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18:00
@Drise no, disk issue would disappear the second run (disk cache)
@rubenvb Over 4.2 * 3 million floats, I could see it.
@Drise Why don't you call C++ from within Matlab? (MEX and stuff)
@Drise can you format the file in binary, or is that not an option?
@rubenvb This is going into a Qt app.
@MooingDuck Not an option.
5
Q: Fastest way to read numerical values from text file in C++ (double in this case)

SimonCurrently, my code is simply this: void ReadFile(double Cst[][1000], char* FileName, int height) FILE* ifp; double value; int nRead = 0; int mRead = 0; //open the file, check if successful ifp = fopen( FileName, "r" ); if (ifp==NULL){ ... } for (nRead = 0; nRead < height; nRead++){ ...

18:02
@Drise hmm. Then I'd look into storing the data in float binary form.
@rubenvb Not an option.
Or use Boost.Spirit, apparently.
Also not an option.
Are doubles better than floats?
wut? Why is that not an option?
@rubenvb Boost is not an option for what I do.
@rubenvb Qt, VTK, or plain ol C++
18:04
@Drise Boost is always an option.
Boost is plain new C++.
ffs
Or use the Qt streams, see if that is optimized.
@rubenvb Sorry. I shouldn't even be using C++11
RAAAAAGE
I'm pissed.
@Drise Quit and find a new job ;-)
@EtiennedeMartel Do tell.
@rubenvb I'm 19, and get paid 16$ an hour and don't have a degree. I think not lol.
18:06
@RMartinhoFernandes lol
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm wondering why this property changed even isn't firing despite the fact that it should fire.
@Drise then don't complain about the time it takes; the longer you have to wait, the more you get paid for doing nothing.
I want to flip tables. All the tables. No table shall resist my rage.
@Drise The problem seems to be the cache and parsing that much data. Unless you can replace the file with a binary format, it's not going to get much faster.
How old is everyone here
18:07
@AgainstASicilian look at the SO profiles...
@AgainstASicilian 783
@rubenvb most have no data
@MooingDuck There's plenty to speed up reading text into a linked structure!
@MooingDuck That's just the ape.
I'm twenty-something.
@MooingDuck then they probably don't want to let you know ;-)
(I always have to check how much is "something")
18:08
@rubenvb You make a good point. But I just don't want my boss complaining it takes so long. I'd rather say that's as fast as it gets. I've already optimized it the best I could.
@AgainstASicilian safe to assume most of the people are male twenty somethings. There's several exceptions, but for the most part...
@rubenvb SO profiles (from what I can see) do not reveal age
@Drise How many megabytes per second? If the hard drive is the bottleneck, then the boss should understand that.
@AgainstASicilian 0x16
@AgainstASicilian if one (like me for example) allows it, it does...
18:10
WTF is this npviewer bullshit that is taking 4% of my ram?
I admit I sometimes forget my own age O.O
sometimes off by a year, haha
Damnit! The Cairo 2D vector library has even shittier documentation than GTK!
@JimNorton It's built on the same basis, what'd you expect?
@RMartinhoFernandes That 4% is the difference from make -j taking down my computer and not.
18:14
@rubenvb I was clinging to hope I guess. :-(
Also: Can I restrict make -j from consuming too much ram?
besides make -j 8
Why would you want that?
@Drise Time this program on your file: ideone.com/0EXKY. This should tell you if the slowdown is the disk/cache, or something you are doing.
@RMartinhoFernandes It will eat all my ram (12GB) and crash me.
That sounds like a bug.
18:15
Well, you also asked it to eat all your processors. Not a good idea if you want to use the machine at the same time.
get more swap space
Fried silicon tastes good.
@RMartinhoFernandes I thought you were more of a carbon dude?
Let me star that for you
@Cicada I saw what you did there.
18:17
WTF.
C&C.
@RMartinhoFernandes Command & Conquer?
sbi
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ISTR there being a link-shortening domain for stackoverflow.com acquired by the SO team. Am I remembering this wrong? (I am short on space in a comment and would need to shorten a link to some answer.)
@sbi If Shit Turns Red?
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18:21
@rubenvb ??
Are you down to stackoverflow.com/a/id?
@rubenvb ISTR IANAL…
@rubenvb "I seem to recall".
@sbi ISTR?
oh lol.
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@RMartinhoFernandes Yep.
18:21
Why would anyone want boiling titties?
@RMartinhoFernandes ask @Cicada.
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@RMartinhoFernandes What are you smoking kind of foreign oil are they feeding you?
The ape missed the crucial three seconds.
17
Q: Official shortened URL service

