didn'T change if we're talking about Model-T
I'm not talking about production vehicles
I'm talking earlier
I don't know, I only saw a 189x car owned by a family member, (three wheled car)
looked pretty good
12:46
steering wheel in an awkward place, nothing for the feet to control, ...
It could be much worse than that. That said, this is still a modern thing
Still better than walking.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix sigh. So. A bad dialog box is not bad: "It's not like they have to use dip-switches to enter the response"
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Also, have fun sling-starting your car next time you take a trip
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix You know, if "Good UX" is "It could be much worse" than we're not having any kind of meaningful discussion.
12:57
But cars are a modern thing which was my first statement.
No it wasn't.
16 mins ago, by Loïc Faure-Lacroix
@sehe I don't know. I think bad UX is a pretty modern thing.
exactly
I didn't say cars have good UX
You misspellt "ceasarian" as "coding"
Ven
Ven
13:23
C++17 approved by the standards committee. C++20 work already started. Once the language gets more features it will finally be perfect.
2
That reply.
nwp
nwp
They should allow closing questions as duplicates of a specific page on cppreference.
> The duplicate question must exist on Stack Overflow
Apparently there were plans, but they were sunsetteded along with docs.so.
14:05
@Ven The train has left station long time ago and I am not in it. :(
I had a sound phone in the background while listening to that. It made the piece sound somewhat creepy ^^'
14:21
It's great, that, given the links to proposals, I can not in fact access them from those links
That's because you're a badlet.
Expired cert + HSTS :v
That's indeed a problem, but if you add an exception you can open it.
@Morwenn No, because HSTS
On the other hand, the UTF8 character literals is boring.
HSTS?
14:24
> This site uses HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) to specify that Firefox Developer Edition may only connect to it securely. As a result, it is not possible to add an exception for this certificate.
Oh, I don't use the developer edition.
@fredoverflow oh nice
I've somehow got myself roped into doing a short talk on Kotlin at work :\
Ven
Ven
@thecoshman nice!
> clamp(x, low, high) returns either x if x is within the interval [low, high], or the nearest bound otherwise.
God save WG21, praise be unto Him.
@набиячлэвэли clearly shoud be clamp(low, x, high) ergh, scub
14:28
@thecoshman nah; arg, range makes more sense
And on the seventh day He created
> namespace foo::bar { /* ... */ }
And He knew it was good.
nwp
nwp
> { /* ... */ }
@набиячлэвэли Though shalt not make an image of HIM.
or something
@набиячлэвэли Hey, I proposed those in the Future Proposals forum a long time ago ^^
@nwp Is allcaps the canonical way of capitalising "Him"/"His"/"He"/etc?
IIRC the thread is even mentioned in the proposal.
@Morwenn Ain't ye a brave lil' feller
@Morwenn Dunno, can't open links :P
14:32
@набиячлэвэли Who's a good boygirl? :D
nwp
nwp
@набиячлэвэли No, I think "Him" is correct, but I don't really care.
@набиячлэвэли just wanted to argue over nothing :P
Ooooooh :o
Granted, it's the second (i.e. less important) linked forum thread, but
@Morwenn You managed to motivate them :P open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2014/…
14:35
Eh, it would be strange if only a person wanted that feature.
nwp
nwp
> After counseling the compiler team of Microsoft on templates I am currently the motivational force behind the latest international C++ standard - Morwenn's CV
xD
I also report bugs to compilers even though they're never closed.
 
1 hour later…
16:07
Hello lounge
NH.
NH.
16:38
@nwp interesting thought. But next time your life insurance agent starts asking weird questions about your beliefs about death, you might have to wonder...
also note that life insurance companies did all the work upfront to ensure they wouldn't lose out in the deal, so they really don't have much incentive to target individual cases and try not to pay out.
I am such a last minute person - keeping on booking the next day accommodation the previous day ...
NH.
NH.
@Telkitty Allright, time for you to book all your Christmas plans now. There is no other way to solve procrastination other than.... DO IT NOW
nwp
nwp
@NH. You might be over-analyzing a web comic here.
Don't worry, I do things. I just tend to plan them very last minute ...
