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.
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.
@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?
@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.
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.
@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.
@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.
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.
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.
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?
@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 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
@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. :(
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.)
@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
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 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. :-)
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
@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.
@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).
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
@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?
@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.
@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 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...
@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).
@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 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).
@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
@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.
@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 @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).
@ScarletAmaranth The standard does provide a default, but (unfortunately) no guarantee about which implementation it points at, so most discourage its use.
@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.
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.
@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.
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.
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.
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.
@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!