Brad GilbertI think it might be a good idea to have a URL-shortening service for each of the Stack Overflow family of sites. Since questions, and answers all have a unique id, it should be fairly easy to use that for shortening the URLs. For example: (Could easily be shorter) http://short-SO-url.com/12...

chuckle
18:23
Doesn't look like there is one.
And I think the lounge<C++> acronyms list is not accurate. These things aren't used "commonly" at all.
@rubenvb YMMV.
@MooingDuck 5.2520820000 seconds
4195149.9735083934
I'm still laughing.
18:24
@RMartinhoFernandes LOL TIL all those cute .ly domains were supporting Gaddafi!
@Potatoswatter no not really
Don't post your own ideas for the domain name here, someone could register it before the Stack Overflow team could register it. If you really feel strongly about a domain name, send them an email instead. — Brad Gilbert Sep 29 '09 at 14:48
I like how the next two comments after this one are domain name ideas.
:4214823
-2
Q: How to export a C program that compiles from command line in Linux to an IDE?

TJ1There are a lot of open source C/C++ projects, most of them can be compiled using "make" in Linux. Is there any easy way to export this to an IDE, for example Microsoft Visual C++, CodeBlock, or Eclipse? Even if it is an involved work, is there any step by step help for doing that? Thanks for th...

Oh dear.
That's the kind of question I don't even bother deciding what to do about it. I just close the tab.
60
Q: What shortened URLs are available through s.tk?

Jeremy BanksIt was announced on the Stack Exchange Podcast episode #23 (at 1:05:26) that Stack Exchange now has its own URL shortener, http://s.tk/. At the moment, users can't create their own, they can only use the ones that are built-in. What shortened URLs are available through it?

I feel like this really meets the description for NARQ.
@EtiennedeMartel NARQ?
@JimNorton Not a real question.
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@RMartinhoFernandes Ah, thanks! I knew I had at some time read something somewhere about something. Thanks for diging this out!
> This question is ambiguous, vague, incomplete, overly broad, or rhetorical and cannot be reasonably answered in its current form.
@Drise so that proves that your code cannot beat ~5.25 seconds no matter what optimizations you make.
@MooingDuck not quite: he could switch to other code that improves the speed. Yet he doesn't want to do that.
@MooingDuck You haven't even disabled sync_with_stdio, so, yes, he can.
@RMartinhoFernandes hadn't thought of that
@rubenvb in what way? Did you see the code for that last test? ideone.com/0EXKY
@rubenvb s/want/can't/
18:32
@Drise not able to switch to Boost is not true.
@rubenvb yes it is in many buisnesses.
7
A: Fastest way to read numerical values from text file in C++ (double in this case)

ildjarnboost.spirit.qi comes with a benchmark that compares the performance of atof, strtod, and boost::spirit::double_. Here are the results on my system, using VC++ 2010 SP1 x64: atof_test: 4.1579076800 seconds strtod_test: 4.2338680000 seconds spirit_double_test: 1.2822015600 seconds Pretty...

@MooingDuck Quite ridiculous IMNSHO.
@rubenvb If we add any third party code there's all sorts of forms and legal actions and nonsense. Even if it's open-source.
@Drise Did you read the question i posted a few minutes ago, and my answer under it?
@MooingDuck Boost is simple. It's made to be included everywhere.
18:33
@MooingDuck Also, why when I turn optimizations on (-O2) do I get a bunch of errors and redefines for your code?
@Potatoswatter Yea, I glanced at it some. Got distracted though.
@rubenvb Boost is simple. So what? Corporations are not simple.
@RMartinhoFernandes I would guess HArvard Law doesn't count for sh*t? boost.org/users/license.html#FAQ
@Drise The point is, don't make it harder than it needs to be. Just parse the text you have in the obvious way, and it will probably be easy to implement and fast to run.
See my example atoi, it runs really fast and handles what you would see in a scientific app.
@rubenvb doesn't matter if it's rediculous. That's how legal and beurocratic systems work. If you work for a company with more than 20 people, randomly adding boost is not as easy as just using it.
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@RMartinhoFernandes Well, that only seems to support a set of static shortcuts. I can't get a shortened URL to the book question through it. :(
18:35
@sbi Yeah.
@Drise because I only tested on ideone. What's wrong wiht it?
Seems not everyone on the Internet is a douche: ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/right-click/…
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11
Q: Please add question and answer shortlinks with site names to the s.tk URL shortener

Kevin VermeerThe URL for this question is currently http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/110407/please-add-question-and-answer-shortlinks-with-site-names-to-the-s-tk-url-shorte which is very long. This is partially mitigated by the http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/110407 syntax, but still quite large, e...

