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14:00
oh nice someone actually went through my recent posts and dovnvoted them
nwp
nwp
the nightly script will fix it, probably
it's not enough to count as mass downvoting
Ven
Ven
~5 is enough, IME
it was someone who knows how the system works
Run into Vlad from Moscow did you?
DA SHISTEM
Ven
Ven
ohai
sbi
sbi
I typed /** and Eclipse has been frozen for 90secs already...
Parsing C++ with Java code maybe wasn't that good an idea, after all.
sigh
neither Parsing C++ nor Java code are good ideas at all
independently of their possible association
Ven
Ven
parsing Java code is vOv
not too bad
sbi
sbi
14:08
Oh, it unfroze...
Only about 2–3mins then.
I can run Q3A, a program that brought machines down to its knees a mere 15 years ago, while I have 8 instances of the C++ compiler competing for the CPU. (and the only noticeable lag is while loading, because I/O). But Eclipse can take this octo-core machine down to its knees, eating 10 out of 16GB of RAM when trying to index through the template mess melak left behind here.
I hate that.
the worst part is that they parse on the bloody gui thread...
sbi
sbi
No, they don't, they parse on one/some of those five dozen threads eclipse is keeping around. But when the guy wants to help me and asks the indexer for something, it freezes until the indexer comes up dry.
they hold up the gui thread for it then
cause otherwise the thing should not be freezing
sbi
sbi
Yeah, that's what I was saying.
they block the GUI, just not directly the GUI thread
14:20
I'm starting to feel that people should learn event-loop based soft-realtime programming before they are allowed to do anything UI
sbi
sbi
It's the GUI thread. Windows notices that the GUI isn't responding. It grays the window if I click on it after a while.
missed the ? from my last message
I think Windows will do that if the GUI thread is blocked because it's waiting for something to be set by another thread
windows will gray the window when the gui thread doesn't poll the message queue for a bit
why it doesn't poll the queue windows doesn't really care about
ah
that could happen for a lot of reasons
usually one of 2 ways though, executing a long running algorithm or calling a blocking api that blocks for longer than people are willing to wait
sbi
sbi
14:27
@thecoshman Really? I see only four: 1) it's doing something lengthy (which it shouldn't) 2) it's blocked waiting for something, 3) it's run into an endless loop, 4) it crashed. What else do you see?
@sbi may not be handling all events that Windows is offering
but if you are boring and use general groups like that, of course you only see a so few reasons
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman At the heart of a Windows event loop, there's one function to pull the next message from the message queue. If that isn't called for about 10secs, Windows marks the program as frozen and won't send it new input events.
@sbi ah, you can't only pull certain events can you, you just pull the next
sbi
sbi
@thecoshman Yep.
And then you dispatch it. Well, that was Win32, anyway. I haven't looked at this since then.
@sbi what do you mean by left behind? Did you hire him to write loads of metacode and then he left? :D
14:34
@sbi that api is pretty stable for backwards compat
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz Actually, when the company ran out of cash, and people were laid off, the students were among the firsts who had to go.
ouch
aren't students paid the least anyway?
Ven
Ven
students aren't paid
sbi
sbi
Yes, they weren't paid much, which made it absolutely worthless a gesture, but a head count as high as possible had to be reported to the board...
Anyway, he left behind a unit library, and I only now have wrestled the time from projects schedules to incorporate it into some of our code. Which is incredibly dull. I have done nothing but fighting compiler errors since early September.
nwp
nwp
14:37
@thecoshman You can totally only pull certain events. Depending on how consecutive the events you care about are that may require a lot of calls, but it's definitely possible and fairly straightforward.
@sbi whose fault is it? Your code, melak's lib or C++ in general?
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz What fault?
@sbi Oh I assumed fighting compiler errors for... over a month wouldn't exactly count as a successful development story
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, but it is. A unit library's whole raison d'entre is that it prevents code from compiling that messes up quantities. When you introduce this late to a big code base, you will have to touch every line dealing with numbers, because all of them fail to compile.
oh, I see.
will that be one huge merge when you're done, or are you doing this sorta step by step?
sbi
sbi
14:41
If there's one fault it's that these cow-workers always considered bullshit project plans more important than doing this to a steadily growing code base as early as possible.