NH.
NH.
yes, I know, I looked at it too in-depth, it is just my job relates to life insurance, so I found it rather... inaccurate.
17:01
@Froglegs Finally, and answer that I'll accept:
> Charles Fu [MSFT] · 9 minutes ago 0
This is known. At the last testing phase, we realized there is bug to use all 32 registers with AVX512. We didn't have time to fix the bug so we limit the available registers to 16.

We are working to add the full 32 registers support for AVX512.

Thanks,

Charles Fu

Microsoft VC++ Team
/cc @Fanael @Mikhail
user784668
17:20
@Mysticial So they're restricting the amount of register to work around a codegen bug. That's shitty, but understandable.
Still better that shipping a wrong codegen I guess.
user784668
@Morwenn Well they do ship wrong codegen :P
Charles posted that it's been fixed in 15.5, but looking at that assembly, it's still wrong.
@Mysticial Wow, indeed.
Only CompCert codegen is formally proven to work.
17:39
@Mysticial looks like that would be fixed by __vectorcall
tbh though the whole thing should be optimized away
@Mgetz It's a no-inline function that returns something. So it can't optimize everything out. At the very least, the vaddpd and the move-mask should remain.
Though if the compiler is smart, it could merge those two into a vaddpd with merge-masking.
user784668
@Mysticial MSVC smart ha
@Mysticial sneaky suspicion that level of optimization hasn't been baked in yet, given they are still doing the AST refactor
user784668
@Mgetz They're going to have two phase lookup soon!
@Fanael 15.x or 16.x?
user784668
17:48
@Mgetz 15.5 IIRC
@Fanael full two phase or the partial they've had for awhile?
user784668
@Mgetz Dunno, I just read a reddit post.
@Mgetz Neither GCC nor ICC is able to merge the vaddpd with the blend mask. But GCC merges the blend mask into the broadcast-load of the constant.
Which is better than what ICC does, but still not optimal.
@Mysticial odd that ICC doesn't, I'd think they would if it was the fastest choice
what does Agner say?
Actually, what GCC does is optimal.
Or at least equal to the solution I had in mind.
@Mgetz Agner hasn't said anything yet.
nwp
nwp
17:53
9 hours ago, by Morwenn
@login_not_failed https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/vcblog/2017/09/11/two-phase-name-lookup-support‌​-comes-to-msvc/
GCC: https://godbolt.org/g/oQZ9n2
ICC: https://godbolt.org/g/X85oVo
bah, JJ Abrams is back for Star Wars Episode 8
I guess that means there's no chance it won't suck tremendously
@Mgetz I wouldn't say that Agner is slow on this. It's just that Skylake X is ridiculously more complicated than any other previous processor.
With all the throttling, and offsets, and different levels of AVX512 capability.
@Mysticial didn't say he was
And what instructions trigger the AVX(512) throttles and such.
@Mgetz Sorry, didn't mean to imply that. But it is an impression out there given that he usually get his analysis out in about a month or so.
18:01
@Mysticial I figured he'd get his analysis out there when he's done
Stress-testing a Skylake X overclock is ridiculously complicated too. You have 3 frequencies to test (non-AVX, AVX, and AVX512).
Furthermore, not every single AVX/AVX512 instruction triggers the respective throttle frequency.
Some AVX512 instructions run at the AVX frequency. So you need to stress-test those specifically. Otherwise, you'll crash on them.
Likewise, some AVX instructions run at non-AVX frequency.
user784668
@Mysticial If only there were some sort of machine that you program to tell you which instruction triggers which throttling level.
This wasn't the case back in the Haswell/Broadwell generation, where it was clear that any 256-bit instruction will trigger the AVX throttle.
I haven't thoroughly tested yet. But my suspicion is that:
- AVX Frrequency: AVX code that uses FMA. (including all FP) and non-FMA AVX512.
- AVX512 Frequency: Only AVX512 that uses the FMA (including all FP). And only for SKUs with the port5 FMA enabled.
Which means that all non-multiplication integer SIMD instructions will run one notch higher.