This is g++ main.cpp -o -O3 main
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18:36
^Note the tags.
@rubenvb I don't see how that changes anything.
@Drise you seem to be linking together two .cpp files that were not meant to be linked together. "(.text+0xe4): multiple definition of `main'" (I'm speculating, those are wierd errors)
You still need your legal folks to look at it.
That probably involves paperwork.
posted on June 21, 2012 by Scott Meyers

I just announced the final talk I'll be giving at this year's C++ and Beyond. It's Secrets of the C++11 Threading API.  Like my other talks, it's a new presentation covering new information I've never written, blogged, or spoken about before. (Okay, there may be some tiny overlap.  For example, in my Effective C++11 talk, I'm going to offer a more detailed analysis of the issues I rai

Let's say I'm glad I'm not a professional programmer then.
Not that I ever used Boost. I haven't had the need personally.
18:39
@MooingDuck I just #included a header file that i use for my timer code.
Nvm
Apparently -o -O3 != -O3 -o
@rubenvb I don't want to convince my company's lawyers that we can use boost, and then convince IT to put it on everyone's machines. Way too much work.
@MooingDuck With -O3:
5.0646030000 seconds
4195149.9735083934
Why is it called a cockpit?
@RMartinhoFernandes Because a chicken is involved?
(See, I did not fall for that one)
It's an honest question.
It makes no sense.
There were no cockpits before modern times, so I assume there's no etymological reasons for it.
@RMartinhoFernandes Etymology ended with World War 1?
Wiktionary says it's a merge of "cock" and "pit".
18:45
" The term is most likely related to the sailing term for the coxswain's station in a Royal Navy ship, and later the location of the ship's rudder controls" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockpit
> 1580s, "a pit for fighting cocks," from cock (n.1) + pit (1). Used in nautical sense (1706) for midshipmen's compartment below decks; transferred to airplanes (1914) and to cars (1930s).
Well.
@Potatoswatter I picked the wrong words.
15 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@MooingDuck You haven't even disabled sync_with_stdio, so, yes, he can.
@EtiennedeMartel thanks
> cockpit (sense 1) dates from the early 20th century and derives from an early 18th-cent. nautical term denoting an area in the aft lower deck of a man-of-war where the wounded were taken, later coming to mean 'the ‘pit’ or well from which a yacht is steered'; hence the place housing the controls of other vehicles
18:48
@RMartinhoFernandes: wait, that doesn't apply to filestreams
So, wait, a "cockpit" once meant a pit where you put your cock. Hmm.
@Drise so yeah, you're not going to get practically faster than that.
@EtiennedeMartel Haha, I just realized why Angry Birds are popular cartoon characters in the Philippines despite nobody having an iPhone…
18:49
cock fighting is popular here. Angry birds indeed
@RMartinhoFernandes we were trying to improve the speed of reading from an ifstream, and you suggested disabling sync_with_stdio, which, as far as I can tell, does not affect ifstreams.
@RMartinhoFernandes Getting uncomfortable?
Want to parse numbers fast? Don't use a library that provides lots of features.
Improve the speed of reading from an ifstream ?
Get an SSD !
18:51
@manasij7479 No, iostreams is dog slow.
Want to further improve the speed of reading from an ifstream? Don't read from an ifstream!
In fact, don't read at all!
Just go home and get drunk.
@MooingDuck Oh well. Next step, switch to fopen.
@Potatoswatter citation needed
@EtiennedeMartel Read from /dev/zero!
@manasij7479 No, it's not.
18:52
@manasij7479 Well, all that buffer handling and formatting isn't free.
@EtiennedeMartel And locales.
Yeah, that as well.
And the uselessly spinning and calling virtual functions and chasing pointers.
Essentially, iostreams come with a lot of overhead because they do a lot of stuff for you. If you don't need all that, you might want to switch to a lower level solution, like C streams (or even platform-specific APIs).
C streams do almost all of the above
18:54
(They're also badly written, but hey, that's another thing altogether).
C streams cuts out the stupid inefficiency and leaves somewhat justified slowness.
And open (posix) is unbufferred, which sometimes hurts performance.
@Potatoswatter like parsing strings!
Really, just read the code I linked above and adapt it to your scientific app.
It's not complicated.
Reinventing a decimal number parser is actually easier than sorting through all the library alternatives.
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@MooingDuck If your ompany's lawyers ned convincing to understand that a license is fine that's coming in, what?, a dozen lines saying in a very straightforward way that you can do what you want with the code, then your compay urgently needs better lawyers. Likewise, if your developers canot just download boost and put the damn thing wherever they want on their machines, you need better IT. Or maybe you need a better job?
19:00
Man, your typing is sucking.
@Potatoswatter I'm not convinced it's worth his time though
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@RMartinhoFernandes I am sitting on a laptop that's half the width of mine with a keyboard that takes hammering each key or some chars will be missing.
@MooingDuck Just the time spent discussing it here is already too much. This is what I mean by not complicated.
@Potatoswatter and debugging?
@MooingDuck Chances are, my code will suit his program just fine. But you can see how much debugging is involved in something like that…
uint64_t mystrtol( char *&pen, uint64_t val = 0 ) {
    for ( char c; ( c = *pen ^ '0' ) <= 9; ++ pen ) val = val * 10 + c;
    return val;
}