One big merge for each project.
Actually I had already moved past the point where I fought compiler errors, but fixing the tests errors revealed even more well-used areas where the library is rather inconvenient to use than making the code compile, so I am still going back and change things. And then I need to fight the compiler again...
Also, it doesn't help that I lost the vote for a release-based library model, where projects and libraries use certain releases (or at least release branches) of (other) libraries. Now everything is on master, and even though I am adapting only the most needed current projects, that's a whole dozen of them, so a lot of code to go through, rather than porting them to the new stuff one at a time.
Which unit library are you using?
sbi
sbi
@Morwenn melak's
Not even Boost.Units or nholtaus/units? I'm surprised
sbi
sbi
He looked at boost's, and it brought our tiny platform down to its knees just linking this stuff (this is pure runtime-linking), and fitting the modules into memory (for linking) was a problem for small toy modules even.
Wowo
sbi
sbi
14:50
Most of the complex template stuff brings our devices to a halt. I had already run into that when I tried to use boost.exception. I had to clone this minus the type erasure (all parameters are stored in stringified form now), because it doubled our module sizes and made startup (think linking) agonizingly slow.
I know that nholtaus/units cares about compile-time performance (e.g. you can selectively have it instantiate only the SI units you need), but it's still a template-heavy beast at the end of the day
What are you working on to need the security of a units library?
curious: would changing function visibility reduce link times?
sbi
sbi
@Morwenn I hadn't seen that and I dunno whether melak had looked at it. But this here brings Eclipse beyond its limits more than our platform.
@milleniumbug ???
@Morwenn We're making battery power plants. You do not want to confuse Watts with Megawatts and charging with discharging.
-fvisibility=hidden and friends
static by default you mean?
sbi
sbi
14:56
I now mostly introduced time durations and time points to our framework, modeleda bit after C++11 (which we don't have).
Not that it matters since these libs would have to be written with that in mind
@sbi you mean Watt and Megawatts are not the same thing?
sbi
sbi
@milleniumbug I dunno that. What's it do
Ven
Ven
r u the real scarletamaranth #bigfan
@sbi Using a units library there indeed sounds reasonable :D
I wish I could use one at work, but Python, so it could kill the runtime performance
Looks like Pint has support for NumPy though, so it probably mitigates the highest perf impacts
sbi
sbi
14:58
@ScarletAmaranth They are the same quantity, but have a different scale. :) We integrate a lot of components, and have to deal with a lot of interfaces, and everybody is using their own system to represent such values. It was a nightmare, and I remember us almost wrecking a several-10k-€ battery when a wrong minus sign slipped through tests, and the thing was discharged violently after it reached its minimum state of charge...
It took days for the battery people to nurture it back up to the world of the living.
@Morwenn Here it kills the code writing performance. :)
@sbi And could kill the compile time performance too apparently x)
you want to avoid a mars climate orbiter mistake
But having a compile-time proven dimensional analysis is good
@sbi allows you to set whether the function is exported in the dynamically linked library. Supposedly it could reduce linking times, but YMMV and dunno if it's well supported on your platform, hence why I wasn't actually suggesting it, but rather I was curious
sbi
sbi
@Morwenn Well, building with -J7 kinda puts the fun back into C++ compiling, but when you fiddle, for weeks, with a set of headers which are, by their very nature, included almost everywhere, no amount of compile parallelization can make you happy. :(
15:02
^^'
sbi
sbi
@milleniumbug Oh, there's no DLLs on our devices. There very executable, a single module, is not fully linked until runtime.
fair enough
sbi
sbi
Don't ask me about specifics, though. I haven't looked at this. But when you dump the resulting executables, everything is included that the compiler failed to inline in some objects file. These dumps are huge!
When I looked into boost.exception, I had to develop a set of filters to send this through in order to wrestle something from it I could meaningfully compare.
(Turned out ~70% of the binary was template instances of some exception parameter or another.)
I can totally believe this happening
I'm not doing embedded, but seeing something like this is also very discouraging
Never use cpp-sort x)
sbi
sbi
15:10
@milleniumbug I hear you. If these identifiers end up in your binary (and TMP makes sure it's tens of thousands of those), you need to scale up the RAM by two magnitudes in order to load the damn thing.