I also have some evidence that AVX512 code that uses the 512-bit FMAs don't actually trigger the AVX512 throttle unless it's dense enough where those uops actually get dispatched into port5. So integer code that has few multiplications will have all the multiplies go into port0+1 thereby leaving the port5 FMA idle and thus causing the core to clock at the AVX frequency instead of the AVX512 frequency.
19:04
TIL you can actually post porn to twitter
19:33
softcore, yeah
I mean, really?
19:49
@Morwenn what's the axiomatic system of it? Architecture references?
@Mysticial dumb question: why didn't intel just use the regular registers for the opmask registers?
@Mgetz Probably because the regular registers are a mess.
The SIMD lives in a completely domain from the regular registers. Different register files, different reorder buffers.
@Mysticial fair enough, it does strike me that you can use k0-k7 as registers if you reaaaaally wanted to
You could, but any operation that isn't bitwise is 4 cycles.
ah, and the instruction is probably a lot longer too
19:58
Yeah, they're all VEX-encoded.
even with REX prefixes and such and ADDL isn't that long
20:24
I wonder if 3-byte instructions for all basic instructions is too much to ask for.
1 byte op-code, 12 bits for 3 x 4-bit register addresses. 4 more bits of metadata?
Or I'd say jump right up to 32 registers. 1 byte op-code, 3 x 5-bit register addresses.
Of course we'd need a new "cleaned-up x64" mode for this.
@Mysticial eh.. honestly even fixed 32bit ops would be nice
the problem is as always... compatibility
@Mysticial we call this ARM64
20:39
Do away with the flags register. Branching can be done by reading a register instead of the carry flag.
All instructions take 2 or 3 inputs. And output 1.
IOW, do away with all multi-output instructions. If you need outputs, make two instructions each of which output each.
IOW, a MULH for the upper 64-bits rather than a MULX for both.
This will piss off the bignum people, but I don't care.
But it will simplify the main execution logic by a lot.
@EuriPinhollow To be honest, I've got no fucking idea. I only know that they use Coq and that they claim that their codegen is proven.
21:13
@Mysticial This isn't ARM64. It's DEC Alpha.
@Puppy I guess that depends on whether you want a story, or cool CGI lens flare...
Episode 7 didn't even offer cool CGI lens flare
user784668
22:06
@Mysticial But why even bother with x86 at that point, if you want to get rid of its biggest advantage over competitors?
@Fanael The advantage x86 has over its competitors is backwards compatibility. I'm pretty sure code size is almost irrelevant nowadays.
user784668
Code density is probably the only thing that x86 does right.
@Fanael Code density is certainly important for both cache utilization and use of main memory bandwidth. Ultimately, low code density is what largely killed most of the RISC processors (HP-PA, MIPS, SPARC, POWER, etc.) For a while they stayed ahead of Intel by just building huge chips with gargantuan caches, but eventually even that wasn't enough.
Higher code density (especially in Thumb mode) is also a large part of what keeps ARM in the game. Still not at dense as Intel, but close enough that it at least isn't a huge handicap.
22:25
Speaking of encoding and stuff, I just realized that the EVEX prefix doesn't actually allow AVX to be extended to 1024 bits.
So AVX512 is it.
The vector-length field has 2 bits. (128, 256, 512, and 1024) But those 2 bits have a different meaning in another context which prevents 1024 from being usable.
Or at the very least, embedded rounding is impossible on 1024-bit operands.
So either Intel didn't plan for 1024 at all. Or they totally fucked up. Or they intended to do yet another encoding for it.
user784668
@Mysticial ÜVEX prefixes starting with 8D 11xxxxxx.
There's also the issue of the mask registers being only 64-bits large. But I don't see that as a problem since all of the mask instructions specify a length. There's nothing other than Intel's docs that say that they are 64 bits. So you could widen them to 128-bits without affecting backwards compatibility.
@fredoverflow so yeah, going to be doing this talk on like an intro to the Kotlin... you got some suggestions for things to cover? It's about a 20min presentation. I'm thinking a little the support InteliJ gives you and how easy you can migrate a code base over from Java slowly. The null safety is something that seems to be inevitable. The power of data classes, how much they give you out of the box. Parameters being able to take default values making overloading trivial...