value_t mystrtof( char *&pen ) {
    static value_t const exp_table[]
     = { 1e5, 1e4, 1e3, 1e2, 10, 1, 0.1, 1e-2, 1e-3, 1e-4, 1e-5, 1e-6, 1e-7, 1e-8, 1e-9, 1e-10, 1e-11, 1e-12, 1e-13, 1e-14, 1e-15, 1e-16, 1e-17 },
     * exp_lookup = & exp_table[ 5 ];

    while ( iswspace( * ++ pen ) ) ;
    //if ( *pen == '-' ) ++ pen; // don't think we ever care about negative numbers
19:03
yay, perforce is using 100% of my cpu. Did I mention how much I hate perforce?
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Well, I am now going to watch Portugal being thrown out of the EC by the Czechs, and since this machine is so weak, I will need to shut down every process it can work without. See you!
@MooingDuck I think you did. Several times.
@Potatoswatter does it handle negative numbers? He definitely has negative numbers
@MooingDuck If you uncomment that line it does.
@Potatoswatter I disagree
19:06
What about nan or infinity ?
Oh, yes, you need to actually set a multiplier and such. Hehe.
Actually my app would have just taken the absolute value, hence that implementation (before I commented it out entirely.)
@manasij7479 I doubt those are valid inputs in this case
@Potatoswatter good thing he didn't just take your code like you said
@manasij7479 The point is to only handle things that actually happen. That's part of optimization.
@Potatoswatter And just forget about exception handling.. right ?
-1 fallacy. the bloat of irrelevant functionality is evidence of the poor functionality, not counter evidence. std::string (or more generally std::basic_string) has extremely poor functionality as a string. try simple things like uppercasing a string, or replacing all occurrences of a substring with another. even more basic, try trimming a string. the C++ std::string is good for one thing only, and that's as a standard way to pass strings around, even if it's needlessly inefficient and restricted for that purpose. — Cheers and hth. - Alf 1 min ago
19:08
@RMartinhoFernandes Technically, aren't templates instantiated at template-instantiation time? :) The resulting class or function is not compiled at that point, right?
@MooingDuck I said "chances are…" and before that I said "adapt" ;v)
i guess at least some people may want to disagree with that ;-)
@manasij7479 Yep. There are ways to detect parse errors that don't involve messing with the inner loop.
@Potatoswatter That error detection and sanitization will very likely make the whole thing much more inefficient.
@manasij7479 No sanitization. If a newline isn't where you expect, print the line number and bail out. When you have a hundred megabytes of text, any syntax errors are due to a bug in the generator of the file.
19:13
@sbi We'll see.
now perforce refuses to close. awesome. KILLED!
whoa, I can scroll again!
19:28
Woah, this was an intense day.
The Oatmeal thing is getting out of hand. Hope the asshole from the other side is ready for the shit which will hit the fan.
this is too easy:
1
Q: the issues on two lines of C++ codes

bit-questionFor the following two lines of C++ code map<string, vector<size_t> >::iterator beg = mapper.begin(); vector<size_t>& indics = (*beg).second; How to understand what do they want to achieve, and in specific, what do the & and * in the second line of code mean?

-3
Q: Poor std::string functionality

Kornel SzymkiewiczAnyone knows why the C++ standard library’ std::string class (or more generally the std::basic_string class template) lacks ordinary character string functionality such as uppercasing, substring replacement and trimming, etc., compared to e.g., QString class from Qt, or Python strings?