I know that Hana and a few other libraries use smart tricks to reduce the names of those identifiers so that dummy would be used instead of ahaha<lol, look<at, me>, please, and<blebleblebleble>, yup> wherever possible
@Morwenn ahaha<lol, look<at, me>, please, and<blebleblebleble>, yup> rofl
And compilers now often provide a built-in for std::make_integer_sequence to avoid its overhead at compile-time
sbi
sbi
It's hilarious how many silly syntax errors I can pack into 12 lines of code.
@Morwenn And I had to recode it by hand since I'm stuck with VS 2013 :D
15:23
@Rerito I hope you at least went for the log-time implementation
@Morwenn You mean something like:
sbi
sbi
We are stuck in C++03. Try to do this stuff without variable template arguments...
Is there a way to develop a large application like Chrome and test without having to build for several hours first?
template <int Start, int End>
struct make_integer_sequence {
    using lower_half = make_integer_sequence<Start, (Start + End) / 2>;
    using upper_half = make_integer_sequence<(Start + End)/ 2+1,  End>;
};
@Rerito I was merely thinking of Xeo's implementation
15:26
@Morwenn Yes I did something similar
Ven
Ven
Xeo almost at 100k :O
sbi
sbi
What? That loser! Even I am at 150k, and I have probably answered half a dozen questions in the last three or four years.
I'm not even at 10k, I wonder what that makes me :D
Ven
Ven
scrublord
scrublord millionaire
Ven
Ven
15:33
Even @Morwenn is Certified™ 10k™ SO™ User™.
Yeah I am the sucker of the french SO community
sbi
sbi
@Rerito Dirt beneath my shoes. :)
@Rerito Does that even compile?
sbi
sbi
For starters, he probably meant (End-Start)/2. Also, it seems to lack something that ends the recursion, so it would make your compiler explode...
15:50
Hello, where is it recommended to initialize a git repository for a visual studio project? In the top level folder (containing *.sln, *.suo, etc. ) or in the one below that containing *.h, *.cpp?
sbi
sbi
2 days ago, by milleniumbug
Rules are here. Questions go here. Cheers and hth.
Xeo
Xeo
@sbi my last answer was over 3 years ago w
@Ven hmm, 5k is still quite a ways away
Ven
Ven
@Xeo I believe in the power of passive rep.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Wow. Given that nobody pinged, you, what on earth brought you here right now??
Xeo
Xeo
I'm always lurking
(literally - I always have this chat open in a pinned tab)
sbi
sbi
15:55
And what makes it go "plink" when your name is dropped?
Xeo
Xeo
nothing, I just happened to see it.
sbi
sbi
Of course.
Just like @Rapptz appearing right on cue here. He also just happened to see it, didn't he?
Xeo
Xeo
@Ven > ** rep this year (2017-01-01 - 2017-12-31): 5504
so, I'll prolly reach 100k around June next year?
Ven
Ven
@Xeo 2018 shall be a bountiful year.
I believe you'll reach 100k just around uncon time ;p.
sbi
sbi
@Xeo Where do you see this? Do they still have the old textual reputation page lying around somewhere?
Wow!
16:02
@sbi I miss the days when the obvious example would have been Tony showing up shortly after any mention of sex or pornography...
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Yeah, Tony the Kitten, always right on cue.
Hi, @Jerry! What cue brought you here?
> rep this year (2017-01-01 - 2017-12-31): 11159stucks out tongue
@sbi I usually show up around this time. 9:00 AM my time...
@sbi ** rep this year (2017-01-01 - 2017-12-31): 23680 (I'll keep my tongue in my mouth though).
Ven
Ven
hi
My internet is having issues so that ping is what made me realise it went back up
good day today
Ell
Ell
16:08
hi
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Yeah, but you give about 1 answer/day. – shamelessly displays flapping tongue
@Ell What are you doing here? We weren't speaking of you!
Ven
Ven
no u
@Rapptz This service is provided at no extra charge. Unfortunately, it's much less dependable than your internet service.
Ell
Ell
@sbi I was queued cued by Rerito saying he's not even at 10k
@sbi Yeah, I still answer a few questions, now and again (hanging head in shame).
Ell
Ell
16:09
I'm not even at 2k!
time to step up your rep game
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Now now! slaps shoulder Don't feel bad! That happens to the best of us!