The effectively very static nature of functions. Maybe immutability via things like val.
user784668
Fucking Linux.
user784668
y u no load gpu driver automagically
22:39
it has a working one :\
@fredoverflow just watching that video you linked to me. Soon you will be able to write 'deprecation' annotations that can help the IDE do automatic swaps of the deprecated code with the replacement :O
22:56
@thecoshman Can you say "deprecation annotation metaprogramming"? I knew you could... :-)
you could call it that I guess :P
@thecoshman I'm thinking in terms of somebody intentionally writing abbreviations (so to speak), and immediately writing a deprecation annotation to translate them to the "real" code...
@VermillionAzure It's afternoon where I am, so your first attempt was perfectly acceptable as well.
@JerryCoffin it was too cringe
meow
@JerryCoffin Question: what do you think about ontology for programming?
23:07
@VermillionAzure My location defines the center of the (observable) universe.
@VermillionAzure Do you mean an ontology that attempts to define the concepts and terms used in programming, or do you mean things like semantic web stuff (OWL, rdfs, etc?)
@JerryCoffin Both.
I'm talking about ontology in the way that bioinformatics have produce gene ontology databases for general use by researchers for analysis
They use this to define "known" relationships between genes and conditions
If we could create a similar database or categorization for algorithms and concepts, I would guess that this would open the door for greater things
@VermillionAzure The latter seems to fall into that "it's the future: always has been and always will be" category. The former...I guess I never have thought much about it.
@JerryCoffin One thing I want to understand is whether procedures can be typed based on its contents
IMO if we consider procedures as ordered sets of elements that have certain traits, then it should be reasonable that we can produce arbitrary theorems about such sets of elements
@VermillionAzure You can undoubtedly glean at least some information, but whether it'll be enough to gain any truly new insights..well, that's open to a lot more question.
@JerryCoffin I mean... if you look at Haskell, they've had great success with encapsulating IO from purity in programs by making it explicit in their types, and having composition of functions affect the type of procedures
23:16
And don't get me wrong: I'm not trying to say it won't work--I really am saying that I really just don't know. Certainly static code analyzers routinely find things that people clearly didn't realize. Most are still pretty simplistic though--the don't gain so much in the way of truly new insights, and most just have the perfect, unrelenting attention to detail that people lack.
Hmmm
Well thanks Jerry
Off to class!
@VermillionAzure Surely. Enjoy. Or at least try to stay awake and learn something... :)
Anyone on?
@MarfGamer No. I'm definitely off (my rocker).
I'm currently trying to get the Visual Studio workchain in my Eclipse CDT setup, however no matter what I do I can't find the toolchain
*Eclipse can't find the toolchain
I have Visual Studio 2017 installed, along with Eclipse CDT with the Visual Studio support plugin
23:30
@MarfGamer I hope you'll forgive me, but I'm going to stay away from any question about how to configure Eclipse.
I've looked all over, and everywhere that talks about setting up Eclipse for it glazes over how they installed Visual Studio. My installation of Visual Studio works, but Eclipse fails to finds it's Toolchain
@JerryCoffin That's fine, haha
@MarfGamer My advice would be to delete Eclipse, and just use VS.
I've tried using VS, however I do not like it at all
One of the major things being is the fact it doesn't even use folders except for projects in "solutions"
All the code and project files in one folder is absolutely ridiculous and is a nightmare to manage.
You end up getting nightmares like this: github.com/facebookarchive/RakNet/tree/master/Source
Not only is it easy to install, but once you have it installed, there are at least a few things it actually does fairly well (whereas, I'm reasonably certain there's nothing Eclipse actually does well).
What do you mean by that? I've rarely had any problem with Eclipse until now where it's unable to find a single toolchain
I'm not saying VS is necessarily bad either, however I find it unforgivable basic directory support is not present at all
23:35
@MarfGamer ...but every project is in a solution.
That's not the problem, the problem is that all the source files in the project folder are unsortable directory wise
I use VS and my code and project files are not in 1 folder, don't know what you are talking about

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