^ Needs a few more votes to reopen. One of the best SO questions in a long time.
I get so frustrated by the folks who mindlessly react to apparent negativity, in this case the word "poor" used by the OP. Jeez. Argh!
Hoo-mans, closing questions and shit.
19:39
@CheersandhthAlf Uh… what do you think the question is about? "Poor functionality" is rather nebulous, no?
@Potatoswatter try refresh in the browser?
@CheersandhthAlf not even close to one of the best in a long time, but now that it's a real question, I've upvoted and voted to open
Hello guys. I stumbled upon this piece of code: "unsigned long countWords(const string& s, set<string>& wl);" which apparently it is used to break down string words and then input them into a set. Could somebody please explain to me what that code means? (Also, I'm a complete beginner with c++)
It means "countWords is a function that takes a string as an input parameter, a set of strings as an output parameter, and the function returns an unsigned long".
@NicoBellic Post this on SO, and I'll answer it.
19:45
@FredOverflow, what does the unsigned long refer to in this case?
An integral value with no sign
@NicoBellic That's a function declaration, not an actual function itself. It says "Somewhere, there is a function called countWords, which takes two parameters. The first is a reference to a string which countWords will not change, and the second is a reference to a set of strings, which the function might change. The function returns an unsigned long to it's caller.
It's the return type. What the number actually means I do not know. It may stand for the number of words, but that would be kind of redundant, because the set already knows how big it is.
Ie only positive integers.
Oh I see. What's the use for the unsigned long though?
19:46
Am I right in calling him out on being rude?
If you need to ask what those two operators mean then you need to start learning C++ from step 1. forget vector's, forget iterators, forget looking at code like this. Go get a good book or find a good tutorial and start learning the language. This is not meant as an insult, I just think you're trying to skip a few steps in learning a new language, and that will cost you more time in the long run. — Ed S. 11 mins ago
@NicoBellic Who knows. I think @FredOverflow Has the idea though.
@NicoBellic On many platforms it means "a number between 0 and 4 billion".
Fred lol
What? :)
One of my colleague would never successfully compile anything if he had Werror enabled.
You always make me laugh somehow
19:48
So would that long refer to the size of the set after the function is done breaking down the string into individual words and inputting it into the set?
@NicoBellic We can't know that from what you showed.
@NicoBellic What the number means we can only guess.
As Fred said, std::set knows how many things are in it, so its a bit redundant.
Yeah which is why I'm getting confused as to why this unsigned value is just being called.
Maybe the set starts out with already words in it? Then it wouldn't be redundant. Oh, good old glass bowl!
@NicoBellic The unsigned value isn't being called, it is returned from the function when the function has finished its work.
19:50
Oh I see. That's a bit better.
int foo();             // a function returning an int
unsigned long bar();   // a function returning an unsigned long
Well that's cool. 30 rep from out of no where.
@DeadMG From personal experience, when I first ran into iterators I was somewhat puzzled by the syntax, although I knew what & and * meant and how they were used. It took me some time to figure out how they worked exactly.
@Drise Sure, but you need to know what a T& is before you can address iterators.
So, let me know if this is a decent way of going about it: I'll have the string converted into char using c_str, at which point read every character starting from 0 until you find the first space. When that is found, add all of these chars into an empty string, and then add the new string into the set. Last step would be to set the new string back to empty once the next letter is found.
Aha, you are supposed to implement that function?
19:54
sql chat is empty, anyone here know anything about microsoft sql server?
You can directly iterate over the string, no need to convert it to c_str first.
@notbadjpeg I know it's from Microsoft.
@NicoBellic Avoid char* or char[] when possible.
@FredOverflow really?
@notbadjpeg you asked.
@Drise yes, you were wrong. it wasn't rude. it was just factual, and helpful. i would probably have written the same, if i had the wereabouts and competence to be as non-offensive as that guy. but then, many people have called me rude. it's like a last resort to keep up one's self respect: call the person helping you, rude. to avoid that trap, simply ask: does that answer/comment say or imply anything directly personal? if not, then it's probably not rude.
19:55
I would like to haha. I have this list of star names (I work in astrophysics) which are all saved into a string, and are all separated by space. I just want to add them to a set to then just call upon them when I need one. It might help me later on.
@Drise what should I use then?
and i got an answer
@NicoBellic
std::string mystring = "Hello World";
for (unsigned int i = 0; i < mystring.size(); i++)
std::cout << mystring[i] << endl;
@NicoBellic just index the string directly, or use iterators.
327
Q: How to split a string in C++?

AshwinWhat's the most elegant way to split a string in C++? The string can be assumed to be composed of words separated by whitespace. (Note that I'm not interested in C string functions or that kind of character manipulation/access. Also, please give precedence to elegance over efficiency in your ans...

That will print each character on a new line.
There's even better things like QStrings that you can tell it to split the whole thing and return a set.
QStringList args = command.split(" ", QString::SkipEmptyParts);
19:58
We can never have enough string classes!
@FredOverflow I use Std::String and QString. Nothing else.
Qstring almost out of need since most Q* only takes them.
But they do have a bunch more functionality than std::string. Especially like QString::number(someDouble);

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