@Ell :)
Ven
Ven
lol literally having less rep than cinch
Ell
Ell
@sbi my spelling is almost as bad as @thecoshman s :S
sbi
sbi
16:11
@Ell Naw, no real person is that bad.
Ven
Ven
that's a paddlin'
sbi
sbi
Oh damn. Unaware of the imminent danger, I typed ::, thereby freezing Eclipse again.
@sbi Claiming to be unaware of the imminent danger when running Eclipse is likely telling a judge you shouldn't be blamed for driving 150 km/h through a school zone, because you were too drunk to be able to read the speed limit signs. :-)
6
sbi
sbi
Really, until I started to fiddle with this unit library, I was a happy Eclipse user.
Also, I cannot set predict when it will do this. In some files I can happily type away, in others, I always have to type colon-space-colon-left-backspace-right. sigh
16:28
@sbi I've only ever used Eclipse under duress, so to speak (e.g., developing for an embedded system, where Eclipse was the only supported tool). Never been happy with it though.
@Rerito you're basically not even a human at this point
Is there a way to develop a large application like Chrome and test without having to build for several hours first?
sbi
sbi
@Louis There's a scratch in your record:
1 hour ago, by Louis
Is there a way to develop a large application like Chrome and test without having to build for several hours first?
a scratch?
I brought it up again because I got no answers and the chat had scrolled it off the screen.
sbi
sbi
@Louis That's where the record player's needle jumps and repeats the same thing over and over.
(Don't you young folks know anything?)
16:39
we know better than to listen to music using skipping spinning discs
@Louis yes, you can develop it in something that doesn't require a build that takes several hours, and/or use a machine that builds fast enough.
sbi
sbi
Oh, I know better, too. But I also know that this is possible.
@BartekBanachewicz Define "large".
ha, joke's on you, I store my music on a hard drive... oh wait, that's still spinning :P
@sbi we have big and scary computers those days
sbi
sbi
If you have tens of MLoC, it will take long to compile, and tests will run longer still.
> storing music
> 2017
sbi
sbi
16:41
@milleniumbug Mine isn't spinning.
@sbi define "long"
a 10M LoC C# app could reasonably build under an hour I'm pretty sure
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz Measured in hours.
@BartekBanachewicz Oh, then you're wrong! This isn't "Lounge<C#>" here!
@sbi also distributed and partial builds
@sbi no no no the sign actually means Lounge < (left) | C++ > (right)
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz We've been doing distributed builds 15 years ago.
@BartekBanachewicz yawn
@sbi for C++ you're still gonna be blocked by linking though
I mean C++ tries to block you in every possible way and linker is like the last bastion
hoping you get out of ram and patience before you actually get the binary
but languages that don't have such problems can build really fast in a distributed fashion
hence I stand by "10MLoC under an hour" claim
sbi
sbi
16:48
Yes, but don't you think @Louis came to ask here, because he was thinking of C++ projects? I mean, given the name of the room...
So what? It has happened here on multiple occasions that my suggestion was "use a different language"
especially in a question as vague and underspecified as his
@Louis Surely. The starting point is to break the project up into a number of much smaller DLL/.so files. Then you virtually never build the whole thing at once, and even when you do, it's pretty easy to distribute (even the linking).
yup @sbi. That is exactly why I am here (the name of the room)
@Jerry
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz Yeah. (You say this as if it were a good thing.)
@sbi and why wouldn't it be a good thing?
if a person goes to a hammer store and asks for help with painting, talking that person through the process of painting with a hammer isn't really the thing to do
16:56
@JerryCoffin Thanks for the answer.
I can attempt to break it up but I suppose I'll never be able to test it integrated into the UI without building the whole she-bang. What I was hoping for was a way to hot load updated DLLs and then just run the compiled app. Not possible?
@Louis and what are you gonna hot-load if you don't build it first?
I want to modify the chrome html parser
Is that what you are asking? I also want to make updates to the javascript engine.
in that case you can build it once and then only change the parts you're interested in
linking will still take a while, but it won't be nearly as bad as a full rebuild
sbi
sbi
@BartekBanachewicz You may stop holding your hoop now. I'm not gonna jump through it no matter how long you hold it.
ahh ok
btw is this room not meant for C++ conversations?
17:02
@Louis You can hot-load updated DLLs, but it's somewhat non-trivial.
@JerryCoffin Nice! How can I do this? What can I search for in google or url that can educate me
2 days ago, by milleniumbug
Rules are here. Questions go here. Cheers and hth.
@Louis It's fairly dated in general (to put it nicely), but Coplien's book has a chapter (or so) devoted to such things.
Thanks!
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin Ouch. That was a fantastic book – in the mid-90s.
17:08
any more recent suggestions @sbi?
@sbi Yup--and if you have a suggestion for a newer book that goes into hot-loading DLLs (or similar) in C++, I'd love to hear about it. For now, it's the only think I know of to recommend about the subject.
sbi
sbi
@Louis The rules message has been thrown at you twice now. In case tl;dr: This is where some of the C++ regulars hang out and talk. They resent strangers coming in and demanding being helped. You might be lucky, but that depends. On what, is explained in the links.
@JerryCoffin I don't think there's anything newer that isn't platform-specific.
@sbi I suppose the more current suggestion (which might even apply here, though it's questionable) would be to build the whole as a collection of microservices, each of which you can start up, shut down, test, link, etc., in isolation. Mostly intended for server-like things, but perhaps a browser could be built that way as well...
sbi
sbi
I have learned to type /-*-space-*, but forgot to type enter before I erase the space...
Well, that gave me time to make use of one of the perks of coding at home: I now have a Scotch at hand. :)
@JerryCoffin Ouch. Microservices? Really? Do they even exist? I thought they were only a buzzword, nothing more than vapor... :)
@sbi I'm not sufficiently certain of the definition of a microservice (and how they differ from a...macrosesrvice) to say whether they exist or not. I'm not sure it's a particularly practical suggestion either--just that nearly every time I see hipsters giving advice, that seems to be what they like right now...
sbi
sbi
17:23
@JerryCoffin Alt-0150. You are not in Kansas on Usenet anymore. :)
@sbi I'm a living fossil of the old Usenet, bringing its education, gentility, and ASCII with me wherever I go. :-)
sbi
sbi
@JerryCoffin :)
17:39
@BartekBanachewicz You've misspelt "quackers".
       ..---..
     .'  _    `.
 __..'  (o)    :
`..__          ;
     `.       /
       ;      `..---...___
     .'                   `~-. .-')
    .                         ' _.'
   :                           :
   \                           '
    +                         J
     `._                   _.'
        `~--....___...---~'
3
@BartekBanachewicz Coming this fall, a new comedic drama mini-series, One flew over the rubber duck's nest.
18:08
There's been a lot of talk about "std2" lately. But does it mean there's actually going to a new namespace named "std2"?
What are they gonna put in it?
Hm. A namespace I suppose.
18:21
@Mysticial The general intent is a new standard library that discards (most?) backward compatibility in favor of making better use of modern c++. I don't there there's much detail or definition beyond that--it looks to me like some of the discussion is just using it as a dumping ground for anything that looks too radical to fit well into the current standard library (e.g., replacements for locales and iostreams).
@JerryCoffin yeah right and fucking --no-backwards-compat flag was too much
if this actually happens I'll write in C++ only for a straight year
if C++ actually introduced Core and Compat models like OpenGL the language might have some hope
@JerryCoffin interesting
@BartekBanachewicz I'm reasonably certain something will happen--but it's hard to be sure exactly what that'll be. Still, there's a growing realization that iostreams (to repeat the obvious example) don't really fill most people's needs well, the intended extensibility is rarely used, etc.
@JerryCoffin the extensibility is rarely used because people didn't bother to actually understand how they were supposed to work
so any replacement will most definitely be a java-like dumbed down version
BUT WITH VARIADIC PRINT AMIRITE
@JerryCoffin being serious for a second, std::rand is still in the language. If you really think that streams have a chance of being kicked out, you must really be optimistic.
@BartekBanachewicz Pretty good I thought
18:29
@JerryCoffin I think the only saving grace is that they are being VERY careful what they add there, given iostreams
@BartekBanachewicz I seem to remember that that's because they're supposed to work in a pretty insane way.
@Puppy well yeah there's that too
@BartekBanachewicz It's certainly true that few understand the design of iostreams--but I don't think "java-like" is necessarily the cure (nor something I think the C++ committee would probably accept).
don't recall the detail offhand though
@JerryCoffin oh it's not the cure, in the same way that java is not the easy language to learn.
18:30
@BartekBanachewicz Herb is trying desperately to get something like this in with Bjarne's help. But neither of them quite know what shape it'll look like
at a minimum they see it as warnings for doing unsafe things
@Mgetz I vaguely seem to remember that all proposals with that were shot down waaaay before it even got to any reasonable discussion
@Mgetz (pet peeve i know) std::rand isn't even deprecated
it's "discouraged"
I died quite a lot on the inside when I saw the diff of the proposal actually changing "deprecated" to "discouraged"
@BartekBanachewicz they are trying... but they know it'll be a long slog... at a minimum [[deprecated]] is a start
at a minimum it's realizing that you can't move forward if you try to satisfy a vast portion of your users
18:33
@BartekBanachewicz I don't think getting rid of rand is a particularly good idea. Instead, they should leave it (at least nearly) intact, but mandate that it become a simplified front-end to the real random functions. It's actually harder to deal well with srand than rand.
@JerryCoffin but what's the point? If you have std::random, you can implement any simplified version in a manner of a couple lines!
@Mgetz cont. Python 3 actually did a really brave thing, and for quite some time people were saying that it's gonna be the death of it. But we're in 2017 and python's charts are skyrocketing
Python 3 turned Python from a wonky script-ish language to a really powerful, modern tool
and I believe this needs to happen for C++ as well
@BartekBanachewicz The point, of course, is to assure that anybody who re-compiles the megatons of existing code gets at least halfway reasonable behavior--and that we provide something that people can use going forward as well. Unfortunately, it takes more than a couple of lines to use the current PRNG classes well--even just seeding mt19937 well is non-trivial.
@BartekBanachewicz and yet people are still using python 2.7
This is a good decision in the long term, Python still suffers because of this though really
@Mgetz it's a rapidly declining minority
18:37
@BartekBanachewicz tbf Microsoft did the same thing on a binary level multiple times with .NET... and that isn't declining either
@JerryCoffin I am pretty sure the example fits the definition of "a couple of lines"
@JerryCoffin bigger issue IMHO is getting the C standard committee to agree to this...
@JerryCoffin there are two major issues with rand A) it has to be a PRNG, you can't use /random/ or a crypto rand. B) it's output is limited to 16bits IIRC
@BartekBanachewicz It is a couple of lines. It's also exactly the sort of thing I'm thinking of that needs to be avoided when seeding the generator.
better to have a drop in random() which IIRC is pretty standard on POSIX than keep using rand()
in the example provided by cppreference, that ~2KB PRNG is seeded with sizeof(unsigned)*CHAR_BIT bits
18:40
@Mgetz It does have to be a PRNG, but it's not limited to 16 bits (and most reasonably current implementations produce at least 32-bit output).
@JerryCoffin why?
@JerryCoffin a lot of them are still 16-bit
In other news, C++'s new APIs are broken too (that is, they're "pit of despair" APIs)
who would have known?
@milleniumbug there's a 2nd overload ot mt19937
18:44
@BartekBanachewicz @milleniumbug already pointed to the beginning of the problem: it's typically only setting a tiny fraction of its internal state (and testing shows that with that little randomness in the seed, its result is quite poor).
Why is it call mt for the "general public" anyway - leaking implementation details in the title already ^^.
@ScarletAmaranth um, because it is the MT?
Eh - just call it random number generator.
and you'll differentiate it from other number generators exactly how?
@JerryCoffin poorer than a 16-bit rand()?
It's not a problem to have a default one typedef'd to MT or some such.
18:46
@BartekBanachewicz The only current one I know of is Microsoft's, at least among the typical desktop/server implementations.
You also have std::sort that you can differentiate then further with various implementations.
also again you can get more bits from the random device and initialize the mt with it soooooooooo
@ScarletAmaranth unlike C which has qsort :D
because libstdc++'s typedefs std::default_random_engine to std::minstd_rand which provides numbers of worse quality than glibc's rand() (good job C++)
@ScarletAmaranth The standard does provide a default, but (unfortunately) no guarantee about which implementation it points at, so most discourage its use.
Yeah, point stands vOv.
18:47
@milleniumbug lol
Oh, there is a default one?
I've always just used the twister ever since I think C++11.
see the bottom of the table on the built ins
it's implementation defined
@BartekBanachewicz Depends on what "16-bit rand" you mean. Microsoft's, for example, actually has 32 bits of internal state, but only produces 16 bits of output. In so doing, it discards the (less random) least significant bits. For what it is, that's a competent design. It is still a basic Linear congruential generator though, so it shares the weaknesses of the class in general.
@StackedCrooked Made in Abyss - 6.5/10 - too little explained :(.
You finished watching it?
That's fast :)
18:57
13 episode binge watch :).
@ScarletAmaranth But yeah, I agree. And it's a problem with many anime.
I've started watching so many only to never get to a conclusion. Some completely cease to exist and some just take literally decades to explain - hello One PIece.
@BartekBanachewicz OTOH, the C standard includes (or at least used to include) an example implementation of rand. Unfortunately, many took it not as an example, but as the mandatory implementation. Worse, it was quite a lousy implementation.
@StackedCrooked That's what wikia is for.
:)
Don't know that site actually.
But I think I've landed there a couple of times.
19:06
"go look up on wikia" sounds like NGE's approach to explaining its plot :D
@StackedCrooked Whenever you google an Anime. The first hit is usually Wikipedia, the 2nd is MAL, the 3rd is Wikia.
In my case the first hit is usually myanimelist.
Maybe because Google knows me.
19:42
dang
I saw the Pacific Rim Uprising trailer and it looks goddamn awful
19:54
@Puppy The release of a Blade-Runner movie (even if it's only a pale imitation of the original, about which I don't know, since I haven't seen it yet) will render every other scifi movie for at least the next few years seem lame by comparison.
20:31
@Puppy :(
@JerryCoffin As long as it's not just "The original film again but all the actors are older and we forgot to make it good", Star Wars
20:52
@Puppy Even if they did that (which I agree would be sad), starting from Blade Runner it would probably still be better than 99% of scifi movies...
21:48
@JerryCoffin tried to watch the original blade runner with my wife lately and it's apparently a boring film
or you were talking about the new blade runner?
Blade Runner 2049 is a good film. There's no doubt it's a good film. Is it a good Blade Runner film? I'm still not so sure. It's a bit a slow film and a tad artsy, but then so is the original.
Hmm, I hope it will be a bit less slow than the original. I don't really want to here "is there anything going to happen in this film" for 1.5 hours
Such a delightful nerd
> I took the Neely in protest of this video
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix oooh... it's kinda slow yeah...
I don't think it was bad slow...
nwp
nwp
I watched C++ as a "Live at Head" Language. Probably not worth watching but it did include the claim that C++ compile times are irrelevant because one can just buy more CPUs.
22:03
the trailer makes it look like it's not that slow
I honestly don't know how to class the Original Blade runner but it's definitely not an action movie. A thriller sure, almost a detective
@Puppy looks like a power rangers ripoff
22:19
looks like a really bad power rangers ripoff
who the fuck thought that putting a pair of chainguns at the hips whilst fighting in melee was a good idea?
on a different topic, people how designed the relay modules couldn't figure that having relay modules that fit on a breadboard is pretty convenient... and at the same time that can be soldered on a protoboard.
22:50
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix I didn't find it boring at all--but it's a film that's trying to make you think about the nature of life and humanity, not SPLOSIONS!
I usually find that it's best to be honest about what the film is about
if you have a film that's just about SPLOSIONS then just roll with that
heh
must say it always amuses me when the US try to claim they are the leader of the free world, when I always think of Germany
23:05
@JerryCoffin well that's what I like about the original movie.
wow............ — Gruffalo 2 mins ago
more fuzzies. But my YT vid is still going. No time for bed youtu.be/5_y6q4m0vew?t=2966
nwp
nwp
23:31
Today I learned that debian gcc 7.20 and ubuntu gcc 7.20 behave significantly different.
It is very annoying because travis uses ubuntu and builds fail unexpectedly.
00:00 - 14:0014:00 - 00:00

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